Sports & Entertainment
New art project introduces classical music
  • | VNS | February 18, 2019 12:49 PM

The first programme of a special art project to introduce classical music to young people will begin this week in HCM City.


Young artists of Saigon Classical, a club of 30 young artists in classical music, will perform during the club’s new project, Giới Thiệu Nhạc Cổ Điển (Classical Music), which was launched this week in HCM City. — Photo courtesy of the organiser)

Giới Thiệu Nhạc Cổ Điển (Classical Music) is organised by Saigon Classical, a club of 30 young artists that aims to promote the musical genre to young people. The club was established in 2005 in HCM City.


The project includes a series of performances, talk shows and forums featuring classical music, a genre rooted in the traditions of Western culture, instruments and famous music pieces of different styles created and performed by talented artists in different generations.

Its first programme will include a talk show by composer Trần Như Vĩnh Lạc of Saigon Classical.

He will talk about the instruments used in classical music in the 18th,19th and 20th centuries in orchestra such as the piano and organ.

The woodwind and percussion families of instruments will also be highlighted.

The programme will also include a show performed by Lạc and his staff of young music players. The artists will play foreign and Vietnamese music pieces.

“We have support art projects launched by young artists, including Giới Thiệu Nhạc Cổ Điển, because they have improved knowledge and love for music among young audiences today,” said Trần Tuấn Khoa, a first-year student at HCM City University of Law.

Khoa and his friends attended Diễn Xướng Nam Bộ (Folk Singing Genres of the Southern Region), a long-term art project that aims to expand Vietnamese traditional music and theatre by the Soul Music and Performing Arts Academy’s Soul Live Project last year.

The project includes a series of different activities and shows featuring the history of diễn xướng, including folk songs called hò, vè, lý, nói thơ and nói tuồng, and dances and plays of different styles created and performed by southern farmers in the 18th and 19th centuries.

It has attracted dozens of talented artists, music and theatre critics, such as cultural researcher Huỳnh Ngọc Trảng of the HCM City Institute of Culture and Arts Research.

Trảng has more than 20 years of experience in the art and has written more than 70 books and other documents on traditional culture, fine arts and religion of the South.

The first programme of Giới Thiệu Nhạc Cổ Điển will begin at 7pm on February 23 at the HCM City Literature & Arts Association at 81 Trần Quốc Thảo Street in District 3. Entrance is free.

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