Of kingdoms and anti-ageing

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/music/30369821

Of kingdoms and anti-ageing

music May 24, 2019 04:53

By THE NATION

For more than 40 years, the Faculty of Architecture of Chulalongkorn University has been staging variations on a play inspired by the famed Chinese literary work “Samkok” (“Romance of the Three Kingdoms”).

This year, the play is being brought back to life as a variety showcase “Krob Dek Sang Baan: Anti-Ageing” and is being staged at the Thailand Cultural Centre this Sunday (May 26) with a cast made up of the faculty’s graduates who have made a name for themselves in the entertainment circle.

 

Sarunyoo Wongkrachang, Sanya Kunakorn, Yanee Tramote, Natapohn Tameeruks, Nira Suwanamas, Thanavate Siriwattanakul, Taofa Maneeprasobchok, Todsapon Kaenthip, Watcharabul Leesuwan, Pholphak Watcharaponghirun and Nuttapong Namsirikul will be joined by music stars ModernDog, Apiwat “Stamp” Eurthavornsuk, Sarawut “Ae Newklom” Hengsawad, Dolchai Boonyaratavej, Nat Yontararak, Flure, Klear, Pipat “DJ Arm” Withayapanyanon, Art 7th Scene, Panu “Poppy K-Otic” Jirakhun, Jirakit “Joke” Suthornlapyos, Kemawat “Keng” Rerngtham and Pinyo Rootham.

 

Proceeds from ticket sale will support the purchase of durable goods and educational aids.

Tickets are from Bt500 to Bt3,000 at Thai Ticket Major (02) 262 3456 and visit http://www.ThaiTicketMajor.com

Follow the movement of this musicalconcert at facebook: KrobDekSangBaan and Line: @krobdeksangbaan.

US hip-hop star to headline Abu Dhabi F1 concert

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/music/30369799

US hip-hop star to headline Abu Dhabi F1 concert

music May 23, 2019 01:00

By THE NATION

Yas Marina Circuit and Flash Entertainment have announced that American hip-hop sensation Travis Scott will headline the year’s Yasalam After-Race Concert at the Formula 1 Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi Grand Prix 2019 weekend.

Scott will bring his booming urban sounds and powerful onstage presence to the du Arena on November 29.

One of the most enigmatic and popular artists to emerge as part of a fresh new wave of US hip hop stars, Scott has been steadily winning over underground music fans in the know since 2014.

Fans can expect such hits as “Sicko Mode”, “Antidote” and “Yosemite” plus many more as he delights the crowd with tracks from his three studio albums, plus a few surprises.

An “Early Bird” discount is available for those that purchase their Abu Dhabi Grand Prix tickets before May 31.

Following last year’s 10th anniversary edition, the Formula 1 Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi Grand Prix 2019 will run from November 28 to December 2 track and offtrack entertainment across Yas Island.

Tickets are available at http://www.YasMarinaCircuit.com.

Songs for a worthy cause

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/music/30369469

  • Ice Saranyu croons “Buppesannivas”.
  • The eight artists and Neung Jakrawal and his band take a picture with the audience after the “Pink Park Eternal Love” concert.
  • Handsome Kong Saharat kept the ladies happy.
  • Pod Tanachai had the audience up on their feet and dancing.
  • Pu Anchalee’s hits brought back fond memories.
  • Kob Songsit impressed the audience with his love ballads.
  • Tor Saksit added some of the lyrics of his father’s song when the latter was in Grand Ex’.
  • Tom Isara and Ae Jirakorn join up for “Khid Thueng”.

Songs for a worthy cause

music May 17, 2019 01:00

By Kitchana Lersakvanitchakul
THE NATION

Eight much-loved singers from different generations join forces to raise funds for the Pink Park hospice

Love was all around on Monday night, as members of the audience came together to sing along with their favourite love songs of different eras at the second edition of the “Pink Park Eternal Love” concert at Royal Paragon Hall.

 

As the name suggests, the concert aimed to raise funds for Pink Park Village, Thailand’s first non-profit holistic centre for underprivileged, terminally ill women suffering from stage-4 breast cancer operated by the Queen Sirikit Centre for Breast Cancer Foundation.

