Showing posts with label Hanoi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hanoi. Show all posts

Monday, February 21, 2011

Backstreet Boys flash-mob hits Hanoi

Over 50 young Hanoians yesterday evening gathered together in an organized flash mob inside the Hanoi megastar cinema complex to perform tunes from Backstreet Boys to welcome their concert tour next month in Vietnam.

The youths, mostly from Hanoi-based high schools and universities, are members of the “Backstreet Boys’ fan club” on Facebook.

They performed three Backstreet Boys hit songs “As long as you love me”, “Straight through my heart”, and “Everybody” amid tumultuous applause of the crowd at the cinema.

“I am totally absorbed in their performance. I really want to join the fan club when I know it’s an activity to welcome the Backstreet Boys,” 19-year-old Tra My said after attentively watching the amateur show.

“Through our performance, we would like to boost social activities, create a healthy playground for youths and especially show our love to our Idols [Backstreet Boys],) said the team captain Nguyen Vu Khanh.

Backstreet Boys is scheduled to perform in Ho Chi Minh City-based Military Zone 7's stadium in March 24 and to grace Hanoi's My Dinh national stadium two days later.

All tickets to the shows have been sold out, according to the organizers, adding that many customers from other countries in the region like Singapore, Thailand also booked the tickets.

Meanwhile, several expatriates and foreigners, who live and work in Vietnam, are also interested in the coming concert.

“I have lived and worked in Hanoi for 6 years but I have never seen a world-renowned band like Backstreet Boys performing here. I hope other world-famous artists will come to Vietnam for performance in the near future,” said Mike Gallagher, a British national.

Backstreet Boys, one of the biggest teen-pop groups in 1990s, consisting of four members A. J. McLean, Howie Dorough, Brian Littrell, Nick Carter and Kevin Richardson, was formed in Orlando, Florida in 1993.

They rose to fame with their debut international album, Backstreet Boys in 1996.

They reached to superstardom with their album Millennium in 1999 and its follow-up album, Black & Blue one year later.

Richardson left the group in 2006 to pursue other interests, leaving the band as a four-piece, but the remaining members did not rule out a possible return of the singer.

The Backstreet Boys have sold over 130 million records worldwide, making them one of the biggest selling artists of all time.

According to Billboard, they are the first group since Sade to have their first seven albums reach the top 10 on the Billboard 200.

 BSB 2

 BSB 1

Masked hip-hop show comes to town

A hip-hop show titled “Faces” by chorographers Raphael Hillebrand and Sébastien Ramirez from Germany and France will take place in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City on 25 and 27 February.

Top hip-hoppers such as Hoang Ky Anh, Nguyen Chinh Dung, Nguyen Minh Kien will perform together with foreign dancers.

All artists will wear masks during the performance to send a message: “Are we all wearing masks to cover up our face in today’s society?”

Introduced for the first time in 2008, in an event organized by Vietnam Goethe Institute and French center L’Espace, the hip hop performance has since gained more fans as it reflects a dynamic, open and modern Vietnam, a country with rich culture and good preservation of traditional values.

The show will take place in Hanoi’s Youth Theater on February 25 and Ho Chi Minh Ctiy’s Ben Thanh Theater on February 27.

Free tickets can be obtained at Goethe Institute, No 56-57 Nguyen Thai Hoc, Hanoi or No 18, Street 1, Do Thanh, Ward 4, District 3, Ho Chi Minh City.

After performing in Vietnam, the crew will tour France and Germany.

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Friday, February 18, 2011

Language of love: Vietnamese or Chinese or Universal?

Several cases of audacious public display of affection in China recently have caused quite an uproar among the internet community.

From China

In August 2010, a video clip of a young couple making out at a public canteen in China spread all over the web like wildfire, sending a shock wave through its millions of netizens.

Not long after that, news of a rich Chinese youth confessing his love with a giant heart made from 1999 roses became a much-discussed topic both on internet chat rooms and in the print media.

In December last year, the internet community once again was fumed over the clip of a teenage couple displaying too much affection on a public bus, prompting the driver to stop and force them off the bus.

