Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Don Ca Tai Tu is not dying: German expert

German professor Gisa Jaehnichen is confident Vietnam’s “don ca tai tu” - a folk music genre distinctive to the South - is not dying as the country is seeking its recognition as a world heritage from UNESCO.

Jaehnichen who once did a long term researches on the genre is welcoming Vietnam file a national dossier on Don Ca Tai Tu to be submitted to UNESCO as an intangible cultural heritage in March this year.

Tuoitrenews had an interview with her during her trip to Vietnam to attend a three-day conference on the topic concluding Tuesday in Ho Chi Minh City.

How did you get to know Don Ca Tai Tu in Vietnam?

I was in Vietnam studying the language in the early 80’s and I learned everything I could about the culture, including Vietnamese music, of which Don Ca Tai Tu is a part.

What about Don Ca Tai Tu that interests you?

I think all kinds of music have their own interesting characteristics. So is Don Ca Tai Tu.
People say that it’s amateur music but I think it’s very professional.

Amateurism doesn’t mean that you are lacking professional qualities. I would translate it as music of the talented. People need to have a big talent to play but they don’t need to make their income out of their music.

What important to me is that, you can create your own versions. You don’t have a fixed composition that you have to follow. You can input your emotions into the music, according to certain rules.

If you understand the rules you can play very attractively and each performance can be different.

Don Ca Tai Tu is unique to southern Vietnam. There’s also Don Ca Tai Tu Hue, but it’s completely different from the South, which has a more a mixed social background: you have traders, you have craftsmen, you have intelligentsia, you have rich people, you have more poor people, you have farmers altogether playing.

It does not matter where you are from and what your background is.

In Don ca Tai Tu, the music is written first and the lyrics come after and get fitted in. That’s how it’s differentiated from other music genres in Vietnam.

Compared to the other Vietnamese traditional music that you researched on, what is the biggest difference in methodology when you approached Don Ca Tai Tu?

It’s not so much different.

If there is a new instrument that can create different sounds better than the old one, I do not hesitate to try out.

For example with the guitar phim lom (guitar with modified frets) or the Vietnamese violin that has another tuning, I can play pieces of music - for two instruments on one instrument. So that’s a creative fact and the approach to Don Ca Tai Tu is not much different from others.

The methodology is always the same but the outcome is different.

How is Don Ca Tai Tu different from Cai Luong?

I have to say that Cai Luong is completely different from Don Ca Tai Tu. Don Ca Tai Tu is only the source of music but its spirit is not as in Cai Luong.

Cai Luong has another social function: it’s to entertain a big number of people on a big stage. But for Don Ca Tai Tu, you never play on a big stage and you shouldn’t do that because it’s for a small group of people sitting around, played without amplifier, just on the waterside or in the garden.

Cai Luong is on the stage to amuse people or to raise social problems in texts and dialogs and Don Ca Tai Tu is only like a tool to be used in Cai Luong. Of course, a few nice pieces from Cai Luong composed in the past went back to Don Ca Tai Tu. And then Don Ca Tai Tu musicians created longer pieces out of it.

Despite interesting exchanges between both, it does not mean that they have the same social functions. So you can hardly compare the two.

We still have people who love Don Ca Tai Tu but this generation may disappear soon. What do you think about that?

People often think: “If I deal with old things I’m backward and if I’m backward I’m not earning what I should earn to get a better living.” The consumerism, which is also reaching Vietnam very fast, leads to the assumption that old things are bad.

But it needs only a certain time, then people will come back to their inside. The traditions are needed to be sustainable as a society. You cannot just eliminate the old things and think you become a modern person. To be a modern person you need the traditions to create new things. If you think you can grow without traditions, then you are already old.

We’re trying to put Don Ca Tai Tu in the representative list which the UNESCO recognizes as well-preserved heritage. Don Ca Tai Tu is not endangered because many people are interested in it and it still has a life, which is the effort of many people in the last 2- 3 decades.

Don Ca Tai Tu is not dying out, I’m sure.

