The
first Museum for the 24 Festive Drums was declared opened on 1 January 2020 at
the Tan Hiok Nee Heritage Walk but this did not become a popular destination as
the global pandemic and lockdown years just kept visitors away.
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| Loud drum roll for the soft opening of the 24 Festive Drums Experiential Museum |
This was an initiative under the
Downtown Johor Baru Grants Programme: Arts, Culture and Heritage, a
collaboration between Iskandar Regional Development Authority and Think City
Johor Bahru, supported by Majlis Bandaraya Johor Bahru, R&F Princess Cove
and Malaysia Digital Districts.
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| Cardboard cutouts of the figures of the two Tans, Tan Chai Puan [Left] and the late Tan Hooi Song [Right] |
Drum Up JB! shows
presented from 2023, through 2024 and up to 2025, have wowed audiences made up
mainly of drumming enthusiasts, families and friends along with new drumming
fans – both local and foreign – many who travelled to Johor Bahru specifically
to experience the drum shows.
In
the
recent season of shows for, Drums:
A New Beat Beckons, over the weekend of November 14, 15 and 16, it was
timely to host the installation ceremony of the new Committee for the 24
Festive Drums Association of Malaysia as well as the soft opening of the first phase of the 24 Festive Drums Experiential
Museum in
the R&F Marina Place, located adjacent to the Permaisuri Zarith Sofiah
Opera House.
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| The art of the 24 Festive Drums is documented in My Johor Stories 3: Proudly Johor, Then and Now |
Dubbed
an Experiential Museum, this gallery of heritage information presented in
visuals, videos and artefacts, aims to let visitors have an immersive
experience in the art of the 24 Festive Drums.
This
museum honors the legacy of the 24 Festive Drums that was founded in 1988 by the
two Tans, the late Tan Hooi Song and Tan Chai Puan, right here in Johor Bahru.
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| Parents of the late Chong Hai Liang |
Chong Hai Liang, whom we lost to the
Covid-19 virus during the pandemic, was also honoured at this event for his deep
commitment to the art of the 24 Festive Drums and his dream for preserving this
performing art in a museum for generations to enjoy and appreciate.
Ben Loh, who calls himself, A Friend
of the Festive Drums, was the drumming enthusiast who established a drum
troop in Oklahoma in 2003 when he went to further his studies in the United
States.
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| Ben Loh, Ng Teck Chuan and Lim Yi Kai [Left to Right] Photo Credit: Ben Loh |
When he came back to Johor Bahru for
the Second International Drum Festival, he got to know Hai Liang and his dream
to preserve the art of the 24 Festive Drums in a Drum Museum.
He was delighted to be part of the
project team as Interim Project Manager for the setting up of this Experiential
Museum, which was turning Hai Liang’s dream into reality for new generations to
appreciate this unique art of drumming.
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| Tan Chai Puan at the Drum Museum entrance with Johor Bahru Tiong Hua Association president [Left] and Mr Chong [Right] |
When Tan presented his speech, he was
standing next to the entrance to the Museum while its doors were shut. The four
panels of the “swing doors” were each covered by posters with words in Chinese
and English that read, Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter.
His speech was a deeply emotional
expression as his view from that vantage point, was the spacious promenade, the magnificent architecture
of the Opera
House and the causeway between Johor Bahru and the Republic of Singapore, set to the stunning backdrop of the Johor Straits, which
Tan deemed was an ideal location for the museum and a home for the 24 Festive
Drums.
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| The swing doors opened and the Museum was declared open |
Tan
also acknowledged the support and partnership of the R&F Group in providing
this space in the R&F Marina Place to turn Hai Liang’s vision of a museum
in cultural hub into reality.
He
was pleased that when the Rapid Transit System (RTS) starts its service, it
will connect Johor Bahru with Singapore for visitors to come here more
conveniently.
Tan
was also confident that the art of the 24 Festive Drums will be preserved and practiced
by new generations of drummers and drum enthusiasts under the leadership of
young entrepreneurs and drumming practitioners.
He
recalled that Johor Bahru once had an annual Johor Arts Festival and paid
tribute to the founders of the Johor Society for the Performing Arts (JSPA),
the late Yap Siong Cheng and his wife, Suzie, who brought exciting shows and
performing arts to the local community.
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| Wall posters provided heritage information |
Tan
is familiar with organizing cultural events for the community as he was
involved with organizing cultural events and street carnival activities at the Tan
Hiok Nee Heritage Walk between 2009 and 2014.
After
the official opening of the Johor Bahru Chinese Heritage Museum in 2009, the
then Menteri Besar Johor declared Jalan Tan Hiok Nee as a Heritage Walk. Tan
was part of the committee formed to organize a series of public cultural events
at the Heritage Walk on Saturday nights when the road was closed to vehicular
traffic.
[Tan
helped me by providing relevant information about Chinese cultural events so
that I could write about them in English. These Chinese culture-heritage stories
published in English, go a long way to provide information to the Chinese who
do not read Chinese language, and helped them learn more about their own
culture.]
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| Group shot: Seeing double of Tan Chai Puan; One is a cardboard cutout of him! |
Before
Tan pushed open the door to officially open the Museum, he shared a legend (which
he earlier told me!) about the opening of the Johor Old Temple in the 1800s.
It
happened that when Sultan Abu Bakar and Tan Hiok Nee were walking in front of
the temple, they heard the sound of drums. Curious about what was going on
behind the closed door, they paused and Tan Hiok Nee encouraged the Sultan to
open the door to see for himself.
The
Sultan responded by pushing open the front door, a legendary belief that by
this action, it was the Johor Sultan who declared the Johor Old Temple open.
Tan
then invited the Johor Bahru Tiong Hua Association president and Hai Liang’s
father along with other key people to join him in pushing open the four swing
door panels to step into the Museum.
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| A wall of drums at the Museum entrance |
While
the 24 Solar Terms was adopted as the inspiration for the creation of the 24
Festive Drums in 1988, the two Tans did not know that the 24 Solar Terms would be
recognized by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO) and added to their world intangible cultural list in
2016.
Each
of the 24 drums were painted with two bold Chinese characters that represented
each of the 24 Solar Terms, while the music and choreography of the 24 Festive
Drums were arranged to harmonise gracefully into a performing art that depicted
the cycles of the 24 Solar Terms in music, calligraphy and the rhythm of life.
The soft opening of Phase One of this Drum Museum – which will be opened to the public next year – marks the significant start of more cultural attractions in the R&F Marina Place that will be developed over the next few months.











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