And most recently, after a 1:20 minute long video clip that captures two young students, allegedly from Fujian Province, kissing each other passionately in their class made its way onto youtube, it has brought about much public outrage. Soon angry words began to fly thick and fast among those who criticized their “indecency” and those who rallied behind them.

 love 1

The flaming love confession of a young Chinese couple

…To Vietnam

The young Vietnamese have proved to be no less bold in their public display of affection, with several video clips of teenagers kissing in class widely circulated on the internet.

In the early morning of April 10, 2010, students at the Academy of Journalism and Communication’s dormitory became witnesses, reluctant or not, to a highly romantic love confession of student to his girlfriend -- this, not long after a traffic-stopping demonstrative act of love by another student at Dich Vong Hau park in Hanoi, with 1,000 candles and 100 roses on March 19.

Another case, a student from Phan Huy Chu high school in Hanoi confessed his love by making a heart from rose petals in the middle of the schoolyard.

The love confession with 150 roses at Hanoi’s Noi Bai Airport last year by a young man from Vinh Phuc (who was, despite the heroic effort, turned down) draws some parallels to the one by a wealthy young man in Wang Fu Jing shopping complex in Beijing two years before (who also suffered from the same unhappy ending).

The most recent public display of affection scandal is a video clip posted on the internet last week showing a young couple--the girl still wearing her school uniform--petting and necking in a class on Nguyen Chi Thanh Street, Hanoi.

 love 3

 love 2

Couples in Hanoi express their love at public places, also with flowers and candles

For or against?

According to Nguyen Thi Chinh, a consultant at Psychology Consulting Center in Hanoi, it is a normal psychological trait among teenagers to mimic what they think will assert themselves as adults or simply make them different from others.

Dr. Trinh Hoa Binh from the Institute of Sociology considers this phenomenon as deviation from the norm. “Of course, as a rule, what is inappropriate and temporary will eventually be discarded. Young people nowadays have access to a large amount of information, yet they can be quite vulnerable when faced with these overwhelming, vehement waves of information,” he said.

Others, however, express their understanding and support for this social phenomenon.

Pham Thinh, an Education and Youth columnist for VTC News online newspaper, thinks that those who exhibit such behaviors are often people possessing strong character, with a zealous passion for life. “Those young people are likely to do great things in the future. I’ll give them my support, if what they do is not out of bounds with their family circumstances,” he said.

Dr. Do Thi Thu Hang, lecturer at the Academy of Journalism and Communication, thinks teenagers mimic these impudent expressions of love because they appeal to them and speak to their needs. She also says that if similar things are to happen in other countries, not necessarily China, Vietnamese youngsters will also “import” those things immediately.

Is the media to blame?

A question was raised over whether this is the result of how the media have been exploiting sensational news to attract more viewers. Dr. Do Thi Thu Hang said that might not be the case, because although the media can lower the bar a bit at times, it does not seem to have caused much harm.

Pham Thinh, however, seems to disagree, believing that the media do play some role in this. “This type of news attracts a lot of viewers, most of whom are young people, all newspaper editors know this, so in publishing such information, they partly aim to draw more attraction,” he said.

However, online newspapers cannot be the only source of such attention-grabbing, crowd-exciting news, which is also widely spread through social networks and various information sharing websites. Thus, the journalist continues to analyze further, “While the newspapers only do their job, which is to report such events to the readers, in many cases their reports somehow cross the line.”

For this reason, according to Hang, we need to filter the news provided to the public carefully to prevent the mimicking of behaviors that go against our traditions and culture, and at the same time encourage gracious romantic and other love-related behaviors.

Pham Thinh expressed a similar view, though more firmly, “Newspapers’ managers and editors should consider carefully before publishing these shocking contents because young people, still in an impressionable psychological state and in the process of developing an identity, will be quick to mimic. And an additional undesirable effect is that the older generations will also lose their trust in the young.”

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Friday, February 11, 2011

January, a month of festivals and feasts

Vietnam celebrates more than 9,000 local and national festivals that can be categorized as folk, historical-revolutionary, religious, foreign-origin, and cultural-sport-tourist.

They mostly have their origins in the north, according to cultural scholars.

The first lunar month is a “month of festivals and feasts,” according to an old saying.

The New Year marks the arrival of spring according to the Chinese and Vietnamese calendars, and people are eager to visit historical sites and temples and pagodas, go sightseeing, and participate in festivals.

