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Burmese Percussionist Kyaw Kyaw Naing Visits Milton |
| January 2006 |
On
Thursday, February 2, Kyaw Kyaw Naing—one of the world’s
leading practitioners of Burmese music— performed concerts
and presented demonstrations at Milton to students of the Middle
and Upper Schools. A percussionist from Myanmar (Burma), Naing plays
an instrument known as the patt waing, which is a set of twenty-one
drums hanging inside a circular and ornately decorated frame. He
is a young master musician with mastery of multiple percussion instruments
including tuned drum sets, xylophones, and tuned gong sets. This
knowledge and tradition was passed down to Naing from his late father,
Chein Tit Tee, one of the most famous masters of his generation.
Naing, born in Burma, first came to the United States by invitation
from UCLA. As he explained in an interview for an Asia Society program
in New York City, “my intention was to stay [in the United
States] for a while and go home. When I was at UCLA, I toured around
the museums and the music halls on campus. I was amazed. It was
as if Burmese music did not exist. I saw musical instruments of
various countries, but not a single Burmese musical instrument.
Not even a harp or a xylophone. So I got the idea to introduce Burmese
music to America and to do something for people in the Burmese community
here. I see that few Americans are familiar with Myanmar or Burmese
music, and that is why I have dedicated myself to this.”
Naing's visit to Milton Academy was part of the Melissa Gold Artist
series.

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