Wednesday, October 6, 2010

People’s Artist, singer Y Moan loses cancer battle

Vietnamese People’s Artist Y Moan
Vietnamese People’s Artist and pop singer Y Moan died last Friday at the age of 53 after a long fight with stomach cancer, reports VnExpress.

The artist’s funeral will be held in the central highlands city of Buon Ma Thuot in Daklak Province on Tuesday morning. The artist wants to be buried in his garden to be always close with his family.

Born in 1957 in an poor  Ede ethnic family, Y Moan started to sing at age seven when he joined a traditional ethnic band in Daklak Province. He studied at the Hanoi Conservatory of Music from 1979 until 1986.

Y Moan was famous for songs such as Oi M’Drak (Hey, M’Drak), Ly ca phe Ban Me (Ban Me coffee cup), Giac mo Chapi (Chapi’s Dream) and Doi chan tran (Bare foot), which expressed his love for his homeland.

Y Moan performed internationally in China, North Korea, South Korea, Thailand, Germany, Poland and France.

In 1997, Y Moan was recognized as a Meritorious Artist, for exceptional artistic achievements. In 2000 the Culture and Information Ministry recognized his lifetime career achievements. He also has been honored as People’s Artist, the highest honor given by the State for artists.

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Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Inane cable TV leaves HCMC viewers frustrated

Ho Chi Minh City residents do not have much choice when it comes to cable television, having to choose between SCTV and HTVC. And then, it is a case of six of one and half a dozen of another in terms of programming quality and viewer-friendliness.

In the last year Saigon Tourist and Vietnam Television (VTV), who own SCTV, have increased monthly subscription three times, doubling it to VND88,000(US$4.4) last month.

They explained that the money is required for upgrading equipment, buying new programs, and producing new shows.

One of the channels they claimed to have improved is SCTV1, a comedy channel. On October 2 a new in-house comedy was scheduled to premiere at 8.30pm. But at the announced time, there were only commercials.

Finally the show began at 8.45pm. It featured a conversation between two drunkards and apparently left most viewers cold. To make things worse, there was a burst of commercials every 20 minutes or so.

Many subscribers complain that SCTV is too focused on films and then only broadcasts old ones.

SCTV9, for instance, is dedicated to Asian movies but shows mostly Chinese movies from the nineties. SCTV is meant for movies from all over the world and SCTV16 for western films.

SCTV7 is meant for theater but also shows films, as do “general programming” channels like SCTV6 and SCTV12.

Another complaint is that most shows broadcast on SCTV are repeats of what have been shown on national channels like VTV and HCMC TV (HTV). Movies shown on the general film channel are repeated on other channels the same day.

SCTV promised to start showing Vietnamese films at prime time in September but has yet to do so.

From having just one channel that broadcast Vietnamese and foreign films along with many foreign channels, the cable company has expanded and now has 17 SCTV channels which also show music, sports, skits, and cartoon.

In the last few years many foreign channels like MTV, Travel and Living, and Super Sports have gone and been replaced by SCTV’s own channels.

In the same boat with HTVC

Many people decided to stop subscribing to SCTV after its serial fee hike.

Sensing an opportunity, HTVC launched a promotion to wean away customers from its rival – customers who had paid SCTV but wanted to switch to HTVC did not have to pay the installation charge.

But soon many became disillusioned after realizing that they were hardly getting anything better.

Commercials and TV shopping get as much screen time as programs, with commercials also permanently running in the form of a ticker at the bottom.

Old movies, game shows, and music shows broadcast on HTV’s terrestrial channels get another airing on its cable channels. HTVC+, a news and information channel, only shows commercial and TV shopping, sometimes for as long as an hour.

Huy Van of Tan Phu District said: “I stopped watching SCTV since there are not many sports programs, especially soccer, though the fee kept increasing. I thought HTVC would be different and switched. But now I realized that they are just the same.”

“The quality of HTVC’s cable programs is going down," Nhat Thien of District 7, who has been subscribing to HTVC for three years, said. "The signal is often lost and not fixed for up to a day."

