Trịnh Công Sơn

From: Trude Bennett <tabennet@email.unc.edu>

Reply-To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>

To: Vsg@u.washington.edu, ryanharvey@riseup.net

Date: Wed, May 28, 2008 at 10:44 AM

American song-writer/activist looking for information about tunnel

performers and other music of the resistance during the American invasion.

Hello friends. I am a song-writer and activist wanting to write a brief

article about the music surrounding resistance to the American invasion. I read recently about musicians and performers traveling the tunnel systems performing for the guerrillas, but only a brief paragraph. I put a small, 4-times a year publication about music and politics, especially activist musicians using their music alongside social and political movements.

In the U.S. we only hear about the music coming from England and America

against the war, but never of the music of Vietnam and Laos against it, or surrounding the social movements of the time.

So I am looking for any information about music/performance in the tunnels, or around any other musical/performance elements during the

American War.

PLEASE REPLY OFFLINE DIRECTLY to Ryan Harvey at <ryanharvey@riseup.net>

Thanks and peace.

Ryan Harvey

Even If Your Voice Shakes...

www.riotfolk.org/voice.html

Riot-Folk Music Collective

www.riotfolk.org

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From: Stephen Denney <sdenney@ocf.berkeley.edu>

Reply-To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>

To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>

Cc: ryanharvey@riseup.net

Date: Wed, May 28, 2008 at 10:54 AM

Aside from the musicians and performers travelling with PAVN and NLF soldiers there was also Trinh Cong Son, whose ballads are generally considered anti-war. And there was an anti-war movement in the south. The Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam, which is now banned in the country, was a major force in this peace movement.

- Steve Denney

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From: ryan nelson <sociolgst@yahoo.com>

Reply-To: sociolgst@yahoo.com, Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>

To: vsg@u.washington.edu, ryanharvey@riseup.net

Date: Wed, May 28, 2008 at 1:44 PM

Not able to find any data on tunnel singers; however, enjoy a wealth of sources on Trinh Cong Son and others.

For info on Trinh Cong Son, the widely heard but banned by the South Vietnamese government poet-musician whom wrote about the plight of Vietnamese people during the U.S. (American) War and folk queen Joan Baez labeled the Vietnamese Bob Dylan, view

Kamm, Henry. Dragon ascending: Vietnam and the Vietnamese. 1996. Arcade. p 196+.

Jamieson, Neil L. Understanding Vietnam. 1995. Univ. of Cal. p 326+.

Broughton, Simon et al. World Music: The Rough Guide. 2000. Rough Guides. p 267.

Rosenthal, Benjamin S. “The Vietnamese ‘Middle Ground.’” Congressional Record. Oct. 3, 1969. p 2.

<http://www.virtual.vietnam.ttu.edu/cgi-bin/starfetch.exe?3CjlsuF0uGJhhLOee128@Oighg1auNc08zwuyT5CGuE5Ps6rrUdR18Mzs41

rpk0SW.@7htFhj@zeAAgySpvisND5o3fJlklrXlq2wyZzhzM/2131412026.pdf>.

(Mentions Nguyen Cao Ky’s cracking down against youth dissent figures such as Trinh)

For a brief story about how Xuan Hong, a [N.L.F.] singer, defined a protest song, and the criteria differences between VN and U.S. protest songs, view Rodnitzky, Jerry L et al. Feminist Phoenix: The Rise and Fall of a Feminist Counterculture. 1999. Greenwood. p 69.

<http://books.google.com/books?id=OAjEQXg1gHAC&pg=PA69&dq=viet+cong+music&lr=&as

_brr=3&sig=rCV2elmEm40kGkWT5_0z_x3XZhs>.

For info on the N.L.F.’s use of protest music to indoctrinate, view Capps, Walter H. The Vietnam Reader. 1991. Routledge. p 241.

Would be interested in reading your article once finished, Ryan.

Peace

Ryan Nelson

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From: Molly O'Connell <meh145@columbia.edu>

Reply-To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>

To: sociolgst@yahoo.com, vsg@u.washington.edu

Date: Wed, May 28, 2008 at 2:17 PM

Xuan Hong (Nguyen Xuan Hong) was not a singer, but a composer. He wrote several famous revolutionary songs (eg Tieng Chay Tren Soc Bombo, Mua Xuan Tren TP. HCM, Mua Xuan Ben Cua So, Xuan Chien Khu, Bai Ca May Ao and Chiec Khan Tay), and died in 1996. In Vietnam, his style is not defined as that of 'protest music,' but instead as part of the classical revolutionary style (ie nhac truyen thong cach mang, not nhac phan chien). He is known for his choral arrangements and focus on optimistic themes.

The google link does not provide footnotes, so I could not check the author's reference. However, I imagine Rodnitzky is referring to this Xuan Hong.

Regards,

Molly

2008/5/28 ryan nelson <sociolgst@yahoo.com>:

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From: Hoang t. Dieu-Hien <dieuhien@u.washington.edu>

Reply-To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>

To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>, ryanharvey@riseup.net

Date: Wed, May 28, 2008 at 3:06 PM

I was told by friends who lived in the North during the war that any music that was not revolutionary was banned. So, nhac truyen thong cach mang, or nhac do (red music), was all that could be heard those times in the North.

Some nhac phan chien, as we knew it in the South, were banned in the North also. Trinh Cong Son's music, which is on the melancholy side, even the nhac phan chien, was considered too maudlin (uy mi). I would like fellow Saigonese to confirm or correct me, but I would not classify Trinh Cong Son's music as "protest music". Anti-war, yes, but not protest. "Day ma di" would be more of a protest song, or other rousing songs that Saigon students would sing while marching or demonstrating against the war or the Saigon government.

Peace,

Hien

2008/5/28 Molly O'Connell <meh145@columbia.edu>:

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From: Stephen Denney <sdenney@ocf.berkeley.edu>

Reply-To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>

To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>

Cc: ryanharvey@riseup.net

Date: Wed, May 28, 2008 at 5:58 PM

To what extent were Trinh Cong Son's songs banned or censored in the south during the war years? I remember young Vietnamese friends of mine in the late 70s who would listen to his music as sung by Khanh Ly. After 1975 there was a major campaign launched to eradicate all "decadent and reactionary" cultural influences in the country, which included "yellow music".

- Steve Denney

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From: Nhu Miller <trantnhu@gmail.com>

Reply-To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>

To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>

Date: Wed, May 28, 2008 at 9:49 PM

Trinh Cong Son did not fare well with the government after 1975 and

abandoned song writing. He was the greeter at his siblings' restaurant

and became a mediocre still life painter -- which ironically made him

a wealthy man. Viet Kieu enthusiastically bought his paintings and he

was able to buy a well appointed villa on Duy Tan (the new name

escapes me for the moment: is it Pham Ngoc Thach or Pham Ngoc

Thao St?) The last years of his life, he lived well, even though he hardly

ate, he continued to subsist on alcohol and air. He died of a liver

ailment, perhaps cirrhosis, that was probably linked to alcohol.

I went to a sold out Trinh Cong Son concert in Ha noi last year -- and he seems

fully rehabilitated, if not accepted.

T.T.Nhu

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