Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Nhạc dân tộc cải biên is a modern form of Vietnamese folk music which arose in the 1950s after the founding of the Hanoi Conservatory of Music in 1956. This development involved writing traditional music using Western musical notation, while Western elements of harmony and instrumentation were added.
Her real name is Trần Thị Cẩm Ly and was born on 30 March 1970, in Saigon.Her hometown is in Qui Nhơn, Bình Định.She is the third child (her fan named her as Chi Tu according to Southern order in the family) of family with six siblings, her father is composer Tran Quan Hien, her two younger sisters are Hà Phương and Minh Tuyết who are also singers (apparently they're locating ...
Đờn ca tài tử (Chữ Hán: 彈 歌 才子) or nhạc tài tử (樂才子) is a genre of chamber music in the traditional music of southern Vietnam. Its instrumentation resembles that of the ca Huế style; additionally, modified versions of the European instruments guitar, violin, and steel guitar are used.
Phạm Duy (5 October 1921 – 27 January 2013) was one of Vietnam's most prolific songwriters with a musical career that spanned more than seven decades through some of the most turbulent periods of Vietnamese history and with more than one thousand songs to his credit, [1] he is widely considered one of the three most salient and influential figures of modern Vietnamese music, along with ...
After graduating, she became a member of the "Tam Ca Phù Sa" band, then migrated to southern California, where she was introduced to Thúy Nga. Thúy Nga has successfully introduced her to the audience. She became famous as a Thúy Nga singer. [3] Hương Thủy first started her singing career in a female singing folk group named "Tam Ca Phù ...
Band performances Ca trù. Ca trù (also hát cô đầu) is a popular folk music which is said to have begun with ca nương, a female singer who charmed the enemy with her voice. Most singers remain female, and the genre has been revived since the Communist government loosened its repression in the 1980s, when it was associated with prostitution.
Quang Lê was born in Vietnam, 1975), with family roots from Central Vietnam in the City of Huế. [1] His Vietnamese accent is “Huế (central accent),” one of the main Vietnamese dialects in Vietnam, but he is able to imitate the southern accent, and he sings with a mixed accent.
Dạ cổ hoài lang (Vietnamese: [zâːˀ ko᷉ hwâːj laːŋ], "Night Drum Beats Cause Longing for Absent Husband") is a Vietnamese song, composed circa 1918 by songwriter Cao Văn Lầu, colloquially known as "Sáu Lầu," from Bạc Liêu.