First Time Around: East Asia (2008)

This is an ethnomusicological album of pieces made from sound recordings, during visits to six different countries in Asia during 2007-2008, The sounds are edited into sonic short stories.

Listen

Credits

  • Dave Black – field recordings, laptop, gayageum loops, clarinet, acoustic bass, guay, readings
  • Cylvi M – tangso, shakuhachi, golden egg, singing bowl, readings & rubbings
First time around [South Korea]

About

During, and immediately after, a year and a half living in

South Korea 대한민국,

(teaching English for a living, and to fund further travels – see First Time Around: South Korea),

we travelled to:

China 中国

  1. 挽歌为长江豚 (Elegy for the Yangtze River Dolphins) 01:22

8. 请介意你的脚步 (Please Mind Your Step) 01:33

Japan 日本

2. Cylvi M – シルビエム在佛的脚在京都 (at Buddha’s Foot, Kyoto) 02:16

 

Thailand ประเทศไทย

3.ระดับที่สามพระอารามหลวง (3rd Grade Royal Temple) 04:04
4.เชียงใหม่ร้านรัฐบาล (Chiang Mai government shop) 02:35
5.หมู่บ้านกะเหรี่ยง (The Karen Village) 04:10

Vietnam Việt Nam

6.Việt Nam chào buổi tối (Good Evening Vietnam) 02:25
7.núi và rất cây (Mountain and Very Tree) 04:43

Mongolia Монгол улс

9.Монголын хувьсгалт нам ((It’s a) Mongolian Revolutionary Party) 02:33
10.ханаду ямаа (Goats in Xanadu) 03:32

감사합니다 – ありがとうございました – 谢谢 – ขอขอบคุณคุณ – cảm ơn bạn – Баярлалаа!

Continue reading “First Time Around: East Asia (2008)”

Vietnam Việt Nam

 

July 2008 –

It was a great pleasure to get to Vietnam. There was a stopover in Hong Kong airport – out the windows I could see glass apartment towers, hillsides eroded from deforestation and a polluted green harbour. Then on to Vietnam, a fertile countryside of rice paddies and fruit trees with sudden rock formations rising out of the plains. Everywhere hundreds of Vietnamese in cone-shaped coolie hats were at work in the fields from dawn to dusk… it’s definitely the land of the cone heads. The hats are an elegantly simple design that protect from the sun and rain.

Although poorer, the Vietnamese people overall seemed healthier, happier, and more stylish, industrious, humorous and better looking than the average Korean. I enjoyed the fusion of old and new on display, whereas Koreans keep their traditional things quite separate from their modern life. There was also a refreshing absence of the usual celebrity stooges’ faces everywhere, and no McDonalds restaurants to be found. Instead they had communist-style posters of good workers and Ho Chi Minh. The atmosphere was never dreary or oppressive though – it’s a vibrant, colourful country.

Hanoi, the capital, was full of motorbikes, their horns a constant soundtrack. The traffic is busy but not especially fast – to cross a road you just walk out at a steady pace and the traffic all somehow avoids you. It’s a much better system than in Thailand where you wait for a gap and then sprint across. Catching a motorbike ride with Vietnamese locals is a good way to get around and definitely part of the experience.
The slightly unsatisfying aspect was being on a time limit and being on the tourist trail for some of it. Prices were cheap but not that cheap and there were always locals around trying to sell something, and many small-time scams to get extra money. It’s hard to begrudge them though – they’re doing a great job rebuilding from the American war (one-legged mine victims the most visible reminder) and finding their place in the world. The newspaper headlines were mostly government propaganda (it’s a one-party state) and one that stood out was their goal to become an average income nation by 2020. That contrasts with Korea’s frantic industrial development (at the expense of their own culture and environment) and their new president’s unattainable election promise of 7% growth every year.

Highlights included Cuc Phuong national park where we explored a bat-filled cave where stone-age people had lived 7500 years ago; the national water puppet theatre, a great Vietnamese art-form with live music, carving, action and splashes; a night drinking on a boat on Halong Bay with kiwis and aussies; and the sights and general ambience – there was an overall sense of optimism in the country.

In all, I’d love to go back to Southeast Asia another time with an open itinerary and no time limit, and see Cambodia and Laos as well.

Tonight it’s time to get on the train to Siberia, so I’ll write about Mongolia when I get a chance…

first time around east asia 5(1)

Thailand ประเทศไทย

From Bangkok to Chiang Mai, with Thai images and sounds.

first time around east asia 5(1)

from the album

First Time Around: East Asia (2008)

 

Okinawa, Japan 沖縄日本

ハイサイ! イチャリバ チョデ!  よろしく おねがいします。 きょ-ねん 那覇市に すんでいました と にほんご ちょっと べんきょしました。

In 2011-2012 I lived in Naha (那覇市), the main city of Okinawa Prefecture (沖縄県) in Japan (日本).


 

Nat da Hatt and I recorded a track for our duo album ネオン列車の風景 Neon Train Landscapes there – our version of a traditional shima uta (island song)

The Ryukyu Islands are a whole other world from mainland Japan – there’s no Mt Fuji, samurai, sumo wrestling, geisha or shinkansen.  They have a different culture, food, climate and music – more tropical and laidback, the Hawaii of northeast Asia, with jungle, sugar cane, beautiful sea and coral – umi to sango wa totemo kirei desu ne – and wonderful people and tragic history.

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