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The Lim festival in the northern province of Bac Ninh, dedicated to traditional love duet singing, is expected to lure up to 10,000 visitors on the 13th day of the first lunar month or February 26 this year.
Nguyen Huu
Manh, Head of the Lim Festival Organizing Board on Feb. 24
said that the festival aims to preserve and revive the
valuable, ancient art of love duet singing, or “Quan Ho”,
which has been recognized by UNESCO as part of the world’s
intangible cultural heritage.
The festival
will be held on Lim Hill where the Lim Pagoda is located.
The pagoda is dedicated to Hieu Trung Hau, who invented Quan
Ho.
The festival
itinerary will include the love duet singing ritual at which
ancient melodies with the content praising the merit of gods
and Buddha, are sung. There will also be a love duet singing
festival with performances of love duet songs exchanged by
“lien anh” (brothers) and “lien chi” (sisters), who are
ordinary people hailing from different villages.
The love
duets are an art form that combines various elements,
including music, lyrics, costume, and a unique style of
singing that reflects the close relationship between the
singers. The rich and diverse tunes and fine lyrics of the
songs portray the zest for life and distinctive cultural
features of people in the region formerly called Kinh Bac.
After Quan Ho
was recognized by UNESCO in September 2009, a strategy was
adopted detailing a series of measures to be taken from 2009
through 2015 to preserve this art form.
Accordingly,
the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, the Music
Academy and the departments of Culture, Sports and Tourism
of Bac Ninh and Bac Giang provinces have joined hands in
assisting the local communities to systematically compile
lists of love duet songs, ancient and contemporary, as well
as love duet singers, musicians and composers.
Lim Hill,
where Quan Ho is performed during the festival, will be
developed into a Quan Ho Cultural Centre with an area
reserved for performances.
State
agencies have also set out to help local Quan Ho singers
establish their association and restore the worship songs
which were once used at the Viem Xa village festival.
Apart from
the State’s efforts, local people are encouraged to get
involved in preserving Quan Ho.
“No one can
preserve the arts as well as their creators. Let the people
take on the stewardship of their own culture,” emphasised
Prof. Dr. Ngo Duc Thinh, Vice Chairman of the Asian Folk
Culture Association and member of Vietnam’s National
Heritage Council.
NhanDan (26/02/2010)
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