Monday, February 21, 2011

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.

Related Articles

Hanoi pagoda houses priceless Buddhist relics

Legend has it that at the beginning of the Ly Dynasty’s rule 1,000 years ago, the King, hoping to develop Buddhism, went in search of a scared land to build a temple.

When passing through what is now Dong Vo in Hanoi, he saw two giant trees that struck him as an embodiment of sanctity and decided to build Vien Dinh Pagoda there.

Despite turning 1,000 years now -- legend also says they stood there long before the pagoda was built -- the enormous Siamese rough bush trees continue to produce beautiful yellow blossoms that release their heady scent every summer.

But the astonishing thing is that the trees, native to Southeast Asia, are usually medium-sized and grow to a maximum height of eight meters. This jaw-dropping pair is dozens of meters tall and has enormous trunks.

Another precious relic lays right in front of us as we walked past the large gate into the sacred temple: an ancient wooden bell tower. It is held up by massive columns made from immense ironwood trees and inside is a huge bronze bell that goes back to the time the temple was built.

We were struck by the massive bell’s antique beauty, engraved as it is with ancient writing and delicate decorative patterns.

Its chimes are believed to ward off evil spirits and protect the locality.

Locals tell of dark times when the area was plagued by devils which only the sacred bell’s peals helped hold at bay.

Sacred land

Vien Dinh Pagoda is an important pilgrimage destination with its large number of revered Buddhist relics.

Since 2002 Thich Chon Phuong, its head monk, has visited major Buddhist temples in countries like India, Sri Lanka, and Myanmar for religious and cultural exchanges.

pagoda 2

Vien Dinh Pagoda head monk Thich Chon Phuong

His trips have managed to take Vietnamese Buddhism and stories of the sacred origins of Vien Dinh Pagoda outside the country, and evince keen interest in them.

Vien Dinh got its first relic when he met with the chairman of the World Buddhism Union, Thich Huyen Dieu, in India in 2003.

It has now score of them donated by seven Buddhist centers around the world.

Preserved carefully in a large glass container, they give the room an ethereal air.

Phuong has also helped bring some priceless treasures to other pagodas nearby, “to invoke the great blessings and share the power of divine grace.”

 pagoda 3

The ancient massive bell of Vien Dinh Pagoda

Related Articles

Art of embroidery on show

Single-thread: Handmade embroidery pieces are on display at the From a Stroke to a Thread exhibition by French artist Lionel Descostes. — VNS Photos Truong Vi

Single-thread: Handmade embroidery pieces are on display at the From a Stroke to a Thread exhibition by French artist Lionel Descostes. — VNS Photos Truong Vi

HA NOI — An exhibition presenting the work of French embroidery artist Lionel Descostes has opened at L'Espace, the French cultural centre in Ha Noi.

The exhibition, entitled From a Stroke to a Thread, showcases 40 handmade embroidery pieces on taffeta, made using a single-thread technique and the result of eight years' work by Descostes in Viet Nam.

"For me, eight years was a long process of fatigue and pressure," said Descostes. "But I love Vietnamese embroidery and always wanted to do something to preserve this traditional craft."

Descostes studied visual art and technique in France and decided to live in Viet Nam to pursue his love for the nation's traditional embroidery. He also hired hearing-impaired girls from local vocational training centres and trained them for six-nine months to do embroidery.

"The paintings represent my collective work with these Vietnamese girls, whom I found to be very talented and skillful embroiderers," said Descost at the exhibition opening.

He expressed the view that traditional embroidery could find its place within contemporary art and said that the exhibition would open a new vision for visitors on an popular but little understood artform.

The exhibition runs until March 4 at 24 Trang Tien Street, Ha Noi. — VNS

Related Articles

Cai luong artist marks 30 years

Old school: Cai luong artist Kim Tu Long (left) poses with actress Thoai My. Long will celebrate his 30-year career by a live performance in HCM City this week. — VNS File Photo

Old school: Cai luong artist Kim Tu Long (left) poses with actress Thoai My. Long will celebrate his 30-year career by a live performance in HCM City this week. — VNS File Photo

HCM CITY — Cai luong (reformed theatre) artist Kim Tu Long will mark the 30th anniversary of his career with a live performance in HCM City this week.

Thien Duong Cua Toi (My Paradise) will feature extracts from cai luong plays that helped him achieve fame – including Day Song Bach Dang Giang (Waves in the Bach Dang River), and Nang Tien Mau Don (Peony Fairy).

Long, also the show's director, said it offered him a chance to achieve his dream of "paradise" – or, as he described it, an ideal theatre show where several performances were staged in the best possible conditions and actors work hard.

Long, real name Hoang Kim Long, will be joined by Thoai My, Phuong Hang, Trong Nghia, and Que Tran for the show.

Comedians Hoai Linh and Bao Quoc, and singers Cam Ly and Phi Nhung will be special guests.

Day Song Bach Dang Giang will not be a solo effort. Instead, Long will collaborate with young director Vu Minh, and the play will feature nearly 150 dancers.