"The sports channels are boring with just a few live broadcasts of soccer or volleyball. The rest of the time, sports channels only play music.”

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Dong Van Stone Plateau recognized as a geological park

Dong Van Stone Plateau in the northern mountainous province of Ha Giang has been recognized as a member of the Global Network of National Geoparks (GGN).

The news was announced last Saturday by the Vietnamese delegation attending the European Geoparks Conference in Lesvos, Greece.

The plateau has now become the first geological park in Vietnam and the second geological park in Southeast Asia after Langkawi Geological Park in Malaysia.

The GGN proposed Vietnam strategizes a master development plan to encourage people to preserve cultural and geological heritage values together with local sustainable development.

The park is expected to eliminate poverty through sustainable economic development in Ha Giang province.

The Dong Van Stone Plateau’s dossier was one of six approved at the conference.

Dong Van, which has remained untouched for hundreds of millions of years, has mammoth rocks spread over four districts – Quan Ba, Yen Minh, Meo Vac, and Dong Van – and is 1,000m above sea level.

The plateau is made up of at least 80 percent limestone and has fossils of thousands of species of ancient creatures from 400-600 million years ago.

It is also home to several cultures that sprung up over the centuries. Currently 250,000 people belonging to 17 ethnic groups live on the 574-square-kilometer plateau.

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Stone plateau listed as geopark

To be conserved: Dong Van Stone Plateau Geopark has evidence of the Earth's evolution, rocks, caves, valleys and other features. — File Photo

To be conserved: Dong Van Stone Plateau Geopark has evidence of the Earth's evolution, rocks, caves, valleys and other features. — File Photo

HA NOI — The Dong Van stone plateau in Viet Nam has officially been recognised as a member of the Global Network of National Geoparks (GGN) at a conference in Lesvos, Greece.

Dong Van Stone Plateau Geopark is one of six areas which was approved at the conference on Sunday.

It became the first geopark in Viet Nam and the second in Southeast Asia, after Langkawi Geopark in Malaysia.

Dong Van Stone Plateau Geopark is about 150km from the northern mountain province town of Ha Giang. It is well known for various shapes of karst stone with different characteristics, especially karst pyramids.

The area has been surveyed by Vietnamese scientists and specialists from Russia, Poland, Japan, Belgium, and Germany. Around 40 areas have been discovered there with valuable evidence about the Earth's evolution, rocks, caves, valleys and other features. The plateau is made up of at least 80 per cent limestone and has fossils of thousands of species of ancient creatures from 400-600 million years ago.

It is also home to several cultures that have sprung up over the centuries. The 574sq.km plateau is home to about 250,000 people belonging to 22 different ethnic groups.

The GGN's Advisory Council asked Viet Nam to develop a master plan for Dong Van stone plateau which will include the community in geographic and cultural heritage conservation. — VNS

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Best shots of Thang Long win awards

HA NOI — Dawn at O Quan Chuong by Nguyen Hoang Duong upstaged 1,500 photographs of Ha Noi to win the Thang Long Moments photo competition on Saturday.

"We hoped to find refreshing angles and emotions of our near and dear city of Ha Noi through this competition. All competing photos were able to capture the normal life of Ha Noi, which is simple but glorious, down-to-earth but classy," said Nguyen Tuan Duc, deputy editor-in-chief of Ha Noi Moi newspaper and the head judge of the competition.

Summer noon by Tran Thi Tuyet Mai and Old Quarter Cafe by Ta Quang Bao were the competition's runners-up.

The 52 final-round photo exhibition, jointly held by Ha Noi Moi newspaper, Sony Electronics and Santa Viet Nam, are now on display at 29 Hang Bai Street, Ha Noi, until Thursday.

Famous stoneware showcased

HA NOI — The famous Bat Trang pottery village in Ha Noi's Gia Lam District is marking the capital's millenium anniversary by producing and showcasing 1,000 stoneware items.

The stoneware will be exhibited from today to Saturday at the village.

"The exhibition aims to celebrate Bat Trang Pottery's cultural and artistic values and its talented potters," said Gia Lam District's Culture and Information Department head Do Van Thinh.

