Showing posts with label amateur music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label amateur music. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Experts praise Vietnamese folk values

Sing it: Don ca tai tu is performed for tourists in Tien Giang Province in the Mekong Delta. — VNS Photo Van Dat

Sing it: Don ca tai tu is performed for tourists in Tien Giang Province in the Mekong Delta. — VNS Photo Van Dat

HCM CITY — Don ca tai tu (music of the talented) should be recognised as an intangible heritage of the country to curb the impact of Western music's influence on indigenous musical forms, according to international scholars at a conference on preservation of the art form.

Speaking at the three-day event in HCM City, Professor Sheen Dae-cheol of South Korea said Don ca tai tu, which began 100 years ago, holds an important position in Viet Nam.

The history of Don ca tai tu is similar to Gagok of South Korea and Nanyin of China, both of which began as amateur music and developed into more sophisticated forms.

Don ca tai tu, however, has retained its original characteristics.

Because it does not require a stage, it quickly became popular in every corner of society and could be performed under a tree, in a house, on a boat, or under the moonlight.

The Korean professor said he was impressed with the musical instruments. Some of them have only one, two or three strings, such as the monochord, two-chord fiddle and the three-string fretless box spike lute.

"The feeling and soul of the Vietnamese people are embedded in tai tu music. The music, which is an invaluable heritage, applies the yin-yang theory of the East," he said.

"The value of gender equality is also mentioned in Don ca tai tu. Since it began, it has always been performed with the participation of both men and women. Everyone considers Don ca tai tu amateur music, but it is not amateur at all. It is noble amateur music. It deserves to be considered as a world cultural heritage," he added.

Dr Joe Peters of Singapore, who noted that Don ca tai tu was important to the Vietnamese people's life, said that video and audio clips on the art form could be found on the internet.

Prof Yamaguti Osamu of Taiwan's Nanhua University said improvisational music like Don ca tai tu appears in other countries, including India and, especially, Africa.

The music is transmitted orally and has no printed musical notation.

More recordings of the music must be done so that documents can be submitted to UNESCO and the art form can be approved and recognised as an intangible cultural heritage of the world.

Gisa Jaehnichen, a professor in the music department at University Putra Malaysia, praised the charm of Don ca tai tu and the instruments used in performance.

The music is traditionally played in informal venues, often in a close friend's home or in a neighbour's garden.

Its standard orchestra includes a dan tranh (16-string zither), a dan kim (two-chord guitar), a dan co (two-chord fiddle), a ty ba (pear-shaped, four-chord guitar), a doc huyen (monochord zither) and a flute.

Professor Tran Van Khe, musician Nguyen Vinh Bao, who are experts in Vietnamese traditional music, and other local artists said they were highly impressed about the knowledge of the foreign experts who spoke about Don ca tai tu at the conference.

Experts said that performing the music on a big stage or during tourism festivals, which has been done in recent years, was not true to its original nature. —VNS

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Friday, January 7, 2011

Don ca tai tu seeks UNESCO recognition

A don ca tai tu performance in Can Tho Province - Photo: Dang Khoa
The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism has asked Vietnam’s National Academy of Music to file a national dossier on “Don ca tai tu” (southern amateur music) to be submitted to UNESCO as an intangible cultural heritage, reports Thanh Nien.

March 2011 is the deadline for Vietnam to forward its dossier, so a film crew from the institute began a fact-finding tour in mid-November to shoot a documentary on southern amateur music in 14 southeastern and Mekong Delta provinces over two months.

An international seminar on don ca tai tu will also be hosted at the Rex Hotel Saigon on January 9 in HCMC’s District 1. The seminar will feature 33 scientific studies, of which seven are from France, Cyprus, Germany, Malaysia, Japan, South Korea and Singapore.

A singer will perform with traditional instrument musicians playing the dan co (also known as a dan nhi), the Vietnamese two stringed fiddle, dan tranh, or 16 string zither and the doc huyen cam (the monochord, which is now often replaced by the guitar).

Officials say they hope the compilation of a dossier to ask UNESCO for recognition of the music as an intangible culture would protect the nation’s cultural heritage at an international level and raise the community’s awareness of the art while promoting the country’s image to attract more tourists.

As ca tru (ceremonial singing) and quan ho (love duets) in the north or nha nhac (Hue royal music) in the central and gongs in the Central Highlands have been recognized as the world’s intangible heritages, don ca tai tu needs the same recognition.

According to statistics,, 21 provinces and cities in Vietnam have don ca tai tu with 2,019 clubs with 22,643 members and 2,850 musical instruments.

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Thursday, January 6, 2011

Don ca tai tu seeks UNESCO recognition

A don ca tai tu performance in Can Tho Province - Photo: Dang Khoa
The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism has asked Vietnam’s National Academy of Music to file a national dossier on “Don ca tai tu” (southern amateur music) to be submitted to UNESCO as an intangible cultural heritage, reports Thanh Nien.

March 2011 is the deadline for Vietnam to forward its dossier, so a film crew from the institute began a fact-finding tour in mid-November to shoot a documentary on southern amateur music in 14 southeastern and Mekong Delta provinces over two months.

An international seminar on don ca tai tu will also be hosted at the Rex Hotel Saigon on January 9 in HCMC’s District 1. The seminar will feature 33 scientific studies, of which seven are from France, Cyprus, Germany, Malaysia, Japan, South Korea and Singapore.

A singer will perform with traditional instrument musicians playing the dan co (also known as a dan nhi), the Vietnamese two stringed fiddle, dan tranh, or 16 string zither and the doc huyen cam (the monochord, which is now often replaced by the guitar).

