Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Once being rooted in France, Thuy Nga's husband, Mr To Van Lai, a former professor in Viet Nam, participated in the building of their first music house. With a better sense of the diasporic market, Lai created a division of Thuy Nga called Paris By Night , which produced videos of Vietnamese diasporic shows.
Duet 6 verses Vọng cổ by Năm Cơ and Văn Vĩ. Vọng cổ (Vietnamese: [vâwŋmˀ ko᷉], chữ Hán: 望 古, "nostalgia") is a Vietnamese song and musical structure used primarily in the cải lương theater music and nhạc tài tử chamber music of southern Vietnam. [1]
The traditional music of Vietnam has been heavily influenced by Chinese music, mainly in terms of musical instruments and performance styles. [3] The introduction of American music, particularly rock and roll and pop music, has influenced the development of modern Vietnamese music.
Lang Van is the only US-based Vietnamese production company to operate both in the United States and Vietnam. It has retail stores in Westminster ( Little Saigon ) and San Jose, CA, Paris, France, Washington D.C., Houston, TX, and Atlanta, GA.
Cao Văn Lầu (22 December 1892 – 13 August 1976), also known as Sáu Lầu (Lầu the Sixth in Vietnamese), was a Vietnamese musician. He was the original composer of the song vọng cổ which started a new genre of cải lương music in the 1920s.
When he was 13 years old, he participated in the video recording Van Son 9 with the song "Killing Me Softly with His Song". While in high school , he regularly participated in school musical productions, and in year 11, he became the first Asian student at his high school to become the Vice President of the student body.
In order to reach Việt Bắc, Văn Cao arrived at Phú Thọ, and then walked along the river Lô to the place of the Viet Minh headquarter. [1] During this time, the French carried out Operation Léa to attack the Viet Minh's headquarter, and Lô River was also a place of fierce fighting.
Nhạc đỏ or literally Red Music is the common name of the revolutionary music (nhạc cách mạng) genre in Vietnam. [1] Red Music was formed during the communist Việt Minh and the First Indochina War and later strongly promoted across communist North Vietnam during the Vietnam War, to urge Northerners to achieve reunification under the Workers' Party of North Vietnam and fight against ...