Themed Bat Trang Pottery – Traditional and Contemporary, the exhibition brings together antiques and commercial items, which account for 30 and 70 per cent of the pieces, respectively.

The crafts are dragons from the Ly dynasty, which established Ha Noi as the capital; a carved portrait of King Ly Thai To's historical edict to relocate the capital to Ha Noi; and a 3.15m-tall vase.

Classic Japanese films to be screened

HCM CITY — Akira Kurosawa's cult film Rashomon (1950) will be among the eight to be screened at a week-long festival in HCM City beginning on Friday.

The festival will open with Happy Flight (2008) by Shinobu Yaguchi at the BHD Star Cinema, February 3 Street, District 10, from October 8-14, with support from the Japan Foundation.

Tony Takitani (2004), Kamikaze Girls (2004), Sansho the Bailiff (1954), 5 Centimetres per Second (2007), Yunagi City Sakura Country (2007), and Memories of Tomorrow (2005) will also be shown.

All of them will have Vietnamese voice-overs and English sub-titles.

Tickets can be obtained free at the Japanese General Consulate, Nguyen Hue Street, District 1.

The festival will then move to Nha Trang from October 22 to 24. — VNS

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Monday, October 4, 2010

Vietnam orchestra to perform in New York

The Vietnam National Symphony Orchestra will perform at Carnegie Hall in New York next January under the baton of Japanese conductor Honna Tetsuji.

Self-taught South Korean piano prodigy Isadora Kim, 16, will join them at the concert sponsored by Vietnam-based NEO Design - Advertising Company Limited and organized in collaboration with the Ministry of Culture, Sport, and Tourism.

Kim Ji Eun, real name Kim Ji Eun, who lives and studies in Ho Chi Minh City, did not receive formal training since she did not exhibit any particular music talent as a child.

She learnt by downloading video clips of renowned composers and imitating them since moving to HCMC three years ago.

She was invited by the orchestra to perform at a cultural exchange symphony concert in December when she had just signed a contract with Carnegie Hall in New York.

“Kim is a talented pianist whom we hold in high esteem and we are honored to perform with her,” Tetsuji, a multiple award winner who has been the VNSO’s musical adviser and conductor since 2001, said.

The concert will feature the US and Vietnamese national anthems, G. Mahler’s Symphony no.4, a piece popular in the US since the artist had performed it at Carnegie Hall just before his death.

“VNSO and I have practiced and performed Symphony no.4 for the last four years; so, we feel very confident about our next performance,” Tetsuji added.

The proceeds from the concert will be donated to Hieu Ve Trai Tim, a charitable organization that helps underprivileged Vietnamese children with congenital heart disease.

“This event aims at using music as a medium for friendship among Vietnam, S. Korea, Japan, and the US,” Nguyen Van Tinh, head of the ministry’s International Cooperation Department, said.

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Visitors flock to tourism fest

Visitors at the photograph exhibition –

Visitors at the photograph exhibition – "Ha Noi 1,000 Years Old" – at the Temple of Literature view some of the 1,000 photos on display. — VNS Photo Viet Thanh

HA NOI — Thousands of visitors attended the opening day of the International Tourism Festival in the Bao Son Paradise Theme Park on Saturday.

The festival features a wide range of cultural and tourism information about countries on five continents. International tourism companies and industry representatives from many countries have come to the festival to display their destinations and services such as Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, China, Bangladesh, Brazil, Egypt and Japan.

Vietnamese tourism businesses are taking this opportunity to present their tourism services at more than 90 booths, while Ha Noi agents are introducing the city's potential at 180 separate booths.

Hout Sinuon, deputy director of the Cambodian Statistics and Tourism Information Department, said many festival attendees had already visited his booth.

"We are here to promote our culture and tourist attractions," he said. "We think we will successfully lure tourists to Cambodia."

An international workshop today will focus on practical benefits of co-operation opportunities, experience exchange, tourism development and joint-venture tourist projects.