 

Tanachai “Pod” Ujjin, Saharat “Kong” Sangkapreecha, Songsit “Kob” Roongnophakunsri, Isara “Tom” Kitnitchee, Jirakorn “Ae” Sompitak, Anchalee “Pu” Chongkhadikij, Saksit “Tor” Vejsupaporn, and Saranyu “Ice” Winaipanit took turns on stage to perform their best-loved ballads as well as some up-tempo tracks that had the audience on its collective feet.

 

The predominantly female audience shouted out with sheer delight as their favourite artists brought 40 timeless love songs and medleys to life.

First out on stage was Moderndog’s Pod Tanachai who got the ball rolling with “Chuang Thi Dee Thi Sud”. He was followed by Kong Saharat with “Pen Yang Nee Tang Tae Kerd Loei”, Kob Songsit with “Patiharn” and Tom Isara with “Pen Thuk Yang” and a cover of songs-for-lifer Pongsit Khampi’s “Samer” with Ae Jirakorn before the latter let rip on “Jai Klang Kwam Roo Suek Dee Dee”.

 

Distinguished producer and keyboard player Jakrawal “Neung” Saothongyutitham, who was also the music director for this concert, made a special request to Tom and Ae to sing a cover of Rang Rockestra’s “Khid Thueng” (“Miss You”) in remembrance of his mother, who died recently.

 

Pu Anchalee thrilled with a series of her best-loved hits including “Nueng Diew Khon Nee” and “Mee Ther”, and talented pianist Tor Saksit took to his keyboard for “Rak Ther”, swapping the lyrics with some of Grand Ex’ “Rak Nai C Major” and “Yim Kor Phor”. Ice Saranyu closed the first part of the show with “Buppesannivas”, the soundtrack of Channel 3’s popular period drama of the same name and “Cham Khue Rao” featuring Tom Isara.

 

“If we have someone with us, our lives are more valuable,” mused Pu Anchalee.

Tom Isara returned after the intermission with a medley of hits featuring “Nuang”, “Restart” and “Chan Tong Khoo Kap Ther” though sadly, he failed to generate as much interest as Kob Songsit who performed a medley of “Kheed Sen Tai” and “Term Mai Tem” before singing “Rak Rao Mai Kao Loei”. The ever-handsome Kong Saharat drew screams as he appeared on stage to sing “Rak Ther Sud Huajai”, “Luek Sud Jai” and a cover of Rewat Buddhinan’s “Chao Sao Thi Klua Fon”.

 

Pod Tanachai returned with a slow song, “Rak Khun Khao Laew” before segueing into uptempo numbers “Korn” and a medley of “Busaba” and “Tim”. Ae Jirakorn entertained with “Klub Ma” and “Jak Nee Pai Jon Niran” matching his high pitch to Pu Anchalee’s powerful rock vocals then handing the stage over to her.

 

Anchalee took the audience back to 1984, the year she released her debut album “Nueng Diew Khon Nee”, with a medley of “Yoo Pai Wan Wan”, “Mai Phid” and “Khid Pai Aeng” and had the audience waving their hands in time to the tunes. Fans screamed again, when Tor Saksit and Ice Saranyu came back with their popular songs.

 

The concert wrapped with “Proh Arai”, a song penned especially for this concert by Neung Jakrawal.

“I am very proud to be a part of the concert,” said Neung Jakrawal, who along with his band provided the backing for the show.

“Every single artist came here tonight to keep the audience fully entertained. Our energy and enthusiasm had no limits. The whole show was impressive and memorable.”

Sweet raps in Phuket

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/music/30369425

Sweet raps in Phuket

music May 17, 2019 01:00

By THE NATION

Influential Thai hiphop icon DaBoyWay, a member of Thailand’s famous hiphop group Thaitanium, will thrill his fans in the South of Thailand when he performs at Suger Club in Phuket next Thursday from 10pm until late.

Entry is Bt200 including one drink. Book a table at (098) 889 8590 or email info@sugarclubphuket.com.

“Above Ordinary” gig postponed

South Korean rapper Simon Dominic, who was due to appear in Thailand on May 26 will now be performing on August 24 due to the organisers requesting a change of venue.

