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Vietnamese New Wave - Part II

Posted by Eric Brightwell, June 8, 2009 02:01pm | Comments (13)
Due to popular response, here's a follow-up to my initial blog on Vietnamese New Wave. For those of you who may not have read it, Vietnamese New Wave (less often called Asian New Wave) is not Vietnamese music. Think Northern Soul, a British genre of music that didn't come from British artists, but were beloved by 70s speed freaks for their common sound. At least, they didn't make it, but they took it, played it at dances, made bootleg mixes of it on tape and CD. The songs in the genre share easy-to-dance-to/syncopation-avoiding beats (setting it apart from Freestyle), easy-to-learn and obviously ESL lyrics, and are completely devoid of pretense or irony. My love and exposure to this amazing music is owed entirely to an amazing person, the flawless tastemaker, Ngoc Nguyen.


Vietnamese New Wave artists come from a variety of scenes including Italo-Disco, (English, French and Swedish) Synthpop and (German and Spanish) and Eurodisco. Beginning in the some time around the mid-to-late '80s, these bubbly, infectious tunes found an unexpected audience in the Vietnamese diaspora who disseminated these gems through the aforementioned mixtapes, parties and bootleg mix CDs which you can still find in Little Saigons around the globe.

We carry many of these artists at Amoeba. Most are found in the Freestyle section. However, a lot are found in, erm... Rock. So ask at info if you can't find something.

French Flag

La Francitronique
- French synthpop
Where the French are widely known for their chanson and yé-yé, as well as their considerable contributions to Romanticism, house and rap (among other musical forms), their central importance in the development of electronic pop music is bizarrely less well known than, say, the Germans' or Italians' -- even though Jean Michel Jarre and The Rockets were making electronic pop music back when Kraftwerk were still bearded, flute-playing hippie longhairs. Nonetheless, most French synthpop was sung in French, thereby considerably limiting its audience. But at least two acts are firmly within the Vietnamese New Wave canon.




F.R. David

Kashmir

Magazine 60

German Flag

Freizeithknast
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German Eurodisco
Like most Eurodisco, the German variety is often lumped in with Italo, despite its Teutonic origins. Although musically it’s quite similar, there is an overall greater emphasis on pop song structures resulting in a slightly less club-oriented, keytar-dominated sound that takes it further away from its disco roots. Additionally, whether produced by Dieter Bohlen (Lian Ross, Modern Talking, Blue System, C.C. Catch, &c) or not, many German Eurodisco songs bear his influence, or that of others in his style. Whereas the Anglosphere proved fairly unreceptive to German Eurodisco, the artists found massive fame in Central, Eastern and Northern Europe; the Middle East, South Africa, and of course East and Southeast Asia.

Angela Lee

Bad Boys Blue

CC Catch

Cheryl Hardy

Fancy

Gina T

Jim Player

Joy


Kay Franzes

Kelly Brown


Lian Ross


Modern Talking

Mozzart

Sandra

silent circle

Stravaganza

Italian Flag

Italio Stalio
- Italo-Disco
Initially, what came to be known (only in retrospect, mind you) as Italo disco grew out of a synthesis of Space Disco's sci-fi preoccupation and (usually) Hi-NRG's staccato rhythms. Although “disco” became a dirty word in the Anglosphere, much of the rest of the world wasn’t ready to give up the ghost in the arcade machine. Whereas rock and rap grew unhealthily preoccupied with authenticity and machismo, Italo remained blithely indifferent and the videos often featured heavily-made up or scantily clad figures chosen more for their figures than singing talents. Although Italo is often used to describe all music in the ‘80s Eurodisco scene, here it’s only used for genuine Italian artists…although I hesitate to use the words “genuine” and “artist.”

Den Harrow

Fake

Fun Fun

Gazebo

Kano

Katey Gray

Ken Laszlo

My Mine

Wish Key

Sabrina


Savage

Catalonian Flag

El sonido Sabadell - Spanish Eurodisco
Unlike their Mediterranean neighbor, Italy; Spain isn’t nearly as widely recognized for their '80s Eurodisco scene. In fact, it's much more likely to be referred to as Italo than its German Eurodisco counterpart. To be sure, there is little to distinguish Spanish Disco from Italo-disco musically, but the Spanish variety is much more often sung in the performers' native language. In Spain, it was widely associated with the Catalonian city of Sabadell.