Officials say they hope the compilation of a dossier to ask UNESCO for recognition of the music as an intangible culture would protect the nation’s cultural heritage at an international level and raise the community’s awareness of the art while promoting the country’s image to attract more tourists.

As ca tru (ceremonial singing) and quan ho (love duets) in the north or nha nhac (Hue royal music) in the central and gongs in the Central Highlands have been recognized as the world’s intangible heritages, don ca tai tu needs the same recognition.

According to statistics,, 21 provinces and cities in Vietnam have don ca tai tu with 2,019 clubs with 22,643 members and 2,850 musical instruments.

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Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Conference to mull ways to revive southern amateur music

HCM CITY – More than 120 Vietnamese and foreign cultural experts will gather in HCM City on Sunday for a three-day conference to discuss ways to revive don ca tai tu, or southern amateur music.

The organisers said researchers, educators, cultural administrators, and musicians from Germany, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea, and other countries will attend the conference at the Rex Hotel.

Don ca tai tu artists from 21 provinces and cities and four professors representing the International Traditional Music Association will also attend.

There will be 33 reports tabled at the event, seven of them by foreign experts.

Prof Yamaguti Osamu of Japan's Osaka University, who helped get UNESCO recognition for Hue royal music as a world intangible heritage, will deliver a speech.

Prof Le Van Toan, head of the Viet Nam Institute of Musicology, described the conference as being very important.

There are 2019 don ca tai tu clubs in the country having 22,643 members. The number will be increased by the time an application is made for UNESCO recognition as a world heritage, he said.

Prof Tran Van Khe, a master of Vietnamese traditional music, said don ca tai tu was born at the end of the 19th century and has become popular in several countries.

"Don ca tai tu is not just for entertainment but is a communal cultural activity," he said. – VNS

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Thursday, December 23, 2010

Southern amateur music sees revival

HCM CITY — Efforts to preserve and secure UNESCO recognition for don ca tai tu, a form of music performed by amateur artists in the south, are gathering pace.

A seminar held in HCM City on Tuesday sought to gather materials and information on the art for submission to the UN agency.

Dozens of researchers, educators, cultural administrators and musicians attended the meeting at the HCM City Museum.

Vu Kim Anh, deputy director of the Culture, Sports and Tourism Department, said don ca tai tu has lost none of its "miraculous vitality" after more than 100 years of existence.

There are 97 clubs and groups with 1,133 members that propagate the music.

Researchers said the art form is becoming more and more popular among Vietnamese and foreigners though its format has changed for the worse, according to some experts.

Songs are now played as short extracts rather than in full, often leaving listeners unable to understand the meaning.

Composer Ngo Hong Khanh said the art form must be preserved and developed in a creative manner while still retaining all its original values.

Don ca tai tu performer Minh Duc said it is necessary to create a cultural space for the art and popularise it among the younger generations and teach it in schools.

Professor Tran Van Khe presented a CD on don ca tai tu that he and folk artist Bach Hue had made in 1963 for UNESCO.

Viet Nam Traditions of the South, featuring 11 songs, has since found a place in a series called UNESCO Collection of Traditional Music of the World.

Other researchers and composers offered valuable references on the art to a city don ca tai tu research group that was established in August. — VNS

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Thursday, December 9, 2010

Recognition sought for amateur music

CA MAU — Twenty-one provinces and cities in the south are compiling information on don ca tai tu (southern amateur music) that will be submitted for recognition as an intangible cultural heritage from the United Nations' Educational, Scientific and Cutural Organisation (UNESCO).

The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism is collecting all of the research documents, articles and other information on this music genre, which is performed by local amateur singers and instrumentalists.

The music, which contains lyrics about people's everyday lives, is played on traditional Vietnamese musical instruments, including the dan tranh (16-chord zither) and dan co (two-string guitar).

Ca Mau Province's Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism, for example, has found hundreds of research documents and articles, and trained 130 officials to conduct surveys of families who have played the music for generations and don ca tai tu clubs.

In upcoming months, the department will organise seminars on don ca tai tu, and will also film a documentary about the amateur music clubs.

Children's story to be released this week

HCM CITY — Toi Thay Hoa Vang Tren Co Xanh (I see Yellow Flowers on Green Grass), the latest children's story by well-known author Nguyen Nhat Aùnh, is set to hit bookstores nationwide this week.

The story, narrated by a 13-year-old boy, chronicles life in a small village, the activities he indulges in with his younger brother and friends at home and in school, their hobbies, their quarrels, their feelings of fear when they read ghost stories, and so on.

HCM City-based Tre (Youth) Publisher is bringing out 20,000 copies of I see Yellow Flowers on Green Grass in its first print.

Anh is the author of several best-selling children's books including Kinh Van Hoa (Kaleidoscope) and Cho Toi Xin Mot Ve Di Tuoi Tho (Give Me a Ticket Back to Childhood).

Kaleidoscope was made into a 20-part TV series by HCM City Television Film Studio. It was shown on the national television network in 2004 and has been rebroadcast several times on HCM City Television and provincial channels.

Give Me a Ticket Back to Childhood, which connects childhood memories with adult realities, won the Southeast Asian Writers Award this year.

Exhibition displays gifts, foods for Tet

HCM CITY — An exhibition of gifts and processed foods for Tet, the Lunar New Year, opened in HCM City yesterday.

Organised by the Investment and Trade Promotion Centre at its showroom in Nguyen Hue Street, it features products made by 23 businesses in the food, beverages, clothing, footwear, cosmetics, and other industries.

Also on display are gift items like precious stones, pearl jewelry, hand-made pillow, and origami.

The event has attracted some big names like Vissan, Vifon, and Sapuwa.

Buyers can get discounts of 5-10 per cent between December 6 and 12.

The exhibition will go on until February 8, 2011. — VNS

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