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In early 2015, she competed in the first season of The Remix, which she won on May 3. [9] Here, she also performed her single "Stop Loving You", which immediately topped many music charts. [10] On May 15, she released the music video for "Vi Ai Vi Anh". The video received more than one million views and topped the Zing MP3 chart upon release. [11]
Dong Son II culture. Mid-1st millennium BCE. Bronze. Traditional Vietnamese music has been mainly used for religious activities, in daily life, and in traditional festivals. The music is considerably diverse due to Vietnam's ethnic population. Moreover, each of Vietnam's ethnic groups owns many unique types of musical instruments.
Hồ Ngọc Hà (born 25 November 1984) [1] [2] is a Vietnamese singer, model and actress.. She started her singing career by releasing her first album titled 24/7 back in 2004
All tracks were written by famous Vietnamese songwriters, including Phạm Duy, Trịnh Công Sơn, Anh Bằng, and Ngọc Trọng.The title track "Em Đã Quên Một Giòng Sông", one of Lam's best-known songs, [2] [3] [4] was performed on Asia Video: Hoa & Nhạc in 1996.
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 ...
The Hong Kong release of the album featured a DVD containing music videos, a remix of "Alive", making of footage and a Chinese version of "Mama Tian Na", not featured on the album. In 2008, at the age of 25, she won the BBC Radio 3 Awards for World Music for the Asia-Pacific region, earning herself the chance to perform at the Royal Albert Hall ...
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 ...
Exactly ten years to the Passion Fruit release, the German pop group Cherona released its version titled "Rigga-Ding-Dong-Song" in 2009 dropping the definite article "the" from the title. The Cherona version on Columbia Records accompanied by a music video [ 7 ] became a minor hit in Europe, particularly Germany (peak #56) and Austria (peak #48).