The Interdisciplinary Resource  
  Subscribe
Login
 
 
     
Search  
Sort by:
Results Listed:
Date Range:
  Advanced Search
 
The World & I eLibrary

Teacher's Corner

World Gallery

Global Culture Studies (at homepage)

 
 
Social Studies

Language Arts

Science


The Arts

Spanish
 
 
Crossword Puzzle
 
 
American Indian Heritage
American Waves
Biographies
Ceremonies/Festivities
Diversity in America
Eye on the High Court
Fathers of Faith
Footsteps of Lincoln
Genes & Biotechnology
Impacts
Media in Review
Millennial Moments
Peoples of the World
Poetry
Point/Counterpoint
Profiles in Character
Science and Spirituality
Shedding Light on Islam
Speech & Debate
The Civil War
The U.S. Constitution
Traveling the Globe
Worldwide Folktales
World of Nature
Writers & Writing

 

Korea's Namsadang: Fresh From the Olympics


Article # : 14848 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 10 / 1988  2,109 Words
Author : Paula S. Lawrence

       Fall 1988 is the time when the whole world has become Korea-conscious. The Seoul Olympic Games caught everyone's attention in September. And in the next two months, Americans will have the opportunity to discover the delights of Namsadang, one of the most dynamic and popular forms of Korean folk entertainment, fresh from performing at the Olympics.
       
        Namsadang grew out of travelling troupes of professional entertainers who once roamed the countryside performing peasant festival music. Going from village to village, they would dance and drum, juggle, walk tightropes, and act out masked dance plays and puppet shows. This fall a ten-member troupe from Seoul, under the direction of the Samul Nori percussion troupe, is bringing the vigorous, at times ritualistic, robustly earthy, and satirical art of Namsadang on its first tour of the United States.
       
        American audiences have previously gotten a taste of Korean folk music with the Samul Nori troupe (the name is derived from the words sa and mul meaning four instruments, and the verb nori, to play). This four-member percussion ensemble won critical praise at the Percussive Arts Society convention in Dallas in 1983 and a featured artists at the Knoxville, Tennessee, World's Fair. Two previous U.S. tours sponsored by The Asia Society in 1983 and 1985 earned the troupe standing ovations with reviews to match. Headed by Kim Duk Soo on the changgo (hourglass drum), Lee Kwang Soo on the k'kwaenggwari (hand-held gong), Chori Jong Sil on the Puk (round drum), and Kang Min Suk on the ching (large gong), the Samul Nori group is the musical heartbeat of the Namsadang troupe.
       
        Drum Virtuosi
       
        Kim Duk Soo began his career at age six, learning the skills of playing both drums and gongs from the great masters of Namsadang. One year after launching his career, at age seven, Kim had achieved such a remarkable mastery of his craft that he won the Presidential Award at the National Farmers Festival Music and dance Competitions in 1959. Not only had he already attained incredible speed and facility on the hourglass drum, but he could also twirl the long paper streamer attached to his hat, the sangmo, at the same time that he played and danced. Eight years after graduation from the Korean Conservatory of Folk Musical Arts, Kim founded him Samul Nori ensemble. He also lectures at the music department of Hanyang University in Seoul.
       
        Like Kim, Chori Jong Sil began his musical career at an early age. Unlike the other members of the troupe, however, he wants born in the south; consequently, he brings a somewhat different type of rhythm and dance to the repertoire of the group. Chori was named "Best Performer" at the National Farmers Festival of Music and Dance in 1959 and at the National Folk Arts Festival in 1964.
       
        Lee Kwang Soo won the National Assembly Speaker's Award at the National Competition in 1962 and taught peasant music and dance in high school. Kang Min Suk, the youngest member of the troupe, already has unsurpassed mastery of the ching.
       
        Samul Nori is dedicated to preserving traditional Korean music and also to performing it in a concert format that appeals to modern tastes. To the delight of audiences, the group experiments with other forms of music--modern music, jazz, African, and
... Read Full Article
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2012 The World & I Online. All rights reserved.