* Professor, Doctor Gisa Jaehnichen is now working in the faculty of Human Ecology, Music Department, Universiti Putra Malaysia. She wrote her dissertation on modern South Vietnamese compositions and her second lecturer’s thesis on instrumental music in Ca Tru (ancient genre of chamber music) and in Don Ca Tai Tu.

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Conference promotes Hue tourism

White light: Young women in ao dai ready to release flower lanterns into the Huong River at Hue Festival 2010. — VNS Photo Nhat Anh

White light: Young women in ao dai ready to release flower lanterns into the Huong River at Hue Festival 2010. — VNS Photo Nhat Anh

HA NOI — A conference on tourism promotion for the central province of Thua Thien-Hue has been held in Ha Noi to introduce tourism services and cultural programmes to the province this year.

The Hue Traditional Crafts Festival, to be celebrated from April 29 to May 3, will be the key event for tourists this year and will build on the achievements of previous festivals. It will specialise in the arts of bonsai and gastronomy with the theme of Vietnamese gastronomy in the tranquillity of Hue's gardens.

Festival goers will be immersed in the conspicuous cultural ambience through Viet Nam's divine culinary and bonsai arts. Cuisines from distinct geographical regions across the country will be featured: the culinary specialities of the south, the delicate cuisine of Hue with its royal meals, vegetarian food and popular dishes to be served in the city's splendid gardens, and the authentic tastes from the north.

Visitors will also have chance to meet prominent culinary researchers and experts, talented bonsai artists, antiques collectors and other artists in the country in the variety of fascinating artistic programmes and community activities.

For the national year of tourism in 2012, hosted by Thua Thien-Hue Province, the provincial Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism will launch many tourism programmes.

For example, the department will organise tours to discover the treasures of Hue and help tourists understand the legacy of the Nguyen dynasty by experiencing the culture and visiting pagodas.

Let's Experience Hue will introduce tourists to Hue festivals, crafts villages and royal life. Tours take visitors on various routes through the provinces and allow them to discover the heritage of the city. For those who want to relax, there will be walking tours that take visitors to forests, to rest by Lang Co Beach and to discover ancient houses.

"Thua Thien-Hue is an attractive destination for tourists as tourism is the key industry of the province," said Phan Tien Dung, director of the provincial Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism.

"Last year, Hue received 1.5 million visitors, 700,000 of which were foreigners."

At the conference, a co-operation memorandum was signed between Ha Noi's Culture, Sports and Tourism Department and its counterparts from Thua Thien-Hue Province and HCM City.

A similar conference for the same purpose will take place in HCM City on January 19. — VNS

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Literature Prizes go to acclaimed writers

The smell of success: Writer Suong Nguyet Minh. — File Photo

The smell of success: Writer Suong Nguyet Minh. — File Photo

HA NOI — A collection of six short stories by veteran army writer Suong Nguyet Minh has won the Viet Nam Writers Association annual Literature Prize.

Di Huong (Strange Fragrance) focuses on different human issues, especially modern society. While Dem Thanh Vo Cung (The Holy Night) is about the loneliness of a man who lives happily with his wife and children, Cha Toi (My Father) is about an old veteran, who can't adapt with the material lives of his other family members.

Dem Mua Ha Tuyet Roi (Snowing on a Summer Night) is a love story in which the characters face the fading value of love in a fast-tempo world.

The stories present Minh's new writing style, which is "a well combined balance of reality, romance and myth", according to the author. Sex is also mentioned in some of the stories in a fine, sophisticated way. "Like a chef who needs a special spice to create a unique flavour for his dish, sex is used to support the stories' structure, in harmony with the rest of the plot," he said.

Strange Fragrance, published in 2009, won the hearts of the judges who included nine well-known Vietnamese writers.

The Literature Prize was also awarded for a children's short-story collection, Chiec Ve Vao Cong Thien Duong Xanh (Ticket to the Blue Heaven) by Que Huong, and Nguyen Bich Lan's version of Slumdog Billionaire topped the translation category.

