Showing posts with label cultural heritage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cultural heritage. Show all posts

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Culture Vulture

At the recent international conference on don ca tai tu (music of the talented) in HCM City, discussions centred on the measures needed for the art form to be recognised by UNESCO as an intangible cultural heritage of the world. Viet Nam News spoke with ethnomusicologist Prof Tran Van Khe about the possibility of achieving this goal.

Could you share some ideas about the conference?

The conference was one of many important activities established to create documents to submit to UNESCO that would help us win recognition of the music as an intangible cultural heritage of the world. The conference was an opportunity for Vietnamese musicians to compare their thoughts about traditional music.

The conference showed that both Vietnamese and foreigners pay interest to don ca tai tu. Attending the conference, I felt very happy listening to many foreign experts talk about traditional Vietnamese music.

Many of the foreigners had spent a lot of time studying the music. Their knowledge was even more extensive than some Vietnamese people. Their opinions will help find the way to preserve the music, so I think the conference was successful.

What do you know about don ca tai tu?

Tai tu music is not music used during ceremonies. It is the kind of music for the poor performed by a small number of musicians and for small groups of listeners. Many people don't understand tai tu music. They think it is non-professional, or something amateur.

Tai means talent and tai tu means talented person, but the players and singers don't perform the music to earn a living. They perform for their own pleasure and for audiences without thinking of money.

The people who play tai tu music are people with noble characteristics. They use the music to replace their speech to talk with each other. People who attend the music performances are very close friends.

The audiences also contribute to the performance. In modern performances, audiences often clap their hands or present flowers to the performers, but they don't participate in the same way as they do in tai tu music. Audiences can help inspire tai tu music performers.

Are there similar kinds of music in other countries?

Yes, there are several kinds of impromptu music like don ca tai tu in the world, especially in India. Indian performers often have an improvisational style. Gagok in South Korea is another example. But not many of them have community values like don ca tai tu.

What do you think about the current situation of don ca tai tu in Viet Nam?

In the past, people performed don ca tai tu for amusement, not for money. But now everyone does it differently. It has been performed on the stage, so it no longer has the same feeling and sense that was followed in the past. It has become semi-professional or even professional.

The art of don ca tai tu in its original sense should be preserved and popularised.

Playing the music is difficult but playing it with deep feeling is even more difficult. That requires hard practice. The young generations now love to learn Western music.

What do you think about asking for recognition from UNESCO at a time when the musical performances have not retained the original sense or purpose?

It is OK if the music has the value of an intangible culture and is loved by the community. The documents that we have to submit do not require a fixed value. The culture can change over time. Of course, we should mention the unavoidable development of the music. In the past, Vietnamese did not perform don ca tai tu as a job. It was considered a higher art form than folk music. Folk music can be imitated but tai tu music should be taught well. We should not apply Western music to don ca tai tu.

Do you have any suggestions to help preserve the music for younger generations?

In order to preserve music, we should create favourable conditions for musicians to live, play music and teach it to young generations. We should give scholarships to poor children who love music and explain music to them so that they will love it and study it with all of their hearts. — 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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Thursday, December 16, 2010

Culture Vulture

Tai tu music inherits thousands of years of Vietnamese traditional music

Prof Dr Nguyen Thuyet Phong is an ethnomusicologist who was honoured by the US government as a National Heritage Fellow in 2007 and one of two Vietnamese listed in the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians alongside Prof Dr Tran Van Khe. Phong talked about the possibility of tai tu music being recognised as an Intangible World Cultural Heritage by the UN.

The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism has tasked the Vietnamese Institute of Music and its departments in HCM City and other southern provinces to develop a thorough profile for tai tu music. This would be submitted to the United Nations' Education, Science and Culture Organisation (UNESCO) which would consider the music as an Intangible World Cultural Heritage status. What role do you have in the project?

It was my pleasure to be invited by Culture Minister Hoang Tuan Anh to work on the project. What part I will play depends on the assignments of the Vietnamese Institute of Music and the HCM City's Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism.

In my opinion, the road ahead is still very challenging. The art form has lost most of its luster to cai luong (reformed theatre), while its performances are much influenced by tan co giao duyen (a mixture of elements of traditional and pop music).

Tai tu music is traditionally performed in visiting rooms. 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.

Performing tai tu music on a big stage as pop and rock music groups do, or like performances during tourism festivals, is not true to its nature.

We should take into account its chamber concert nature when we are striving to restore the art form to its original form in terms of instrumentalists, singers, repertoire, style of singing and instruments, among others.

