Showing posts with label Radio Voice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Radio Voice. Show all posts

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Famous Australian musicians to perform in Hanoi

Famous Australian musicians to perform in Hanoi

Two leading Australian performers will impress Hanoi audiences at a
free concert at Radio the Voice of Vietnam Theatre on February 28.


The concert, titled “Brothers in Concert: Sounds of Colours”, will be
jointly organised by the Australian Embassy in Hanoi and Radio the Voice
of Vietnam, according to a press release from the Australian Embassy.


It will feature performances by guitarist Leonard
Grigoryan and Joseph Tawadros who specialises in the oud, a kind of
lute, as well as other well-known Vietnamese artists.


The Grigoryan and Tawadros family names are synonymous with modern
Australian classical music. Regarded as one of Australia ’s finest
classical guitarists, Grigoryan is also well-known for playing different
kinds of music such as latin, jazz, folk and contemporary music.


Tawadros is recognised as one of the world’s leading performers and
composers for the oud (an eleven stringed lute of Middle-Eastern
origin). With his brilliant technique and lively performing style, he
has appeared in many concert halls worldwide and has dazzled audience
with his passionate music.


The Australian Ambassador
to Vietnam , Allaster Cox, said that the concert will help to bring
Australian and Vietnamese closer together by this collaboration of
artists from both countries.


Grigoryan and Tawadros
will also share their experiences with students at the Vietnam National
Academy of Music and the Ho Chi Minh City Conservatory of Music./.

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Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Radio Voice of Vietnam wins 2010 ABU award

Radio the Voice of Vietnam (VOV) has won the Jury’s Special Prize
awarded by the Asian-Pacific Broadcasting Union (ABU) at the 47th
ABU General Assembly, which opened in Tokyo on October 19.


VOV took the prize for its documentary “Culture Guardians”, a
30-minute programme, which fascinated audiences with moving stories of
people who have devoted their lives to preserving the beauty and values
of traditional cultures.


This is the first time that VOV has won an ABU prize, although in 2009, an entry from VOV4 made it to the final round.


VOV sent two entries, including “Culture Guardians” by Tran Nhat Minh,
Tran Hong Hanh and Hoang Phuong Trang from VOV2 channel.


The ABU’s Prizes are presented annually, to improve the quality of
radio and television programmes and to strengthen cultural and
educational understanding between member countries in the union and
region.


According to the ABU, in 2010, 25 countries and territories sent in 199 entries, including 141 TV programmes and 58 for radio.


The
ABU was founded in 1964 to develop the broadcasting sector in the
Asia-Pacific region and increase cooperation through exchanges of
information, programmes and technical and services consultancies. The
ABU now has 197 members in 56 countries and territories./.

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