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 I trust that the concert will be held very successfully," sh

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lynk2510




Male Number of posts : 657
Registration date : 2011-01-31

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PostSubject: I trust that the concert will be held very successfully," sh   I trust that the concert will be held very successfully," sh Icon_minitimeSat Jun 25, 2011 1:24 am

dary American musician Bob Dylan, whose songs became anthems of the 1960s anti-Vietnam War era, blows into Ho Chi Minh City on Sunday for his first-ever concert in the communist nation. While the symbolism is stark for members of the West's ageing "counter-culture" generation, many in youthful Vietnam have never heard of the man who wrote "Blowin' in the Wind" and other songs of protest and struggle. "I don't know who he is," said Tran Trung Duc, 21, a Hanoi IT student.



Dylan's music helped to shape a Western generation that was in conflict with authority. But about half of Vietnam's population is under the age of 30 with no memory of the years of war with the United States. "They don't have any political connection with the era in which Bob Dylan became famous," said Chuck Searcy, a Vietnam War veteran who has lived in the country since 1995.



Dylan will play in Vietnam's largest and most-westernised city, the former Saigon, as part of an Asia-Pacific tour marking 50 years since his first major performance on April 11, 1961. He heads to Vietnam from Shanghai, where he performs Friday night after a China debut in Beijing on Wednesday. After reportedly banning a concert by Dylan last year, Beijing agreed he could perform if his songs were vetted by censors. Vietnam's foreign ministry spokeswoman, Nguyen Phuong Nga, could not say whether Dylan's songs would have to be reviewed by Vietnamese authorities, but a review by censors would be normal procedure.



Washington and the European Union this week expressed concern over human rights and free expression in Vietnam after a high-profile dissident was jailed for anti-state propaganda activities, including advocating an end to one-party rule. In Beijing, also criticised by activists and Western governments over rights, Dylan did not play two politically-charged songs that are among his most well-known: "The Times They Are A-Changin'" and "Blowin' in the Wind". In the former song he says: "The order is rapidly fadin', And the first one now will later be last." The second song asks: "Yes, 'n' how many years can some people exist, Before they're allowed to be free?"



Brad Adams, an executive director at Human Rights Watch, accused Dylan of allowing censors to choose his playlist. "Dylan should be ashamed of himself," he said. Nga, of the foreign ministry, said the concert was being eagerly anticipated in the country of 86 million.

"I trust that the concert will be held very successfully," she said. Since poverty-st
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