David Lyme
Night Society

Squash Gang

Viet covers
Of course, it was only a matter of time before Vietnamese performers (such as Anh Thuu, Lien Khuc, Lynda Trang Dai, Nguyen Thanh, Tommy Ngo, Trizzie Phuong Trinh, &c) and Cantonese singer Cally Kwong started covering the New Wave songs, although amongst fans, nearly everyone understandably seems to prefer the originals.




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Relevant Tags

German Eurodisco (1), Spanish Eurodisco (1), Vietnamese (2), Vietnamese New Wave (5), Italo-disco (5), Synthpop (7), Germany (4), 1980s (43), Spain (5), Orange County (12), Italy (9), European Pop (1), Asian Pacific American Heritage Month (47), Ngoc-thu Thi Nguyen (26)

Recent Posts From Eric Brightwell

Comments

eric, got your email about cover and djing. are you in houston.
ak@blvd610.com

Posted by bruce on June 17, 2009 at 07:32am

No. I'm in L.A.

Posted by eric on June 17, 2009 at 08:56am

That was fun to take a trip down the memory lane. Why did I wear those really tight jeans, kung fu shoes, and big hair?

Posted by Van Nguyen on December 22, 2009 at 11:34am

Posted by on January 12, 2010 at 09:36pm

During the mid 80s, these NW music was very popular among the Vietnamese teens. I remembered going to all these high school New Wave party on the weekends. It was one of my favorite time in life.

Posted by giang nguyen on January 12, 2010 at 09:43pm

CC Catch is still touring all over Europe. I would love to see her live.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mXgTSJQTlZY
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Blntlz8qxAQ

Posted by nick on January 31, 2010 at 08:31pm

That’s an ignorance comments “easy-to-learn and obviously ESL lyrics”. It got popular because word of mouth and constant play at private parties. They are easy listening & dancing pop lyrics and beats. I remember buying the original vinyls of these groups in LA China Town in the late 80s. Those were good times.

Posted by nick on January 31, 2010 at 08:48pm

Hi all, Just like to let everyone know that I created a Facebook account that dedicates to New Wave and 80's Music, it's called Keep On Music. There is also a New Wave Reunion party that is happening on March 27th in Southern California. Hope to see some of you there.

Posted by Ian Nguyen on February 12, 2010 at 09:46pm

Great article write ups! Here's Ian's New Wave and 80's Music group on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/keeponmusic Come and enjoy back in the fun everyone!

Posted by Jimmy Jam JimNetics on February 18, 2010 at 04:21pm

How nostalgic! I'm glad I stumbled on this website. I would like to collect these new wave songs if someone has suggestions. Thanks for having some of the songs here to listen to. very cool.

Posted by Alex Tran on May 27, 2010 at 11:04am

Alex,if you're in Cali, come to this!
http://www.facebook.com/eric.brightwell#!/event.php?eid=124645084224535&ref=ts

Posted by Eric on May 27, 2010 at 12:40pm

So any investigation/hypothesis as to why vietnamese people like "New Wave"? I'm part of that group but I'm very curious to know myself that's how I came across your site. Do other Asians like this as well such as Chinese/Korean/Jap?

i know my taiwanese brother-in-law was not exposed to it until he met us and then he loved it.

Posted by TT on October 21, 2010 at 12:59pm

I actually dug a little deeper since. I don't know WHY Vietnamese seem to respond so much (personally, it's more of a mystery why this stuff isn't loved by everyone) but I found Taiwanese people who DJ'd it back in the '80s (and I heard Modern Talking on the radio when I was in Taiwan last month). On the east coast, it seems to have taken off pretty strongly with Koreans. But when I went to see Gazebo here, the audience (with the exception of me and one Cambodian) was seemingly 100% Vietnamese... young and old... And Gazebo knew was ready for it! Changing lyrics about cruising Sunset to cruising Bolsa!

Posted by Eric on October 21, 2010 at 03:41pm

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