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National Don ca tai tu music festival opens
Six organisations and five individuals who have contributed to
preserving and developing the artistic value of UNESCO recognised heritage Don
ca tai tu received merit certificates from the Prime Minister at the opening
ceremony of the first National Don Ca Tai Tu Festival in Bac Lieu on April 25
night.
Deputy Prime Minister Vu Duc Dam handed the certificates to the awardees on
behalf of the Government and Prime Minister. The five individuals who received
the certificates were Professor Tran Van Khe, musical advisor at Vietnam
Institute of Musicology, Associate Professor Le Van Toan, Director Vietnam
Institute of Musicology, Professor To Ngoc Thanh, Chairman of the Vietnam Folk
Arts Association, composer Trong Nguyen and reseacher Tran Quoc Thinh of Bac
Lieu province.
"The festival is organised by Bac Lieu, the birthplace of Don ca tai tu, along
with other localities in the region to show our gratitude to the ancestors,
individuals and organisations who contributed to creating and preserving the
music," Deputy Prime Minister Vu Duc Dam said at the opening ceremony.
Dam also said it was a challenge for people to maintain the unique art form's
spirit and soul. "Things that seem very simple have become a heritage of
humankind," he noted.
The national festival aimed to highlight the value of this Vietnamese art form,
four months after it was recognised as an Intangible Cultural Heritage of
Humanity by UNESCO.
The festival gathered 350 artists from 21 provinces and cities in the southern
region, where the music is popular. Bac Lieu city is the centre of the
activities, which include exhibitions of paintings, photos and traditional
musical instruments and Don ca tai tu performances.
Vo Van Dung, secretary of Bac Lieu Province's Party Committee, said the festival
was an opportunity for people in southern provinces to boost solidarity for
better development.
"We are aware that culture is one of the essential factors for development,"
Dung said.
A few hours before the official opening ceremony for the festival, local and
central officials inaugurated the 2,772sq.m. memorial site to Cao Van Lau
(1892-1976), known as the father of cai luong or southern traditional opera.
They recognised the site, which cost 6.3 billion VND to renovate, as a national
historical cultural site.
Placed where the musician was buried in 1976, the memorial was listed as a
provincial historical cultural site in 1997.
Bac Lieu is where the musician wrote classic cai luong piece Da co hoai lang in
1919. It tells the story of a wife waiting for her husband to return home from
battle.
Considered one of the country's main music genres, Don ca tai tu originated from
Hue court music and folk music of the southern region. The genre has been
developing since the 19th century, adapting to local tastes. It thrived in the
early 20th century and remains crucial to the country's traditional culture.
The music is typically performed at festivals, death anniversary rituals and
celebrations by farmer-artists. Instrumentalists and singers express their
feelings by improvising based on 20 principal songs and 72 classical songs. The
art has been handed down orally through generations.
The festival will last until April 29
Source: VNA |
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