Many of the festivals are aimed at invoking patriotism and solidarity among people and act as platforms to preserve and pass down the nation’s culture to future generations.

Some commemorate national heroes. The Dong Da festival in the north, for instance, pays homage to King Quang Trung’s glorious feat of arms against 29,000 Qing invaders from China in 1789.

Festivals in the 1st lunar month

- Saint Giong Festival in Phu Linh Commune, Hanoi, 6th to 8th.

- Tich Dien Festival on Doi mountain, the northern Ha Nam Province, 5–7.

- Huong Pagoda Festival, Hanoi, starts on the 6th and goes on for three months.

- Gia La night-festival in Duong Noi Commune, Hanoi, 6-14.

- Sai Temple Festival in Thuy Lam Commune, Hanoi, 12.

- Tu Xa Festival in Tu Xa Commune, Lam Thao District, Phu Tho Province, 11 and 12.

- Lim Festival in Lim town, Bac Ninh Province, 13.

- Co Loa Festival in Dong Anh District, Hanoi, 6-15.

- Ba Chua Kho (Queen Kho) Temple Festival in Co Me village, Bac Ninh, 14.

- Va Temple Festival in Trung Hung Commune, Hanoi, 15.

- Tam Thanh pagoda festival in the northern city of Lang Son, 15.

- Long Tong Festival in Cao Bang Province on the China border, 6-15.

- Vieng Market Festival in Kim Thai Commune, Vu Ban District, Nam Dinh, 8

Dong da fest

Dong Da Fest

Co Loa fest

Co Loa Fest

Many of the festivals feature traditional sporting events -- like crossbow shooting and wrestling at the Co Loa Festival in Hanoi’s Dong Anh District, fighting, wrestling, and running at the Vi Khe Flower Festival in Nam Dinh Province and the Buffalo Stabbing Festival in Mo Hra village in the Central Highlands.

Dam Trau fest

Buffalo Stabbing Fest

They also showcase traditions like singing love duets, weaving fabric, and many others.

In the south, most festivals are meant to worship ancestors and deities and seek their protection and blessings for prosperity. Like the festival on Ba Den Mountain in Tay Ninh province during spring which people attend to pray for a year of prosperity and success.

ba den pagoda

Ba Den pagoda

The southern celebrations also often feature ornamental flowers and trees grown by traditional trade villages.

Ethnic peoples usually have spectacular festivals -- like the Tay and Nung’s Long Tong and the Hmong’s Sac Bua in the northwestern region and the Kho Me’s Lunar New Year celebrations in the south.

long tong fest

Long Tong Fest

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Sunday, February 6, 2011

Hanoi through eyes of French photographer

If he had more time, Nicolas Cornet, a French photo-journalist would have talked more about Hanoi both in French and Vietnamese. However, he prefers to use his photos to tell his stories.

Cornet said he has closely followed the changes in people and Hanoi through his own photo journalism. That is why when visiting an exhibition showcasing Cornet’s photos of Hanoi at the French Culture Centre L’Espace in late 2010, many people who were born and grew up in the city suddenly recognised scenes they had taken for granted for a long time.

Hanoi in his photos is not merely a reminiscence, but is always moving. Viewers can see the city through photos portraying people’s daily lives, high-rise buildings or ancient, moss covered pagodas.

“His photos are unexpectedly lively,” a common comment made by many visitors. For them, Cornet’s photos are beautiful, not only in terms of lay-out and colour, but also of containing the city’s flavours such as steamed glutinous rice and green tea that are served on the city’s pavement kiosks.

After three years of collecting images and ideas, Cornet has published a pictorial book about Hanoi to celebrate the city’s 1,000 th anniversary.

Since 1987, Nicolas Cornet has spent a couple of months each year returning to Vietnam and feels it is his “home country”.

Besides working for many of Europe ’s well-known daily newspapers and magazines such as L’Espresso, Mare, Le Republica, Figaro Magazine, Le Monde, Ulysse, Geo, Grands Reportages and Nouvel Observateur, Cornet has given lectures on photography and press photography. He has already hosted a series of personal exhibitions in France, Germany, Switzerland and Vietnam.
 

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Sunday, January 23, 2011

Jet Li arrives in Vietnam

Chinese movie star and kung fu master Jet Li landed in Hanoi Thursday afternoon and will stay in the capital for five days to attend charity activities as a goodwill ambassador for the International Red Cross.

