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Muong man’s lifelong devotion to preserving ancient drum dance
For Le Van Ban, an old man
from the Muong ethnic minority group in the northern midland province of Phu
Tho, the Du drum dance has become part of his life.
An old house with a thatched roof on the road to Hung Long commune in Phu Tho’s
Yen Lap district is where Le Van Ban, 59, lives with his wife and five children.
Like many other local Muong people, he lives a hard life, toiling in the fields
all day with a handful of thin buffaloes.
However, behind his rugged appearance, Ban is the only person who still
preserves the Du Drum Dance, an intangible cultural heritage of the Muong in the
region.
The art originated many years ago. When he was 13 years old, he visited a local
village festival and saw an old man with white hair and beard, stripped to his
waist and covered by only a loincloth, dancing with a boy. Their dancing and
beating a big drum was very impressive.
Ban was really hooked. When the festival ended, he followed the performer whose
name was Ha Van Cau, and implored the old man to teach him the drum dance.
Ban then learned the drum dance from Cau for three years, and he was Cau’s only
student.
"According to our traditional customs, women do not learn or perform the drum
dance," says Ban.
Provincial folklorist Dinh Tien Phu explains that in the Muong language, "Du
drum" means “Beating the Drum for Fun and Entertainment”.
"The dance is performed during local festivals, elderly people’s birthday
celebrations, and funerals," he says.
Ban recalls an old, true story in the local Muong folklore: There was a Muong
couple who lived very happily. Suddenly, the wife fell seriously ill and died.
The husband, Dinh Van Lai, felt wretched at the loss of his loving wife.
Moreover, their six-year old son always cried and called out for his mother.
Feeling sorry for the little boy, that spring, the father took his son to a
festival. He bought him a drum to cheer him up. When the father eventually died,
the son beat the drum to see him off. The name Du Drum appeared since then.
From beating a drum simply for fun, drum dancing has evolved into an art.
Movements such as beating the drum, revolving the drum, rolling or holding the
drum are to express the husband’s feeling for his wife and his love for his son.
According to the local Muong, the drum dance manifests their dreams for a
prosperous and happy life. It also expresses solidarity among neighbours and
narrows the gap between rich and poor.
“Animated drum sounds are to see travellers off, and to welcome people who come
back,” says Ban. The Drum dance is also performed in funerals, but with a slow
sad rythm, he adds.
The Drum Dance has been much improved ever since to become an indispensable
cultural activity for Muong people in the region.
In the beginning the drum dance had only one performer, says Ban. Gradually, it
became a community dance, with two forms: eight men with two big drums, or five
men with a big drum and a small one.
The performers include a man who is the main dancer and main drum player, the
second is the assistant dancer, the third man plays the Sona trumpet, the fourth
plays castanets and the fifth person beats a small drum.
The drum is made of buffalo skin, 30cm in diameter and 45cm high from top to
bottom, to make it possible for the dancer to hold it or revolve it quite
easily.
While performing, Ban who is the main dancer, stands on a sedge mat in the
middle of the stage. He beats the drum while dancing, making sure that the rythm
matches with the other instruments.
The main dancer wears red clothes and a red band round his head. The others, in
brown clothes with brown bands round their heads, play the other instruments.
"These musical instruments are fairly normal, but together they produce deep and
powerful sounds that carry the Muong’s passionand and energy well over the
hills," says folklorist Phu.
Established in 1999, the commune's group of the Du Drum Dance has performed for
free at many local and provincial festivals. Every year it gives at least four
or five performances. This is Ban’s pride and joy and also a source of
inspiration for the whole Muong community in their daily life, says commune
People's Committee Chairman Nguyen Van Viet.
Ban describes the Du drum dance as an indispensable part of his life. “I’ve
performed the drum dance for 46 years and each time I perform, I think more
about life. Our only concern is that we are always busy with farm work and have
little time practising," he says.
Source:VietNamNet/VOV |
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