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Manage No PI00000812 Country Cambodia ICH Domain Performing Arts

Description | Master Kong Nay on his show | ||
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Place | File Size | 881 KB | |
Definition | 2032 x 1102 | File Format | jpg |
Copyright |
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Cambodia
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PI00000811
Chapei Dang Veng
Master Kong Nay performs in the seminar
Cambodia -
PI00000813
Chapei Dang Veng
Master Kong Nay with his Chapei at home
Cambodia -
PI00000807
Chapei Dang Veng
Master Prach chhuon showing his Chapei at his home
Cambodia -
PI00005727
Chapei Dang Veng
Master Prach Chhuon, with his Chapei at his house in Takeo Province
Cambodia 2009
Article
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DI00001074
Cambodia’s ICH Chapei Master Transmits Public Health Messages
In Cambodia, ICH is deployed for the transmission of important public health messages. One of the traditional functions of Chapei Dang Veng artists in Cambodian society is to convey important news and information to the community. Today, Master Kong Nay honors this tradition while amplifying his reach through social media. The 75-year-old Master Kong Nay, one of the rare great masters of the Chapei Dang Veng, sings about hand-washing and social distancing and other COVID-19 safety tips. In 2016 the UNESCO Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage approved the granting of financial assistance totaling US$230,000 to Cambodia for the urgent safeguarding of Chapei Dang Veng, a musical tradition that features a lute (a chapei) accompanied by the performer singing. There are only two surviving great masters of the chapei, but they do not practice it actively because of their age. The safeguarding plan submitted by Cambodia, in consultation with artistic and educational organizations, includes the training of chapei teachers, fellowship programs for young masters, as well as a festival. photo 1 : Chapei instruments ready for blessing at the Buddhist ceremony Pchum Ben © Catherine Grant photo 2 : Chapei Dang Veng artists in Cambodian ⓒ Cambodian Living Arts
CULTURE 360.ASEF.ORG 2020 -
DI00000275
GAUGING MUSICAL VITALITY AND IMPLICATIONS FOR SAFEGUARDING: THE CASE OF CAMBODIAN CHAPEI
This article briefly presents a framework designed to gauge the level of vitality or endangerment of music traditions and suggests how the tool can be used to inform music safeguarding activities across contexts. The framework is the Music Vitality and Endangerment Framework (MVEF), developed and first presented in my book Music Endangerment: How Language Maintenance Can Help (Grant, 2014). The MVEF draws inspiration from various language vitality assessment tools, particularly UNESCO’s Language Vitality Framework (2003). In the absence of any such tool for gauging music vitality or endangerment across contexts, the MVEF was developed to fill this gap.
Catherine Grant Senior Lecturer in Music Literature and Research, Queensland Conservatorium Griffith University 2017