The Hollywood actor is scheduled to appear at the Youth Park in Hanoi from 8:30 – 9:00 am January 22 to attend a blood donation, expected to attract 2,000 and is aimed at storing blood for patients during Tet.

At 11:00 am, Jan Li will visit a mangrove forest in Nghe An province in the central region and engage in Red Cross activities in Thanh Hoa and Nghe An.

He will be back in Hanoi the following day and present gifts to 40 enthusiastic volunteers of the Vietnamese Red Cross and will reply to questions about volunteer activities from youths in the capital.

He will have a question-answer session during a press conference in Hanoi on January 24 before returning home.

At his hometown, he is chairman of the Chinese Red Cross Foundation.

Bio

Jet Li, 47, is a real martial art master that makes international fame as an action star. Jet Li is arguably one of the most famous Chinese in the world.

He began practicing Wushu at the age of 8 and after years of training he represented Beijing Wushu team in various performances and competitions.

Jet Li already started acting when he was still an active martial artist. His debut movie was Shaolin Temple in 1982, followed by 2 sequels which made him a national action star.

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Jet Li arrives in Vietnam

Chinese movie star and kung fu master Jet Li landed in Hanoi Thursday afternoon and will stay in the capital for five days to attend charity activities as a goodwill ambassador for the International Red Cross.

The Hollywood actor is scheduled to appear at the Youth Park in Hanoi from 8:30 – 9:00 am January 22 to attend a blood donation, expected to attract 2,000 and is aimed at storing blood for patients during Tet.

At 11:00 am, Jan Li will visit a mangrove forest in Nghe An province in the central region and engage in Red Cross activities in Thanh Hoa and Nghe An.

He will be back in Hanoi the following day and present gifts to 40 enthusiastic volunteers of the Vietnamese Red Cross and will reply to questions about volunteer activities from youths in the capital.

He will have a question-answer session during a press conference in Hanoi on January 24 before returning home.

At his hometown, he is chairman of the Chinese Red Cross Foundation.

Bio

Jet Li, 47, is a real martial art master that makes international fame as an action star. Jet Li is arguably one of the most famous Chinese in the world.

He began practicing Wushu at the age of 8 and after years of training he represented Beijing Wushu team in various performances and competitions.

Jet Li already started acting when he was still an active martial artist. His debut movie was Shaolin Temple in 1982, followed by 2 sequels which made him a national action star.

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Sunday, January 2, 2011

Music bashes to celebrate New Year in Hanoi, HCMC

Several music performances are being readied in Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi to entertain the locals and usher in the New Year on January 1.

The Springtime Rendezvous will take place at the outdoor stage at 19:30 on January 1 at 23/9 Park, District 1’s Pham Ngu Lao Street, with performances of pop stars like Quang Linh, Thanh Thao, Quang Ha, Khanh Ngoc, Quang Vinh, and Bao Thy.

Rock lovers will have a chance to immerse themselves in electrifying performances of various rock bands, including UK rock band The Lost Souls Club and two local rock bands Unlimited and Microwave.

The event takes place at Tiger Translate 2011–Metropolis at 20:00 on January 7, District 1’s Nguyen Du Stadium, promising to rock up the city.

Also in the pipeline is Charming Vietnam Gala organized by Thanh Nien Daily Newspaper, at 20:00 on January 8-9 in Tuy Hoa City of Phu Yen Central province to raise money for the Nguyen Thai Binh Fund for poor students and the Vietnamese Talent Fund.

The event will feature famous singers, beauties, and models from across the country and the two emerging stars of Vietnam Idol 2010, Lan Nha and Uyen Linh.

The 23rd gala will witness the return of Bolero music which is expected to be a special cultural and art event in the South Central Coastal National Tourism Year 2011.

“A day of wind & haven” is also a good choice for music lovers. The event will feature French artists (Pierre Diaz, Trio Zéphyr), French performers of Vietnamese origin (singer Huong Thanh and artist Alex Tran), and Vietnamese violinist Nguyen Thi Thu Thuy. They will perform at Idecaf at 20:00 on January 12.