Long, born in Sai Gon (now HCM City) in 1966, developed an interest in cai luong at 14. He learned to sing vong co (nostalgic tunes), a traditional southern art form, and perform cai luong from Vuong Quang and the late People's Artist Phung Ha.

In 1985, he was a member of Tran Huu Trang Troupe 3, one of the region's leading cai luong performers. His strong voice and dance skills quickly made an impression on audiences.

In 1992, he won the prestigious Tran Huu Trang Award given to promising cai luong artists.

He also won the Nguoi Lao Dong (The Labourer) newspaper's Mai Vang (Golden Ochna) Award for Favourite Cai Luong Actor in 2002, 2003, and 2009.

Thien Duong Cua Toi will be staged at the Hoa Binh Theatre in HCM City on Friday and Saturday. — VNS

Related Articles

HCM City bicycle race gets facelift

HCM CITY — Ten years after it was first held, the Sai Gon Cyclo Challenge has been rejigged and will be organised in its new format at the Phu My Hung Urban Area in HCM City on March 12.

Cycle Challenge Version 2.0 aims to raise US$30,000 to help provide education to poor children.

The race at the Crescent will be open only to platinum and gold sponsors under the new format.

There will be eight of them – VinaCapital Group's VinaLiving, Adidas, HSBC, Hoang Long Hoan Vu, Jardines, Megastar, Halliburton, and VNG, the sole platinum sponsor.

It will be a relay race featuring four riders in each team, with the top three teams qualifying for the finals.

"It is like Formula 1 for cyclos," director of Sai Gon Children Charity (SCC), Paul Finnis, told a press conference on Thursday.

"We hope the HCM City community will join us for an exciting morning of racing and, in the process, help provide education for children," Finnis added.

An online campaign was launched on Thursday, with SCC partnering Zing Me, Viet Nam's largest social network, to launch a new version of Parking Challenge, one of the most popular games on Zing Me.

SCC will use the money raised through the race to support disadvantaged children in HCM City and the southern provinces of Dong Nai, Tay Ninh, Tien Giang, Tra Vinh, and Binh Phuoc.

Since 2001 it has raised $500,000 for building schools and providing scholarships and vocational training, enabling more than 3,500 children to equip themselves with the skills necessary to work their way out of poverty. — VNS

Related Articles

Piano's journal at Opera House offers glimpse into life

Young pianist Trang Trinh will perform her “The Piano's journal” show featuring Chopin, Beethoven, Mozart and other famous composers in Hanoi this Wednesday and Ho Chi Minh City this April.

The show in Hanoi’s opera house at 8pm at 1 Trang Tien Street is designed to display passions in a person’s life cycle from innocence of a child to pain in love and sadness and wisdom in separation, expressed in classical and romantic styles.

Song without word (Mendelsshon), Salut d’amour (Edgar) and the complete three-chapter Moonlight Sonata (Beethoven) will take audience a tour around various human emotions.

Born in 1986 in Vinh Phuc Province, Trang Trinh has just graduated from the Royal Academy of Music in the UK.

She has been invited to work for the London-based All Souls Orchestra, and she has had various performance tours in Italy, Austria, Hungary and Ireland.

In 2007, she won the Francis Simmer Prize for playing solo piano, and the Lilian Davis Prize for her performance of Beethoven‘s Sonatas.

One year later, she was awarded the Gretta GM Parkinson Prize for her outstanding academic records.

Tickets are available at the Opera House at VND300,000, VND500,000 and VND1 million.

Related Articles

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Bob Dylan’s show to tribute legendary Trinh Cong Son

There will be an hour tribute to the legendary song-writer Trinh Cong Son in Bob Dylan’s show scheduled to take place in Ho Chi Minh City-based Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology University (RMIT) on April 10.

Trinh Cong Son has been dubbed the “Vietnamese Bob Dylan” for his anti-war songs.

He is widely considered one of the most salient figures of modern Vietnamese music with more than 600 compositions. April 1 this year will commemorate the 10th anniversary of his death.

Bob Dylan’s show organizers have contacted Son’s family to prepare for the tribute. However, the famous American singer-songwriter will likely not perform any of Trinh Cong Son’s songs or music, according to newswire Dat Viet.

“Currently we cannot say anything for certain as everything is still under preparation and we’re in the process of trying to obtain the permit,” said Nguyen Trung Truc, Son’s brother in law.

This is no confirmation from RMIT yet. However, Bob Dylan’s show promises to be a spectacular performance set up by his own crew.

The Minnesota-originated Bob Dylan dropped out of school and went to New York to pursue his dream of becoming a music professional. At age 20, he was signed to Columbia Records and his career started to take off.

Dylan has both amplified and personalized musical genres, exploring numerous distinct traditions in American music—from folk, blues and country to gospel, rock and roll, and rockabilly, to English, Scottish, and Irish folk music, embracing even jazz and swing.

He was listed among 100 most influential people of the 20th century by the Time Magazine in 1999.

“Clean Cut Kid” and “Masters of War” are two songs he wrote about the Vietnam War.

Related Articles