History of Music in North Korea
Regarding of the division of Korea in the year 1945, Korea was separated into the North and the Republic of Korea or the Democratic People...
https://worldhitz4u.blogspot.com/2014/02/history-of-music-in-north-korea_9063.html
Regarding
of the division of Korea in the year 1945, Korea was separated into the North
and the Republic of Korea or the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea or South
Korea. A rebel song-writing culture was channeled into support for the state,
eventually became a pattern of patriotic song that is known as taejung in the
1980s mixing the classical and Korean traditional musical types.
source of picture: www.theatlantic.com
Almost
the North Korean pop songs are usually performed by a young female singer with
an electric group, percussionist and follow up singers and dancers. Some of the
North Korean pop songs like Hwiparam (whistle) have become renowned in the South
Korean. They are mainly influenced by the Korean pop music and some songs
titles include Don’t Ask My Name, We Shall Hold Bayonets More Magic, Our Life
Is Precisely a Song, The Dear General Uses Distance –Shrinking Magic
(Chukjibeop) and The Joy of Bumper Harvest Overflows Amidst the Song of Mechanization.
Also songs like Reunification Rainbow and we are one; sing of hope for Korean
reunification. In the year 2012 the North Korea’s first girl ensemble, the
Moranbong Band make their world first public appearance. There are a group of
five North Korean women who were hand-selected by Kim Jong Un.
DJ
Andy Kershaw from BBC radio noted, on a visit to the North Korea and the only
recording that is available were the pop singer like Jon Hye-yong, Ri Pun-hui,
Jo Kum-hwa and Kim Kwang-suk and the groups of Wangjaesan light music band, the
Mansudae Art Troupe and the Pochonbo electronic bands, who play in a pattern of
Kershaw which refers to as light instrumental with well-known vocal. There is
also State Symphony Orchestra, the Sea of Blood Opera Company, an orchestra,
two choruses and a group dedicated to Isang Yun’s compositions, all in
Pyongyang, the Pyongyang film studio which also produced many instrumental
songs for its films, and many programs on Korean central TV which has music and
also make performances on the central radio and television orchestra.
The
music of the North Korean is like any general Korean music, includes types of
both folk and classical, courtly music, including genres such as sanjo nongak
and pansori. Pansonri which is a long vocal and percussive music that is played
by one singer and one drummer, the lyrics tell one of the five diverse stories,
but distinctive by each performer, often with the updated jokes and audience
participation. Nongak is a typical form of percussion music; it is typically
played by twenty to thirty artists. Sanjo is completely instrumental that
shifts rhythms and melodic modes during the song. The instruments used include
the change drum set against a melodic instrument, such as the gayageum or
ajaeng.
The
music of the North Korean follows the principles of Juche (self-reliance)
ideology. The characteristic marchlike, upbeat music of North Korea is
carefully composed, well individually performed, and its lyrics and imagery
have a clear socialist content. Some of the religious or new traditional music
may still exist in North Korea, but there is no reliable source west.
The
main common music genre is the patriotic song which is known as taejung kayo,
which initiated in the 1980s. The songs are generally sung by female artists
with accompanying band or choirs that followed the large group (either western
pattern or a component of western and traditional) or show band. The
composition and performance of all the music in North Korea is led by the
state, and all the lyrics are optimistic. Many of the music is composed for
movie, and the works of the Korean composer Isang Yun from 1917 to 1995, who
spent much of his time in Germany and also popular in North Korea.
The
North Korea traditional instruments have been improved in order to allow them
to contest with the western instruments. Many of the older musical types remain
and it is used in both traditional performances that have been agreed to the
ideas and the way of life of the present North Korean communist state and to
follow the present songs of praise to Kim II Sung, and his son who is the
successor.
The
present Ongnyugeum zithers and the Sohaegeum four cords fiddle are North Korean
current versions of traditional Korean musical instruments which is both used
in the present musical types and traditional.