In the northern hub, Hanoi Cultural Friendship Palace will present the “Wise wife teaches foolish husband” drama directed by Meritorious Artist Xuan Huyen and scripted by People’s Artist Doan Hoang Giang, with the participation of a group of artists from HCMC like Hong Van, Duc Hai, Minh Hoang, Trinh Kim Chi, and Van Anh.

In other news, well-known musician Le Minh Son’s evening performance, themed “Guitar for me”, will take place on January 1 at Hanoi Opera House, in collaboration with famous local artists in the north like Tung Duong, Thanh Lam, and Ha Linh.

The capital city will also feature a children’s music show from 15:00 to 20:00 the following day at Hanoi Opera House, and “Prosperous Spring”, a music program, on 20:00 on January 4 at the Hanoi Cultural Friendship Palace, with the appearance of famous local artists Hoai Linh, Hong Van, Thanh Bach, Quang Dung, Thanh Thao, Anh Tho, Thanh Thanh Hien.

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Friday, December 31, 2010

Japanese print maker exhibits in Hanoi

A katazome print of a railway line in Hanoi by Japanese artist Toba Mika - Photo: The organizers
An exhibition of katazome paintings, called “Nara and Hanoi – Linking Eternal Capitals” by Japanese artist Toba Mika will be at the Temple of Literature and Vietnam Art Museum in Hanoi from January 6-25.

The katazome exhibition will commemorate Hanoi’s 1000th anniversary and Nara City’s 1300th anniversary.

The Japanese artform is a method of dyeing fabrics using a resist paste applied through a stencil, something similar to Indonesian batik.

Toba Mika came to Vietnam in 1994, after traveling through other South Asian countries. She has painted around 100 Vietnamese landscapes and has had exhibitions in Hanoi in 2003 and in Hue in 2005.

In this exhibition, Toba Mika will introduce 35 paintings, mostly Vietnamese landscapes. She made prints of small streets in Hanoi, riverside houses in HCMC, urban scenes and tropical landscapes, which Toba Mika calls her own ‘world heritages’.

The prints show houses lining railway lines, walls scribbled with numbers and words and dimly lit slums.

After appearing in Hanoi the show will move to Yakushi-ji Pagoda in Japan.

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Thursday, December 30, 2010

Japanese print maker exhibits in Hanoi

A katazome print of a railway line in Hanoi by Japanese artist Toba Mika - Photo: The organizers
An exhibition of katazome paintings, called “Nara and Hanoi – Linking Eternal Capitals” by Japanese artist Toba Mika will be at the Temple of Literature and Vietnam Art Museum in Hanoi from January 6-25.

The katazome exhibition will commemorate Hanoi’s 1000th anniversary and Nara City’s 1300th anniversary.

The Japanese artform is a method of dyeing fabrics using a resist paste applied through a stencil, something similar to Indonesian batik.

Toba Mika came to Vietnam in 1994, after traveling through other South Asian countries. She has painted around 100 Vietnamese landscapes and has had exhibitions in Hanoi in 2003 and in Hue in 2005.

In this exhibition, Toba Mika will introduce 35 paintings, mostly Vietnamese landscapes. She made prints of small streets in Hanoi, riverside houses in HCMC, urban scenes and tropical landscapes, which Toba Mika calls her own ‘world heritages’.

The prints show houses lining railway lines, walls scribbled with numbers and words and dimly lit slums.

After appearing in Hanoi the show will move to Yakushi-ji Pagoda in Japan.

Related Articles

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Secrets of pyramid to be revealed in Hanoi

Xmas at West Lake

The circus drama called “Secrets of the Pyramid” will debut for Hanoians at the Central Circus on December 24 to 26 and January 1 and 2, revealing mysterious stories and secrets of the pyramid in Egypt.

The show will be performed by the Vietnam Circus Federation in collaboration with artists of the Youth Theater and Hanoi Opera House. The show as a combination of circus with other genres of arts such as drama or comedy will bring viewers many new experiences and help them explore a legendary Egypt.

Tickets are available at the circus theater, 67-69 Tran Nhan Tong Street, Hanoi, at prices of VND120,000, VND200,000 and VND300,000 per person.

*On Christmas Eve, Dec. 24, the West Lake Water Park in Hanoi will hold a colored lantern exhibition with 100 Santa Clauses

Santa Claus will play fun games with the kids and give them gifts. Christmas Eve by the lake will also feature live music, juggling and dramas by Vietnamese and Chinese artist troupes.