Ticket sales have now been suspended and will resume on July 20. A full refund will be given to anyone who wants to cash in their tickets rather than delay.

For more information, go to ticket.achi.co.th.

Paradise on the beach

Chang Music Connection presents the 7th Khanom Festival with a new theme, “Seven Paradise”, on Khanom Beach in Nakhon Si Thammarat on July 27, aiming to stimulate the province’s economy and tourism.

Taking part in the music festival are Bodyslam, Slot Machine, Max Jenmana, Vee Violet, Oat Pramote, Non Thanon, LazyLozy, Oganic, Highhot, DJ LP x MC Prada, DJ ATip x DJ Birdkid x MC Macro, and DJ Yukie x MC Pam.

Tickets cost Bt1,500 at http://www.Ticketmelon.com. For more information, visit facebook: Go Khanom or contact the Khanom Tourism Association on (085) 909 0583.

Wet time in the hills

Another music festival making a return in July is “Singing in the Rain” and this year promises to be more enjoyable and wetter by moving to a new venue, Umbrella City on Thanarat Road KM 21, Khao Yai.

Taking place on July 27 on the theme “Let’s Say Play Together”, this upcoming festival will be decorated with a giant umbrella, feature an activity zone called “Umbrella Roulette” and see performances by Potato, The Toys, Singto Numchok, Better Weather, Polycat, Lipta, Mean, Mints, Lomosonic, Youngohm x Fiixd and DJs from Quay Records.

Tickets are now on sale at Bt1,300 at Thai Ticket Major outlets and online at http://www.ThaiTicketMajor.com and http://www.singingintherainfest.com.

Rocking out with Lok

Vancouver-based producer and DJ Pat Lok is the special guest tomorrow night of Beam Club at 72 Courtyard at the Phetchaburi end of Thonglor.

His releases “You Street” and “Your Lips” and numerous remixes have received critical acclaim, racking up millions of plays and consistently topping Hype Machine.

For more information and reservations, call (02) 392 7750.

Life or something like it

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/music/30369501

  • Stefan Paul Sanchez and Dr Cherie Carter-Scott
  • “The Workshop, A Dress Rehearsal for Life!”, which is adapted from Dr Cherie Carter-Scott’s real life coaching experience, makes it Bangkok premiere tomorrow night.
  • Pete Pol plays transgender Venda.
  • Janya Thanasawarngkul takes on the role of Karen, a women with an eating disorder.
  • Mahannop Panasaratool as Maurice faces racism.
  • Director Napsiri Reyes

Life or something like it

music May 17, 2019 01:00

By Kitchana Lersakvanitchakul
THE NATION

A new musical based on a life-coaching workshop makes its Bangkok debut

Musicals are traditionally based on books, movies, history, folk tales, even the animal kingdom but in a first for Thailand if not the world, coming to the Bangkok stage tomorrow night is one based on a life-coaching workshop.

The brainchild of Dr Cherie Carter-Scott, who is sometimes referred to as the “Mother of Coaching” and a best-selling author, “The Workshop, A Dress Rehearsal for Life!” is having its world premiere at the small hall of the Thailand Cultural Centre.

“Dr Cherie has now than 40 years of experience as a life coach and wrote this musical based on her life and the characters she encountered in her profession,” says stage director and lyricist Napisi Reyes, who also wrote the musical book.

“It is totally different from other musicals. I have seen many Broadway musicals about athletes, actors and even singers but none about a therapist. That alone makes it an interesting, challenging and rewarding experience.”

 

“Dr Cherie dreamt of producing a musical relating to her career and was able to do so almost on her own as she has a talent for writing songs and the script,” she continues.

Napisi was approached late last year by Stefan Paul Sanchez, an opera singer and producer who lives in Thailand. She is responsible for performance, direction and concept, while Sanchez serves as producer and artistic director and Darren Royston is the choreographer.

 

“It’s been a challenge as it’s a new story without any reference, so we had first to determine the direction we should take and how it could be staged. It was also important to find performers who could create and understand their characters by themselves, without any references. Not many Thais know what life coaching is and how it works. Dr Cherie took us to see her coaching method and that helped us understand. It’s really about psychology but is completely different from psychiatry where the patient is helped to make decisions. A life coach has a set of questions and the patient has to understand and unlock the problem by himself. It isn’t therapy but a guide. Anyone coming to see the musical will be able to observe how Randi, the life coach and workshop leader, guides the participants,” she says.

