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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

“Soundscapes of Asia” opens at Dipolog Sports Complex

By Mary May A. Abellon

DIPOLOG CITY, Feb. 20 (PIA) - - The local government of Dipolog City in collaboration with the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA) launched the exhibit for Tunogtugan: First International Gongs and Bamboo Music Festival on February 18  at Dipolog Sports Complex.
Photo courtesy by: Ruel D. Tabada
The exhibit, dubbed “Soundscapes of Asia:The Gongs and Bamboo Music Tradition” is in partnership with the Musicological Society of the Philippines, UP Center for Ethnomusicology and Andres Bonifacio College. 

Dr. Ramon P. Santos, festival director noted that in music, bamboo instruments not only provide cultural and geographic identity to its practitioners, but also define distinct aesthetic qualities to their expressions, partly to their natural substance and partly through their acoustical technology as demanded by the performance itself. 

Background

The power to create sounds is the power to create culture. This serves as a memento that the ingenuity of the human race supplicates to the sensitivity of the living world in a contemporary society and proffers to the struggle of communities for the assertion to configure their particular landscapes.

The main objective of the exhibit is to explore the dynamic practice of gongs and bamboo in the context of musical experience. There is a cultural knot around the Asian region with respect to the sounds produced by gongs and bamboo instruments.

The gathering of data for the exhibit was a collaborative effort of the cultural stakeholders of Zamboanga del Norte. Aurea Brigino Lopez was the head researcher with Asst. Researcher Loen M. Vitto and other field researchers Mapee D.Z. Singson; Sunnie Noel; Evelyn A. Luna; Nellie R. Saberon; Cora Paz C. Gako; Leila Amatong; Jasmin Ybañez; Christie Angel Alensub; Ma. Luz Fredesvienda Gumela; and Archival Researcher Amado Reyes. The group conducted a thorough research of the Subanen community  in Siayan, Zamboanga del Norte which represents 98% of the population. 

Members of the curatorial team included Cecilia S. De La Paz, Ph. D.; Patrick D. Flores, Ph. D. and; Mapee D.Z. Singson. 

Dr. De La Paz while giving the background of the exhibit lauded Dipolog City  through the sterling leadership of Mayor Evelyn T. Uy for hosting the festival saying that of all the places they have travelled, Dipolog City is the best. The hospitality of the people, accommodations, venue, and other preparations made are worth mentioning.

The team is looking forward to people being enthused and encouraged with the cultural ties we have with other Asian countries through the soundscape of various music traditions.

The Exhibit

In the exhibit, you will be amazed with the display of different instruments made of bamboo and brass. Some of these instruments are the clapper; patangguk; patatag; slit drum; lip-valley flute; parallel-string tube zither; scraper; matraca; flat gongs; xylophone; stamping tubes; panpipe; and buzzers. 

People will be able to appreciate the rich culture of Subanens  and how gongs and bamboo music instruments affect their daily lives especially during festivities like the buklog, a ritual gathering that celebrates their way of life and beliefs.

You will also be entertained while sitting on a bamboo chair watching the culture and rituals of the Subanens. (PIA9)