There will be 35 colored lantern displays some lit by more than 8,000 light bulbs. The exhibition will run till February 22.

Tickets are available at the park, 614 Lac Long Quan Street, Hanoi’s Ho Tay District, for VND40,000 to VND140,000. The organizers donate VND5,000 for each ticket sold to the flood victims in the central and buy 100 gifts for poor children in the city.

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Vietnam all set to welcome Christmas, New Year

With just a few days to go for Christmas and then New Year, festive cheer is blanketing the nation.

Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi will have music, circus, food, dancing, and comedy shows during the festivals.

The HCMC Youth Cultural House will have music and hip-hop dance performances and fashion shows from December 24 to 31 while Children’s House in District 1 will organize the “Winter Day” fest on December 24 featuring folk games, music, and circus. Tickets cost VND20,000 (US$1).

The annual Taste of the World Festival at the September 23rd Park from Dec 26 to Jan 2 will offer visitors the chance to sample food from more than 20 countries.

Chefs and representatives from hotels, restaurants, and hospitality agencies in Germany, France, Brazil, the US, and other countries will take part.

There will be comedy, music, and theater performances at HCMC’s Dam Sen Cultural Park from Dec 24 to Jan 2, while Binh Quoi Tourist Village will host a Russian Cuisine Festival from Dec 24 to 26.

In Hanoi, two nights of music titled “Pho cu tinh xua” will be held at the Hanoi Opera House on December 24-25. It will feature marquee names like Thanh Lam, Siu Black, Quang Linh, Tung Duong, Ngoc Anh, and Phuong Anh, and tickets will cost VND500,000 (US$25) to VND2 million ($100).

The Circus Center at 67 – 69 Tran Nhan Tong Street will offer spectacular performances of “Pyramid’s Secret” from December 24 to January 2. Tickets are on sale at VND80,000 to VND300,000 ($4 - 15).

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Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Japanese fusion quartet plays Hanoi

A music show called Karin & Quartet Music Concert will be held in the Youth Theater in Hanoi for two consecutive nights on December 8 and 9.

Karin & Quartet will be accompanied by a 16-stringed Vietnamese harp played by Vo Van Anh (a.k.a. Vanessa Vo), as well as the voice of Thu Huyen, a promising cheo (Vietnamese folk opera) singer. The fusion of Japanese and Vietnamese music will be one of the exciting musical journeys this year.

Karin produces amazing sounds on her 25-stringed koto (Japanese harp). She has traveled the world, constantly finding new inspirations.

Akihito Obama, who will join her on the shakuhachi (Japanese bamboo flute), displays a combination of eloquent traditional techniques as well as fluency in Western styles. Also traveling are Mami Ishizuka on the piano, covering a wide range of musical elements from jazz to world music, and percussionist Aki-ra Sunrise who uses self-made and other instruments from around the world.

Admission is free. Tickets are available at the Japan Foundation Center for Cultural Exchange in Vietnam, 27 Quang Trung Street in Hanoi, tel: 3944 7419.

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Friday, December 3, 2010

Brazilian film week in Hanoi

A week-long festival of Brazilian films starts on Saturday (Dec.4) at the National Cinema Center in Hanoi till Dec.10.

Brazilian cinema started in 1889 with the Rio de Janeiro based film-maker, Afonso Segreto. Since then Brazil has made a name for producing comedies in the 1950s, musical animations and films influenced by the French New Wave of the 1960’s.

The festival which is called “Panorama of Brazilian Movies” will screen seven films that are suitable for all ages including Romance; Os desafinados (Out of Tune ); O auto da compadecida (The Passion of Christ); Meu nome nao e Johnny (My Name is Not Johnny); Noel, o poeta da Vila (Noel-The Samba Poet); Dois filhos de Francisco (Two Sons of Francisco); and the documentary Peoes (Metal Workers) by Eduardo Countinho about the labor strikes of 1979-1980.

All films will be screened in Portuguese with Vietnamese subtitles. Free tickets are available at National Cinema Center, 87 Lang Ha Street, Hanoi or at the Brazilian Embassy, The Apartment T-72, 12 Thuy Khue Street in Hanoi.