 

The mainly Thai performers must communicate in English language.

Dr Cherie wrote the play with her sister, Lynn, so that larger audiences could share this human experience. The characters in the play are everyday people who face the same challenges in contemporary society as many of us do – boundary management, being overweight and/or overworked, abuse, discrimination and communication breakdowns.

The workshop participants are made up of 11 individuals of diverse ethnicity, occupation and sexual preference. All have individual challenges and are seeking solutions. Their stories are funny, sad and moving and told through more than 17 songs written by Dr Cherie and set to a diverse range of genres – classical, gospel, Western country, even a German beer song. Every character has his/her own special song, which defines and differentiates them.

 

Remarkably, the English-language musical is performed by an mainly Thai cast. Pete Pol plays the transgender Venda, Janya Thanasawarngkul is Karen, Nutchapong Asavakarn is Lee, Pavichya Ruengjitsang is Ashley, Pitchaya Kemasingki is Ernie, Woramon Santikarn is Lindsey, Panurut Pongpitakkun is Nigel, Bussayapat Aunchittikul is Randi, Mahannop Panasaratool is Maurice, Sutpatorn Masamran is Reena, Anuttra Kitiyakara Na Ayudhya is Tamara, and Chorlada Suriyayothin is Rose.

“I’m not completely the same as this character as I haven’t yet changed gender. However, I can relate to being bullied as a child. It is my first time performing a musical and it is hard for me to speak English, although I practised hard. My character is rather complex and multilayered. My song ‘Am I this or am I that’ is asking myself what I am really – male or female,” he says.

“Karen is an 40-something overweight woman from Texas who suffers from an eating disorder. Her real problem stems from her father who has never allowed her to be herself. She can’t disobey him but the one thing he can’t control is her eating. Texans are known for eating large dishes and she thought by devouring lots of food, she could conquer her father. And when she’s stressed, eating is what makes her happy,” says Janya.

“I’m fat because of hyperthyroidism but I’m learning to balance my body.

“My song is ‘Metabolically Challenged’, which is about challenging the metabolic system with many temptations such as sweets and ice cream. As Stefan says, it’s strange that all 11 member of the cast actually have lots in common with the characters they are playing,” she adds.

 

“I’m Maurice, an American man of colour who works in Hollywood as a film director. His problem is racism, No matter how proficient he is, he doesn’t feel he is accepted. On one occasion, when he drives his Mercedes-Benz to the entrance, a guard asks him who he is picking up. The guard thinks that he is from Uber or Grab. It’s a hard role to play. The reprise of my song ‘Let It Be Me’ emphasises ‘look at me, listen to me,” Mahannop explains.

With such a diversity of characters and problems, what does Napsiri think the audience will take home from the musical?

“First of all, it’s entertaining – there’s drama, a good story, singing and dancing. Our aim is to have the audience members feel that they are part of the workshop and that they are involved rather than just onlookers. The characters develop as the musical unfolds and they solve the problems by themselves. We hope that the musical will bring hope, happiness and comprehension to those who watch it,” she says.

Life’s little  challenges

– “The Workshop, A Dress Rehearsal for Life!” is being staged at the small hall of the Thailand Cultural Centre tomorrow and Sunday and from May 29 to June 1.

– Showtime is 7.30pm.

– Tickets priced from Bt800 to Bt2,500 are available at Thai Ticket Major counters. Call (02) 262 3456 or visit http://www.ThaiTicketMajor.com.

Three nights at the opera

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/music/30369414

Three nights at the opera

music May 15, 2019 01:00

By THE NATION

Banyan Tree Bangkok and Opera Siam will jointly host the Opera Siam Silver Rose Charity Dinner 2019 on May 22 with a four-course set menu with paired wines and musical performances.

The gala fund-raiser at Vertigo TOO restaurant and lounge on the hotel’s 60th floor, benefits the Bangkok Opera Foundation, a non-profit educational and cultural body, initiated by award-winning novelist and composer of operas Somtow Sucharitkul, to support the advancement of culture and music amongst young Thai artists.

