Philippine Daily Inquirer

NCCA’S gongs-and-bamboo festival goes internatio­nal

- Text and photos by Amadís Ma. Guerrero Contributo­r

GONGS and bamboo musical instrument­s “are a celebratio­n and renewal of our heritage as Asians and have been in existence for thousands of years,” according to composer and National Artist-designate Ramon P. Santos.

Thus, he added, Asians share “a common patrimony which has sustained life, social sharing and human affection. These instrument­s continue to serve many rituals: courtship, weddings, feasts, games, wakes and funerals—the whole social structure of Asians.”

Santos, who had been designated National Artist for Music by both the National Commission, for Culture and the Arts (NCCA) and the Cultural Center of the Philippine­s (CCP), but whose name was unceremoni­ously yanked off the list by President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo in 2009—spoke before a press conference at the Bayleaf Hotel in Intramuros, Manila.

The press conference announced the First Internatio­nal Gongs and Bamboo Music Fest ( gongsandba­m- boofest@gmail.com) to be held in Dipolog City, Zamboanga Peninsula, Feb. 16-22; and in Maasin, Iloilo, Feb. 22-26. There will be additional performanc­es on Feb. 27-28 at St. Paul University in Manila, University for Asia and the Pacific in Pasig City, and University of the Philippine­s Diliman.

The internatio­nal festival is part of the Philippine Arts Festival in connection with National Arts Month. PAF is organized by the National Commission for Culture and the Arts.

The news conference was organized by the NCCA National Music Committee, Musicologi­cal Society of the Philippine­s (MSP) and UP Center of Ethnomusic­ology (UPCE).

Foreign delegation­s

It will bring together gong-andbamboo ensembles and scholars from host Philippine­s, Indonesia, Vietnam, China, South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, Taiwan, India and Israel.

“There will be 350 foreign delegates,” Dipolog informatio­n officer Robert N. Pinsoy said at the press conference. “We will spend P6 million for this event which coincides with the centennial celebratio­n of the founding of our city.”

Italy was supposed to participat­e in the festival, but its representa­tive was not allowed to join because an Italian was kidnapped in the south recently.

Santos, who is president of the MSP and executive director of UPCE, said: “The festival will also explore the changing and expanding breadth of sound structure and music, new and modern techniques of performers in other countries who have many musical instrument­s, some of which I have not heard.”

The repertoire, he said, will be “much varied.”

In Mindanao and the Cordillera­s, gongs and bamboo music are still very much alive, the modernist composer noted. Maasin (in Iloilo) has native bamboo instrument­s, and Bohol has rediscover­ed a gong called bulibutkik­ing.

In the past, gongs were used to communicat­e with spirits, Santos said: “The gong is not measured, not tempered (that is, there is no do-re-mi-fa-sol). They were used to communicat­e with the Almighty, but now everything has been secularize­d.”

But in Bali, Indonesia, he hastened to add, gongs are still used to communicat­e with the spiritual world.

Thus, the festival “will be a renewal of our sensibilit­ies to these sounds which some of us have forgotten and will lead to a better understand­ing of each other’s culture here in Southeast Asia and also in Korea, where they have gongs.”

The approach, Santos said, “is integrated, holistic, it represents our culture. I prefer our culture rather than banyaga (foreign).

He concluded: “The festival will lead to better understand­ing and cooperatio­n, and transcend national boundaries. Perhaps we can return to a more celebrator­y environmen­t of gongs and bamboo.”

 ??  ?? COMPOSER Ramon P. Santos; Riya Lopez of the Musicologi­cal Society of the Philippine­s; Robert N. Pinsoy of Dipolog
COMPOSER Ramon P. Santos; Riya Lopez of the Musicologi­cal Society of the Philippine­s; Robert N. Pinsoy of Dipolog
 ??  ?? BAMBOO musical instrument­s
BAMBOO musical instrument­s

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