Ideologies in Asian Bird Music-Dance: Unities in Place/Motion
Bird music-dance traditions in some parts of Asia have interesting ideologies linked to place and motion. In Thailand, Garuda is a royal dance and has the King’s patronage; however, the Ginggala (half-bird, half human) of the Tai Yai (an indigenous group) has the laymen’s support. The Tai Yai’s ideology of localism transcends boundaries; they adapt and create a new sense of place. In Laos, Nouth Phouthavongsa (Ministry of Information, Culture and Tourism) has a pedagogy to understand the Noi/Nok (bird) involved in music/dance. She teaches the song “A lady who is a bird” to children as a precedence to a dance lesson. In Malaysia, I located the Dayaks’ sustained bird traditions despite constant incursions of industries, logging, and deforestation. Their ideologies of belajai (going away to find one’s self) and be’iana (one root) help in understanding the rajah beuh (eagle dance). Lastly in Japan, the Ainu’s bird music-dances such as the Hantori Hunchikap has movements that portray nurturance, e.g., birds teaching their young to fly. I examined music and dance according to the Ainu’s view and spirituality linked this to their environs.
[Activity Reports]
The Royal and the Laymen Divide: Bird Music-Dances in Central Thailand as Markers of Place and Migration
Not a Peacock But a Ginggala: The Tai Yai's Mythical Human-Bird in Places and Particularities
Songs as Precedence to Dance: Understanding The Pedagogy of Learning Kinnari in Vientiane, Laos
Incursions and Sustained Malaysian Bird Dance Traditions
- Main Cities of Activity
- Thailand: Burapha, Chiang Mai Laos: Vientiane Malaysia: Penang, Kuala Lumpur Japan: Hokkaido, Tokyo
- Host Institution(s) / Individual(s)
- Sanchai Uaesilapa (Professor, Dean of Faculty of Music, Brapha University)
- Khampheng Thammavongsa (Chairman, Theory and Composition Department, National School of Music and Dance)
- Anis Nor (Managing Director of Nusantara Performing Arts Research Center (NusPARC))
- Hokkaido Ainu Culture Research Center