The evening’s programme includes star of Zurich Opera and Spanish Teatro Reale, singer Damian Whiteley; and Stacey Tappan from the Metropolitan Opera, along with renowned Thai opera singer Barbara Zion. Those attending will also enjoy internationally renowned composer Trisdee na Patalung conducting the Jatava Quartet, along with a dance and costume performance.

Local media personality Andrew Biggs will man the gavel as guests bid on intriguing artworks and luxury holiday packages.

The event offers the opportunity to mix and mingle with the talented and dedicated patrons of the arts who have made Opera Siam a focal point of contemporary culture in Southeast Asia, and support the ongoing and worthy cultural and educational initiatives of the Bangkok Opera Foundation.

Tickets cost Bt5,000 per person and are available at HostessesBangkok@banyantree.com or online at Ticketmelon.com.

Opera Siam has now presented 60 opera productions, one of the successful of which was the five episodes of “Dasjati: Ten Lives of the Buddha” that had been performed in Bangkok, Houston, Prague and Bayreuth. After a twoyear hiatus two more episodes – the vignette dance version of “Chandakumar” and the epic opera “Mahosot, Architect of Dreams” – will be premiered in Bangkok.

Performers from different countries will join maestro Trisdee and more than musicians, choristers, dancers and opera singers to retell two iconic tales from the Buddhist scriptures. In “Chandakumar” – the seventh of the ten major jatakas – the Buddhatobe is a prince whose father is told that to attain his dream of heaven, he must sacrifice the most valuable things in the kingdom, including his sons. Prince Chandakumar averts the monstrous sacrifice by summoning the King of the Gods.

“Architect of Dreams”, the fifth of the tales, tels the story of Mahosot, a boy genius who overcomes 101 armies by his wits alone, builds magic castles out of thin air, and causes his king to fall for the daughter of his greatest enemy, bringing about an age of peace to the Kingdom of Kashi.

The performances will take place at Thailand Cultural Centre on June 7 at 8pm and June 8 at 4pm.

Tickets cost Bt300 and Bt1,000 for VIP seats.

Final kiss from a Cuban legend

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/music/30369183

Portuondo at 88: “I feel like I’m 15!”/AFP
Portuondo at 88: “I feel like I’m 15!”/AFP

Final kiss from a Cuban legend

music May 13, 2019 01:00

By Agence France-Presse
New York

Buena Vista Social Club’s Omara Portuondo says ‘Adios’ to global fan club

AS REVOLUTIONS go, the emergence of Cuban music collective Buena Vista Social Club was certainly a peaceful one – but it sent cultural shock waves still vibrating today.

It is more than 20 years since the ensemble of mostly elderly musicians burst onto the scene in the mid-1990s, going on to win a Grammy and sell millions of albums globally.

But one of its last original living legends, 88-year-old singer Omara Portuondo, is still on the road – enchanting audiences around the world with her lush vocals.

Portuondo at 88: “I feel like I’m 15!”/AFP

“I feel very honoured to be able to take our culture, our music, to the entire world,” she says prior to the New York date of her “Last Kiss/Ultimo Beso” world tour, cast as her final global hurrah.

“The Cuban music, the essence of being Cuban, the way we make our music and how people receive it with so much fervour … we have to travel the world,” says the octogenarian, whose skin remains smooth and luminous against her crimson painted lips.

Gracing the stage to wild applause at a candlelit Manhattan club, Portuondo played a set of Cuban classics marked by pulsating Afro-Caribbean rhythms and warm, sensuous melodies, including the beloved “Guantanamera”.

The Buena Vista ensemble’s principal musicians came from Cuba’s pre-revolutionary musical old guard – coaxed out of retirement by Cuban star Juan de Marcos Gonzalez, the World Circuit’s Nick Gold and American guitarist Ry Cooder.

Named after a Havana members-only venue, the Buena Vista Social Club became a global household name after putting out the eventual best-selling Cuban album of all time.

The 1997 eponymous work, recorded in just six days, exported a colourful portrait of Cuba infused with lust and sizzle – in sharp contrast to the dreary image of Fidel Castro’s communist nation crafted by the capitalist West.