The most noteworthy surviving tai tu music figures in HCM City include musicians Vinh Bao and Ba Tu who are quite old now and some other musicians. Also, there are artists we don't know about, but we still are trying to find out who they are.

Even though tai tu music today has a much bigger audience, we still need to restore its chamber space that can accommodate small audiences.

Compared to other kinds of traditional Vietnamese music, tai tu music has a much shorter history. Will it pose any hurdle for UNESCO's recognition?

In my opinion, UNESCO recognition is not based on the history of the art form, but on its quality and musical system. In this respect, we can see tai tu music as unique in that it synthesises traditional music of the north, centre and south of the country over thousands of years.

So it has an extraordinary power. Its performance adheres to strict specific rules. Its theory, which has been handed down by generations through word of mouth, draws on many traditions of the past.

Once the art form is restored, we should commit to conserving it.

What do you have to say about the get-together of ethno-musicologists from over the world during a recent conference of the International Council for Traditional Music (ICTM) in Ha Noi city and Quang Ninh Province?

It was a good opportunity for us to advertise our traditional music and learn from international experts in studying and conserving traditional music. It's noteworthy that the ICTM is also advising UNESCO on appraising intangible heritage profiles.

With 54 ethnic groups, Viet Nam is of great interest and inspiration to the world's ethnomusicologists. Some presentations at the conference deal with subject matter like ethnic groups' music and youth, ethnomusicological applications in education, sociology and the mass media. — VNS

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Friday, December 10, 2010

Con Dao listed in top 10-best islands

HA NOI — Viet Nam's Con Dao Island has been named as one of the top ten romantic destinations in the world for 2011 by the UK's Lonely Planet magazine.

Other islands on the list were Yemen's Socotra in Yemen, Australia's Torres Strait Islands, Japan's Yacyana, French Guiana's Iles du Salut, the Republic of Korea's Ulleungdo, Panama's San Blas archipelago, Chinese Taipei's Penghu, the Bay Archipelago and Hog Island off the coast of Honduras and Uganda's Ssese.

Con Dao Island has a strong political and cultural history. Under the French, Con Dao was used as a major prison for opponents of French colonialism.

Con Dao National Park, one of the country's top six biodiversity hotspots for both land and sea, contains thousands of plant and animal species, and provides a range of eco-tourism options.

The island is home to playful black and brown squirrels, many species of native and migratory birds, and even endangered marine animals like the sea cow, green turtle and hawk's bill turtle.

According to the Sai Gon Travel Service Company (Saigontourist), in the wedding season this year Con Dao was one of the most popular honeymoon destinations for young couples.

Quang Binh reserves 21 ancient ca tru tunes

QUANG BINH — Troupes of ca tru (ceremonial singing) in the central province of Quang Binh is now reserving 21 ancient tunes, according to the provincial Culture, Sports and Tourism Department.
The province now has 10 ca tru troupes with 138 artists.

Some of the troupes often hold ca tru classes for local learners aged between 10-20.
Since ca tru was recognised as a cultural heritage in need of urgent protection by UNESCO last year, ca tru troupes in Quang Binh have held over 30 free performances to raise awareness of the art form.
Ca tru, also known as hat a dao or hat noi which dates back to the 15th century, had also been listed among intangible global cultural heritage traditions in danger of disappearing.

HTV to host anniversary of reality-show

HCM CITY – The HCM City Television (HTV) will host an anniversary show for its reality shows Ngoi nha mo uoc (A House of Dreams) and Cau chuyen uoc mo (A Tale of Dreams) at the HTV Theatre tomorrow.

The Hanh Trinh Uoc Mo (A Journey of Dreams) show will feature popular artists, including cai luong (reformed opera) artist Uùt Bach Lan, comedian Trung Dan and singers of Nam Khanh and Ha Tram, who have been guests on two reality shows.

The show celebrates the fifth anniversary of A House of Dreams and the third anniversary of A Tale of Dreams.

The shows, which focus on charitable and other humanitarian activities, are supported by Vina Pomina Steel Co. — VNS

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Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Dac Lac hangs on to vanishing heritage

Gong show: Centuries-old gong music is the precious cultural heritage of Viet Nam's ethnic people. — VNA/VNS Photos Thanh Ha & Hong Ky

Gong show: Centuries-old gong music is the precious cultural heritage of Viet Nam's ethnic people. — VNA/VNS Photos Thanh Ha & Hong Ky

DAC LAC — The Central Highlands province of Dac Lac is being stripped of its cultural heritage as gongs, drums and many ancient hunting knives and tools are used to feed the thriving trade in ethnic antiques, officials warn.