The winners will receive their prizes at an awards ceremony scheduled for later in the month in Ha Noi. — VNS

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Singers Day to discuss celebrity responsibilities

HA NOI — The fifth Singers Day will be held on January 17-19 in the northern city of Ha Long.

The day is expected to attract around 200 domestic and overseas Vietnamese singers.

The conference will host a discussion on celebrity culture, their artistic responsibility to the community, artists and internet.

The Noi Vong Tay Lon (Joining Arms) charity gala will take place on January 19 to raise funds for local poor fishing people.

The previous Singers Day was held in Quy Nhon last year.

1,000th anniversary book takes music prize

HA NOI — A book on One-Thousand Year Thang Long - Ha Noi has won the highest prize of the year 2010 by the Viet Nam Musicians' Association.

The book consists of five parts covering court music, ca tru (ceremonial singing), traditional music, modern music and music criticism.

The awards ceremony was held last night at the headquarters of Radio Voice of Viet Nam in Ha Noi.

Viet Nam Orchestra charms in New York

NEW YORK — The National Symphony Orchestra of Viet Nam on Saturday performed at a peace concert held at New York City's Carnegie Hall together with artists from Japan, South Korea and the US.

Vietnamese Ambassador to the US Bui The Giang stressed that the event was a symbol of friendship and closer co-operation between peoples. The event also sent a message of peace and friendship to peoples all over the world, he said.

The concert was conducted by Japanese conductor Honna Tetsuji and featured South Korean teenage talented pianist Isadora Kim.

Photos convey kids' views on social safety

HCM CITY — Photographs taken by a group of fourth and fifth grade students to express their views on pedestrian safety are on show at an exhibition at a HCM City primary.

"Photovoice" at the Nguyen Minh Quang Primary School in District 9, which has more than 100 photos taken by eight children, is part of a project to use photographs to promote social change and improve the quality of life in communities.

Express delivery company FedEx and global NGO Safe Kids Worldwide, the sponsors, have already carried out this project in Brazil, Canada, China, India, South Korea, and the Philippines.

In Viet Nam, they launched it together with the Asia Injury Prevention Foundation in October.

They selected students for photography training and pedestrian-safety education who then took the photos.

"The project will help educate children about pedestrian and traffic safety," Mirjam Sidik, executive director of the Foundation, said.

The photos will be sent to several other schools in the city where they will be displayed for three days each. — VNS

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Sophie Paris donates helmets to primary school students

Sophie Paris Vietnam on Monday presented more than 200 helmets to students at Dong Ba Primary School in HCMC through the Asia Injury Prevention (AIP) Foundation’s Helmets for Kids program to help promote road safety among local youngsters.

AIP Foundation has distributed helmets to almost 1,000 students at the primary school since 2008 under the program. This year, Sophie Paris Vietnam donated bright magenta helmets to the first graders, while older students received replacement helmets.

“Education, safety and development of future generations is a priority at Sophie Paris, and the Helmets for Kids program is a great way to ensure students become safer, smarter road users,” said Nick Jonsson, general director of Sophie Paris Vietnam.

Since 2000, AIP Foundation’s school-based Helmets for Kids has provided students with helmets and road safety education. Parents and teachers are also educated about the importance of helmet use and the need to encourage students to wear their helmets during their daily rides to school.

Mirjam Sidik, executive director of AIP Foundation said, “Our goal with the Helmets for Kids program is to effectively make the helmet a part of the school uniform.”

Helmets for Kids is a public-private partnership platform, through which private corporations sponsor schools and local authorities in partnership with AIP Foundations to implement programs.  Nguyen Ngoc Tuong, vice chief of the HCMC Department of Traffic Safety Committee, quoted statistics from the National Traffic Safety Committee saying that traffic accidents caused 11,449 fatalities and 10,633 injuries last year.

“Most parents do not think about getting helmets for their children or encouraging them to wear helmets to prevent injuries,” Tuong said.