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Wednesday, November 17, 2010

European Music Festival returns

Members of the Tharichens Tentett jazz band from Germany
The European Music Festival returns to HCMC and Hanoi from November 26 to December 4 to celebrate 20 years of diplomatic relations between the EU and Vietnam.

The music festival will make its come-back with a remarkably diverse line-up of concerts with the pop night by El Guincho from Spain and a jazz night with the 10 piece German jazz band, Tharichen Tentett.

The festival is organized by the European Commission Delegation to Vietnam and the embassies of 10 European Union member states, including Wallonia-Brussels (Belgium), France, Austria, Germany, Spain and the Netherlands.

The festival will be staging jazz, classical, world music, pop, electronic music, fusion of jazz and flamenco, graceful piano pieces and warm tones of the harp. The jazz night by Tharichens Tentett will be at Hanoi Opera House, 1 Trang Tien Street in Hanoi on November 26 and the pop night by El Guincho will be at the Youth Theater,11 Ngo Thi Nham Street in Hanoi on November 27 and at the HCMC Opera House in November 28.

All performances start at 8 p.m. Tickets are on sale in Hanoi at the Goethe Institute, 56-58 Nguyen Thai Hoc Street, tel: 04 3734 2251 and in HCMC at Do Thanh Apartment at 18, Street No.1, HCMC’s District 3.

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Tuesday, November 9, 2010

German youth choir sing for Hanoi

Koreans bring memory of love to Vietnam

The youth choir from Germany’s Wernigerode Radio will perform two nights of November 10-11 at the Hanoi Youth Theater at 11 Ngo Thi Nham Street as part of German Year in Vietnam 2010.

In the first part of the program, the choir will perform two German folk songs, three modern works and two classics. In the second half they will choir will play folk and spiritual songs of five countries including France, Germany, Russia, the U.S. and Japan and North America

The choir has 35 members from 15 to 18. Since its establishment in 1951, the Wernigerode Radio Choir has recorded over 30 CDs and performed in many television programs and films. They were awarded best German choir.

Tickets are available at the Goethe Institute at 56-58 Nguyen Thai Hoc Street, Hanoi. For further information, contact the institute at 04 3734 2251/52/53 ext. 9.

*The Korean Cultural Center in Vietnam will host an opera called “Memory of love – Orpheo” at the Au Co Performing Arts Center, 8 Huynh Thuc Khang Street in Hanoi at 7:30 p.m. on November 11.

“Memory of love – Orpheo” will be performed by artists from Seoul Performing Arts Center (SPAC). It’s a love story of two dancers, Dong Wook and Uri. They almost lose their relationship but memories and promises make them fall in love again.

The opera combines touching memories with melodies. The fusion of Korean traditional dance with contemporary jazz dance creates emotion and gives an insight into Korean arts and culture.

The opera has been organized to mark the success of ASEAN+3 Summit in Hanoi Free tickets are available at Korean Cultural Center at 49 Nguyen Du Street in Hanoi from November 9.

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German youth choir sing for Hanoi

Koreans bring memory of love to Vietnam

The youth choir from Germany’s Wernigerode Radio will perform two nights of November 10-11 at the Hanoi Youth Theater at 11 Ngo Thi Nham Street as part of German Year in Vietnam 2010.

In the first part of the program, the choir will perform two German folk songs, three modern works and two classics. In the second half they will choir will play folk and spiritual songs of five countries including France, Germany, Russia, the U.S. and Japan and North America

The choir has 35 members from 15 to 18. Since its establishment in 1951, the Wernigerode Radio Choir has recorded over 30 CDs and performed in many television programs and films. They were awarded best German choir.

Tickets are available at the Goethe Institute at 56-58 Nguyen Thai Hoc Street, Hanoi. For further information, contact the institute at 04 3734 2251/52/53 ext. 9.

*The Korean Cultural Center in Vietnam will host an opera called “Memory of love – Orpheo” at the Au Co Performing Arts Center, 8 Huynh Thuc Khang Street in Hanoi at 7:30 p.m. on November 11.

“Memory of love – Orpheo” will be performed by artists from Seoul Performing Arts Center (SPAC). It’s a love story of two dancers, Dong Wook and Uri. They almost lose their relationship but memories and promises make them fall in love again.

The opera combines touching memories with melodies. The fusion of Korean traditional dance with contemporary jazz dance creates emotion and gives an insight into Korean arts and culture.