Buon Trap Town in Krong Ana District boasts an all-woman team playing the Jo, a gong designed exclusively for women of the E De ethnic group.

"The team play on two ten-gong sets which are owned by a local family. Six gongs were sold to antique collectors in recent years and two others were broken," said Tran Viet Du, an official with the district's Culture Office said.

"When the team play the Jo, we have to rent gongs from a nearby town for the performers," Du said.

"Buon Trap is one of many locations in the province where gongs have been sold to traders that can never be replaced again," said Y Wai Bya, director of Dac Lac's Culture, Sports and Tourism Department.

"That is due largely to the poverty of the local people. Many people do not hesitate to sell antique gongs to collectors to get large sums of money," he said.

Du and Bya are among many officials who have expressed growing alarm about the antique trade in Central Highlands provinces.

"Researchers specialising in the Central Highlands' culture and history need to come up with long-term strategies for the preservation of gongs, drums and other old items relating to ethnic culture," Bya said.

Bya admitted that the province still lacked policies to preserve gongs and train officials to gain a profound understanding of traditional music and the culture of ethnic people.

Bya said the provincial People's Committee recently approved a policy to assist gong owners.

"Each family that owns an antique gong will receive an annual stipend of VND500,000 (US$25) from the province," he said, giving no further details.

The committee is also working on a project to build in each village a museum to display traditional musical instruments and items used in the daily lives of the ethnic people.

"More festivals will be organised in Dac Lac's villages and districts where ethnic people can perform gongs, drums and introduce their folk music to outside audiences," Bya said.

The centuries-old gong music is a precious cultural heritage of Viet Nam's ethnic people. They play the gong to commemorate a good harvest, during festivals, and to mark occasions like the birth of children, weddings, and funerals.

The Central Highlands gong culture was recognised as a Masterpiece of Oral and Intangible Cultural Heritage by UNESCO in 2006.

Cultural researcher Y Duong, grandson of Y Jut Nie K'Dam, author of the first Vietnamese – E De Dictionary, said he had spent many years working on a project to protect gongs and would submit it soon to the Dac Lac People's Committee for consideration.

Apart from ancient gongs and drums, K'pan long benches used by gong performers and tools used by hunters of elephants and wild animals are much sought after by antique traders.

Ama Pet, a well-known elephant hunter in Buon Don town, said he was among few people who still kept the leather ropes used in elephant hunting.

Pet caught and domesticated 15 elephants using his rope which is more than 10m in length. Elephant hunting is now banned in Dac Lac. He said he intends to sell his rope to have money to spend for the family.

He said he has priced the rope at VND15 million (US$750) including a piece of buffalo leather used to cover the back of the elephant. — VNS

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Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Fest to celebrate cultural heritage

Carved in stone: Stone steles at Ha Noi's Temple of Literature, which have been recognised as world heritage. — File Photo

Carved in stone: Stone steles at Ha Noi's Temple of Literature, which have been recognised as world heritage. — File Photo

HA NOI — A five-day festival will open at the Viet Nam Culture and Art Exhibition Centre this Saturday to mark the sixth Viet Nam Cultural Heritage Day.

Dubbed Hallmark of Thang Long – Ha Noi and the Youth with Vietnamese Cultural Heritage, the festival celebrates the country's rich past and young people's contribution towards preserving the nation's cultural traditions.

An earlier festival to celebrate the 1,000th anniversary of the founding of the Thang Long Royal Citadel – which was recently recognised as a World Cultural Heritage by UNESCO – was a resounding success, organisers said.

On display during the festival will be artefacts belonging to the Thang Long Citadel that were discovered during the excavation of the fortress in 2002.

In addition, about 500 antiques dating from the Dong Son Culture (700-100 BC) to the Nguyen dynasty (19th-20th century) will be on show.

There will be also paintings and photos of Ha Noi, as well as publications and valuable documents kept at the National Library.

The festival has been co-organised by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism; the People's Committee of Ha Noi; the Ministry of Education and Training; and the Association of Viet Nam Cultural Heritage.

Among the activities that will take place during the festival will be a calligraphy demonstration, a display of traditional culture and arts, folk games, music and dances.

Researchers will also hold a workshop on the day to discuss the preservation of Ha Noi's tangible and intangible heritage, such as ca tru (ceremonial singing) and Thang Long folk dance.

A performance in honour of Viet Nam's cultural heritage will be broadcast live on Viet Nam Television from the Au Co Theatre.

The festival will run until next Wednesday. — VNS

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