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Student film about baby burials wins contest

Four finalists in the fiction category at the award ceremony - Photo: Thanh Hang
A film inspired by a story about burial services for aborted fetuses won the “Magic of the Heart” student short film contest in HCMC that was announced on Saturday.

 The documentary film “Rest in peace, my baby!” by the team from REC, a student media club, won the first prize in the documentary category. The runner-up was “He” by Tran Minh Nhat, a student from the Radio and Television Broadcasting College II.

Nguyen Le Quyen, an REC member, said their film “Rest in peace, my baby!” was inspired by an old article about a man who conducted burial services for still born or aborted babies in Nha Trang.

“We had to struggle with so many problems to make the film. Sometimes we thought that maybe those babies didn’t want us to make a film about them. Yet we managed to finish it, because we had promised Phuc, the character in our film, to spread the message to the public to stop abortions.” The festival gave prizes for the second runner-up, the most-viewed film, and a special prize for best experimental film. The prizes were cash and scholarships to study multimedia at FPT Arena that hosted the competition.

To watch the films, visit www.youtube.com/user/lienhoanphim.

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Promising The Earth

The failure to realise promises of the people who won the bidding at the charity auction for the flood victims in central Vietnam at the “Miss Earth Contestants and Entrepreneurs” night on November 11 in HCM City has sparked a public outrage

The auction, broadcast live on television around the country and overseas, officially announced the winners’ names along with the amount bid which was over VND74 billion in total. It was expected that after deducting expenses and the original costs of auctioned items, the money would go to the HCM City Red Cross Chapter to distribute to the flood victims in central Vietnam. However, except for small donations that were not involved in the auction, the promises of tens of billions of dong were not honored by the auction winners.

The money never made it to the organizers and the HCM City Red Cross Chapter. The event organizers and the chapter could not even confirm who the winners were as they made their bids over the phone. The only successful bidder that they could be sure of was the director of Bao Long Company who was present in the auction room, and bought a wooden set of four sacred creatures at VND47.9 billion. For some reasons, he did a U-turn and did not pay the money he pledged but instead claimed to donate VND 1 billion.

Many netizens have pointed out the sheer lack of professionalism and preparation of the auction organizers. A serious auction team would have selected people with compassion and the financial ability to participate in the bidding and sent them the details about the authenticity of the items to be auctioned prior to the event. In addition, the organizers did not set out clear, specific provisions about the terms of participation and the obligation to honor commitment. They even allowed auction participants to bid via the telephone without identity checks. The organizers probably relied on the involvement of famous models and beauty queens as MCs to ensure the auction success!

The biggest tragedy is that an auction for a noble purpose has turned out to be a cruel joke. The organizers proved to be incompetent, but worse still the auction winners who broke their promises were just adding insult to injury for the flood victims, and toying with the trust of the television audience and the goodwill of the organizers. They made use of the auction for a brief mention of their company names on national TV and then backed away holding onto their purse-strings; or they regarded the charity auction as a joke. What’s funny about spitting in the face of charity work that brings relief to people who are suffering and homeless through no fault of their own. Have they ever thought about their compatriots in disaster or had a prick of conscience? These heartless souls should never be allowed to participate in a charity auction again. How could they take advantage of it and joke that way? They must be completely without a conscience, as a netizen has said.

This is not the first time that the winning bidders in charity auctions have reneged on their word and shirked their responsibility after appearing in front of the public and television camera. This time, the cheating and falsity has crossed the line. Decent people will not tolerate the despicable person who falsely reaches out a hand of support to the desperate flood victims only to pull it away when they try to take it.

Who can remain indifferent when they know that the flooding season has claimed nearly 200 lives and inflicted material damage worth tens of billions of dong? And still, there are people who can be so callous as to flirt with that pain.

Does that mean compassion these days has become the kind of virtue that you only read about and even a noble deed can be easily turned into a joke? I hope that it is not so, because so many people have come forward to voice their sympathy with those unfortunates, and expressed their outrage with the callers who used the charity auction as a free chance to polish their names, or just for fun.

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