Văn Cao


Văn Cao was a Vietnamese composer whose works include Tiến Quân Ca, which became the national anthem of Vietnam. He, along with Phạm Duy and Trịnh Công Sơn, is widely considered one of the three most salient figures of 20th-century Vietnamese music.
Văn Cao was also a notable poet and a painter. In 1996, he was posthumously awarded the Hồ Chí Minh Prize for Music.

Career

After the Nhân Văn–Giai Phẩm affair, a movement for political and cultural freedom in 1956, he had to stop composing. Most of his songs, except Tiến Quân Ca, Làng Tôi, Tiến Về Hà Nội, and Trường Ca Sông Lô were prohibited in North Vietnam.
All of his songs were once again authorized in Vietnam until after the Đổi Mới, 1987.
In 1992, the American composer Robert Ashley composed the solo piano piece Văn Cao's Meditation, which is based on a National Geographic magazine's image of Văn Cao playing his piano.

Works

Songs

Love songs

Source:Buồn tàn thu Suối mơ Thiên Thai Bến xuân Cung đàn xưa Thu cô liêu Trương Chi
  • ''Đàn chim Việt''

Patriotic songs

Bắc Sơn Chiến sĩ Việt Nam

March songs

Tiến Quân Ca Bài ca Chiến sĩ Hải quân Hải quân Việt Nam hành khúc Không quân Việt Nam hành khúc Tiến về [Hà Nội]

Choir songs

  • ''Hải Phòng mở ra biển lớn''

Others

Đêm sơn cước Gò Đống Đa Hò kéo gỗ Bạch Đằng Giang Làng tôi Mùa xuân đầu tiên Ngày mai Ngày mùa

Poems

Anh có nghe thấy không
*

Paintings

Cô gái dậy thì Thái Hà ấp đêm mưa
  • ''Cuộc khiêu vũ của những người tự tử'''