Let me tell you about the lullabies that most Vietnamese did listen when they were little children. Hat ru (or Lullaby singing) is a sort of folk music often heard in Vietnam, especially in the countryside. Ruas a noun is certainly a song to lull babies, and as a verb is to lull,but Vietnamese women use them to consign their fates and also expressfeelings, such as homesickness or the mood of a wife missing herhusband, etc. In order to make the child slowly fall asleep, the song’srhythm is mostly quiet, the tone is stretched as melodiously as alittle dialogue between the mother and the child.In North Vietnam, ru are sung in five notes, do-re-fa-sol-la. For example, “My child, sleep well, Stilloriginated from six-and-eight line poems with inserted syllables, thesong from Nghe Tinh (Central Vietnam) lies only in three notes,la-re-fa: “Baby, sleep well,
“Imagine you’re walking on a board-bridge fastened with nails, Althoughthe habit of lulling children in Vietnam nowadays is gradually lesspopular than in the old days, these lullabies never disappear butbecome a holy part in every Vietnamese soul who was brought up bymaternal love and sweet songs.
|



Let me tell you about the lullabies that most Vietnamese did listen when they were little children. Hat ru (or Lullaby singing) is a sort of folk music often heard in Vietnam, especially in the countryside. Ruas a noun is certainly a song to lull babies, and as a verb is to lull,but Vietnamese women use them to consign their fates and also expressfeelings, such as homesickness or the mood of a wife missing herhusband, etc. In order to make the child slowly fall asleep, the song’srhythm is mostly quiet, the tone is stretched as melodiously as alittle dialogue between the mother and the child.