Check it out: Visitors are introduced to speciality and tourism services at a Lao booth. — VNS Photo Minh Thu

Check it out: Visitors are introduced to speciality and tourism services at a Lao booth. — VNS Photo Minh Thu

The Bao Son Paradise Theme Park is the biggest entertainment and tourism complex in the city. Opened to the public last year, the park was developed to quench the local population's thirst for entertainment and relaxation.

The 20ha entertainment and tourism complex consists of four main areas: traditional craft villages of Viet Nam, a replica of Ha Noi's old quarter, an eco-tourism area and a culinary section offering cuisine from all corners of Viet Nam.

Many cultural and art activities are being organised throughout the park during the four-day festival.

A stage has been set up at the park's gate to feature international music and a carnival. Visitors can also enjoy listening to traditional Vietnamese music such as cheo (traditional opera), folk singing from the central region, chau van (spiritual music), quan ho (love duets) and ca tru (ceremonial singing) at the village hall in the traditional craft village area. Two puppetry performances will be held every day during the festival.

Visitors will have the chance to join folk games such as walking on stilts, bamboo swinging, human chess and throwing a ball through a ring at the ethnic village's replica of a Thai stilt house.

The park's old quarter area brings back Ha Noi's past life through calligraphy demonstrations, xam (blind blusker) singing, to he (toy figurines) making and street vendors.

"We're trying to offer as many traditional Vietnamese art performances as possible," says Nguyen Truong Son, director of Bao Son Group, owner of the park. "The performances will change everyday during the four day exhibition so visitors will be able to enjoy something different each day."

"With the theme Thang Long-Ha Noi, Convergence of 1,000 Years, this will be the biggest event held to celebrate the 1,000th anniversary of the capital, and the 50th anniversary of the Ha Noi Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism's tourism industry," said Mai Tien Dung, deputy director of the department.

"The International Tourism Festival is a key National Tourism Year activity and aims to introduce and honour the cultural and historical values of the capital. This event will also help promote Viet Nam's tourism products and services in the international market," he said.

The park and Thang Long Road, where the park is located, were built to mark the city's millennium.

The opening ceremony for the Cong Nhan (Workers) Theatre was another cultural highlight that took place on Saturday in the capital.

Chairwoman of the city's People Council, Ngo Thi Doan Thanh, and vice chairman of the People's Committee Phi Thai Binh attended the ceremony.

Located at 42 Trang Tien Street, the theatre was first built in 1917 and was used as a cinema. After the liberation of the city from the French in 1954, the name of the theatre was changed to its current name.

The theatre's renovation began in October 2007. The three-storey theatre, which includes a 500-seat auditorium and a well-equipped stage, is now ready to host a variety of different events.

The theatre's opening is helping celebrate the city's grand anniversary.

On the same day, a collection of 94 valuable books about Thang Long-Ha Noi were unveiled at the National Library in the capital.

A display showcasing documents about the capital city is also open to the public at the library.

Nguyen Dang Duc Bao's win in the men's 8,750m event at the Ha Noi Moi newspaper's Run for Peace around Hoan Kiem Lake helped his Khanh Hoa team secure the team title yesterday in Ha Noi.

Bao, who has been the runner to beat during the past several years, stole the triumph from Nguyen Van Lai from the Military team in the last hundreds metres.

Lai failed to defend his title and finished second, followed by Bui The Anh from the Border Guard team.

The Border Guard surpassed the Military to take second place in the team event.

On the women's side, Thanh Hoa sprinter Nguyen Thi Phuong won the gold medal in the 5,250m event. Nguyen Dang Thanh Thuy, who is Bao's younger sister, came in second while Nguyen Thi Huong from Thai Binh finished third.

Phuong's top place failed to help her Thanh Hoa team finish in the top three. The team title went to Khanh Hoa, with Thai Binh taking second and Quang Ninh finishing third.

Khanh Hoa easily won the overall title at the event.

Apart from the events for professionals, the running contest also had categories for amateurs.

The annual event marks the 56th anniversary of Ha Noi's liberation (October 10) and the 1,000th anniversary of the founding of the capital. — VNS

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