Teen talent wants young folk to like folk music

May 04, 2017 | 10:00
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Cao Ba Hung, in his teens, can play more musical instruments than the number of years he’s been on this earth.
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On his own song: Cao Ba Hung won the Sing My Song Viet Nam reality show in January

If this is unusual, what really sets this young man apart is that he has chosen to focus his talents on something other than instruments – song writing.

The 18-year-old began learning to play instruments when he was just eight. Now, he can play the piano, the guitar, ty ba (four-stringed pluck instrument), dan nguyet (moon-shaped two-chord guitar) and dan da (lithophone), Vietnamese traditional drum and more than a dozen other instruments.

Hung’s felicity with so many instruments was in keeping with his father’s wish that he becomes a talented player, but the son’s passion for composing and music production saw him deploy his muse in another direction – by writing songs.

His multiple talents caught the nation’s attention this January when he won the Sing My Song Viet Nam reality show.

He impressed the audience and all four judges as soon as he set foot on the stage, donning an ao dai, Vietnamese traditional dress and holding a fan in his hand.

His very first performance of Tuong Tu (Lovesick) did not disappoint. The audience was charmed by the combination of Vietnamese folk melodies and rap lyrics.

“That a young person like Hung is passionate about folk music will promote this genre meaningfully. This is more valuable than anything that we are trying to do to promote it,” said composer/judge Duc Tri.

“At 18, this [Hung’s performance] is amazing. I really like the folk music in the composition. Even without the traditional long dress and khan xep (Vietnamese traditional headgear like turban worn usually when traditional music is performed), we still feel the folk music in you,” composer/judge Le Minh Son commented after Hung’s Tuong Tu performance.

By creatively using traditional musical instruments like the Baranưng drum, flute and dan nguyet, Hung incorporated Vietnamese folk music into almost all of his works performed at the Sing My Song contest, including Tuong Tu (Lovesick), Kieu (Kieu) and Co van de (There is a Problem). His songs were highly valued by the judges for the way the lyrics matched the language of folk music.

At a time when most youth seem more drawn to music from the West or Kpop, Hung seems to stand out, not just for his love for folk music, but for his strong desire to popularise the genre, especially “among the youth”, as also attract public attention to Vietnamese literary works.

Hung, currently a high school student in HCM City, was born into a family with a strong musical tradition, but says he was more fascinated with technology. By six, he had already learnt to work on Photoshop and design websites. However, it was not long before music claimed his undivided attention.

“When I live with music, I feel like I am being the fullest person I can be,” said Hung.

Having begun to learn the piano when he was eight, Hung was selected to study at the Guangxi Art Institute in China with a scholarship for young talents from the HCM City’s Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism, majoring in traditional music. He was just nine.

“My cousin and I travelled back and forth between Viet Nam and China by ourselves, flying from HCM City to Ha Noi and then taking the train on a journey of many hours.

“Actually, it is now, when I think back to that time, that I feel a bit scared. I was just nine. But then, I was just homesick,” Hung told Viet Nam News.

In July last year, Hung had chance to perform with Vietnamese artists in Russia under the Viet Nam-Russia Culture Exchange Programme.

“Though it was not a solo performance and audience may not have known me, it was such a pleasure that I had a chance to perform with leading artists of Viet Nam,” said Hung.

Such experiences inspired him to stay true to his deeper motivations.

“I had to struggle quite a lot in shifting from playing instruments to composing. My parents wanted me to become a good instrument player and be able to play several instruments. When I was small, I set my own target to play music instruments for at least eight hours a day but eventually I could never make it (my mainstay),” he said.

Hung had showed an aptitude for composing and choreographing when he was 13.

“When I was 13, I liked a girl two years older than me at school. I wanted to tell her this, but did not know how to do it so she would be really impressed. I sat by the piano and composed my first song.

“I then took all the courage I had in my hands, picked up a guitar and sang my song to her. I did not win her affections, but that was how I began composing.”

In 2014, Hung and his four-member group Bon Chi Em (Four Siblings) – a traditional music instrument band, competed in Viet Nam’s Got Talent, but did not go very far in the competition.

Besides singing, he also collaborated with other artists as a songwriter.

“I have long been fond of poetry and have written quite a few. But the readership for poetry is limited, and I love music. My focus is still music,” said Hung.

“Most of my songs take their lyrics from my poems. My works are inspired mostly by my own stories and experiences. Tuong tu in Sing My Song, which is about the feelings of a lovesick boy, is one of them.

“Through my compositions, I would like to bring Vietnamese literature and traditional folk music closer to audience, especially young people.

“I knew about Sing My Song even before it came to Viet Nam. To me, listening to songs performed by their own composer was wonderful. I loved the concept so much that I could not resist signing up for it.”

Hung’s compositions for the show were mostly of folk music.

However, the teenage is also open to other music genres.

“I don’t think that an artist should pursue only one genre of music. For me, wearing hip-hop style clothes or having their hair dyed doesn’t mean those people lack appreciation for folk music. I myself also love modern music. Besides traditional music, I have written songs for rap, EDM and jazz,” he said.

Sometimes, Hung is inspired to combine folk music with modern music. This way, the audience will receive folk music more easily, he feels.

“I am passionate about Vietnamese folk music, and using modern Western music in combination is part of the desire to share this passion with others, especially other young people.”

For now, after winning the contest, Hung is avoiding the media, ’focusing on my studies, songwriting and music production projects only’.

Vietnamnet

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