The opera has been organized to mark the success of ASEAN+3 Summit in Hanoi Free tickets are available at Korean Cultural Center at 49 Nguyen Du Street in Hanoi from November 9.

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Thursday, November 4, 2010

Japan and Vietnam symphony orchestras  Hanoi

Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra (TMSO) and Vietnam National Symphony Orchestra will hold a concert under the baton of Japanese conductor Honna Tetsuji at the Hanoi Opera House on November 7, reports VietnamPlus.

The performance will feature famous pieces of both countries, including Toyama Yuzo’s Rhapsody for Orchestra and Rhapsody Vietnam by Do Hong Quan, Chairman of the Vietnam Musicians’ Association. The second part of the show will have a performance of P. I. Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 5 in E minor op. 64.

The leading Japanese orchestra then will give two shows in Hanoi on November 9 and HCMC on November12.

Japanese violinist, Tamaki Kawakubo, will join TMSO for these performances. She will play the Violin Concerto in D major op. 77 and the Symphony No. 1 in C minor op. 68 of J. Brahms. Kawakubo began violin studies at the age of five in Los Angeles , California , the U.S. She won the grand prize at the 2001 Pablo de Sarasate International Violin Competition and shared the silver medal, the highest award at the 2002 International Tchaikovsky Competition.

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Tuesday, October 26, 2010

ASEAN orchestra has talent from 15 countries

A new symphony orchestra, assembled from the best musical talents from around Southeast Asia, will perform three nights for the 17th ASEAN Summit in Vietnam (October 28-30).

Hanoi and HCMC will have one public concert each - in HCMC October 26 at the HCMC Conservatory of Music, 112 Nguyen Du Street, District 1 at 8 p.m., and in Hanoi Oct. 28 at the Hanoi Opera House, 1 Trang Tien Street, Hoan Kiem District at 8 p.m. The third concert at Vietnam National Convention Center in Hanoi on Oct 29 is only for summit participants.

 Music director and conductor of HCMC Conservatory Music Symphony Orchestra, Yoshikazu Fukumura, auditioned more than 80 classical musicians from 10 ASEAN countries and five countries outside the grouping. He said he would guarantee a superb performance.

The Academic Festival – Overture by Johannes Brahms will open the program, followed by Carmen Fantasy for Violin and Orchestra by Pablo Sarasate, featuring solo violist Anna Sowanna from Thailand, and Concertstuck for the Piano and Orchestra, Op.79 by C.M.V Weber, featuring solo pianist Nguyen Tuan Manh from Vietnam. The last piece on the program would be Symphony No.9 in E Minor “From the new world” by Antonin Dvorak.

Tickets are on sale for VND150,000 to VND250,000. For more information, contact the HCMC Conservatory of Music or the Hanoi Opera House.

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Monday, October 25, 2010

ASEAN orchestra has talent from 15 countries

A new symphony orchestra, assembled from the best musical talents from around Southeast Asia, will perform three nights for the 17th ASEAN Summit in Vietnam (October 28-30).

Hanoi and HCMC will have one public concert each - in HCMC October 26 at the HCMC Conservatory of Music, 112 Nguyen Du Street, District 1 at 8 p.m., and in Hanoi Oct. 28 at the Hanoi Opera House, 1 Trang Tien Street, Hoan Kiem District at 8 p.m. The third concert at Vietnam National Convention Center in Hanoi on Oct 29 is only for summit participants.

 Music director and conductor of HCMC Conservatory Music Symphony Orchestra, Yoshikazu Fukumura, auditioned more than 80 classical musicians from 10 ASEAN countries and five countries outside the grouping. He said he would guarantee a superb performance.

The Academic Festival – Overture by Johannes Brahms will open the program, followed by Carmen Fantasy for Violin and Orchestra by Pablo Sarasate, featuring solo violist Anna Sowanna from Thailand, and Concertstuck for the Piano and Orchestra, Op.79 by C.M.V Weber, featuring solo pianist Nguyen Tuan Manh from Vietnam. The last piece on the program would be Symphony No.9 in E Minor “From the new world” by Antonin Dvorak.

Tickets are on sale for VND150,000 to VND250,000. For more information, contact the HCMC Conservatory of Music or the Hanoi Opera House.

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