Shrugging off questions over US-Cuba tensions – which thawed in recent years, only to frost over again under US President Donald Trump – Portuondo remains defiant: “Nothing can stop music.”

It appears nothing can stop the Cuban diva, either. Donning a long white gown with a sheer red floral overlay, she shimmied in her seat as she brought her audience in New York to its feet.

Asked how she’s managed to keep performing decades after most hunker down for their twilight years, Portuondo raises her eyebrows at the suggestion she might be considered old.

“I feel like I’m 15!” she laughs, saying her fountain of youth is simply being born in Cuba. “We are hot, we love rhythm, joy, life.”

That sensibility, she added, has ensured the staying power of the Buena Vista Social Club – whose story has been immortalised in several documentaries including one by the acclaimed German director Wim Wenders.

Sporting a shiny red bow in her hair and gold hoop earrings, Portuondo’s steamy voice remained clear as ever, accompanied by the keys of another Cuban star, pianist Roberto Fonseca.

In his youth Fonseca attended a concert of the legend – who has worked the likes of Edith Piaf, Nat King Cole, Herbie Hancock and Chucho Valdes – and approached her afterwards to share his aspiration to play with her.

Today they share a flirty but familial relationship with chemistry as palpable offstage as on. “Now my dream has come true,” says 44-year-old Fonseca.

“Playing with her, I’m learning a lot of things. “Portuondo paints with music. It gives you a lot of knowledge about music – gives you a lot of knowledge about your own culture.”

Buena Vista Social Club’s 1997 debut album

The Buena Vista Social Club performed its “Adios” tour several years ago under the name “Orquesta Buena Vista Social Club”, given the dwindling numbers of veteran performers and an infusion of young talent.

But even if her “Last Kiss” tour truly is her ultimate, Portuondo appears set to keep performing until the end, even if only in her beloved Cuba – still her favourite spot to play.

“Hello, babies!” she croons to cheers to kick off her Manhattan concert.

When Fonseca, who plays beside her and turns her pages, told the crowd halfway through the set that the singer would take a break, she gave off airs of surprise.

As he led her offstage the enraptured audience whistled in delight, the animated Portuondo continuing to clap to the beat of conga drums, her hips never ceasing to sway.

Twice as nice

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/music/30369094

Twice as nice

music May 10, 2019 01:00

By THE NATION

K-pop girl group Twice will kick off their Asia tour this month heading first to Japan where they will appear at KCON 2019 Japan M Countdown from May 17 to 19.

The nine-member group, who recently made a comeback with their single “Fancy”, is also coming to Bangkok on June 15 for a show at Impact Arena, Muang Thong Thani before heading off to the Philippines and Singapore.

Follow the movement at http://www.411ent.com and Facebook.com/fouroneoneent, Twitter: @411ent, IG: @411ent

Rocking back in time

Local rockers Brownstone, Neverland, Hard Boy and Skeevers take to the stage of Rock Pub on May 24 for a night of heavy beats from 1980s. Expect covers by such rock giants as Guns n’ Roses, Skid Row, X-Japan, Motley Crue, Van Halen, Def Leppard, Warrant, Bon Jovi, Europe, Whitesnake, Ozzy, Extreme and Mr Big.

The fun starts at 8.30 and tickets cost Bt300 with one free drink if purchased in advance and Bt350 at the door. Call (099) 191 5666, email therockpub1987@gmail.com or visit http://www.TheRockPubBangkok.com.

Spizzwinks sensations

Yale University’s singing group The Spizzwinks will make two special a cappella performances on May 21 at The Greenery of Siam Bayshore Resort in Pattaya and on May 22 in the Rattanakosin Room of The Sukosol Hotel, bringing their unique blend of sweet harmony and tongue-in-cheek humour.

Tickets are Bt499-net with a welcome drink and light snacks and Bt1,200 and Bt1399 net with a  preshow seafood BBQ buffet at Bali Hai By The Sea and at Patummat International Restaurant respectively.

Find our more at (02) 247 0123 or email tsb.prd@sukosolhotels.com.

A night of joy

Grammy award-winning and Billboard chart-topping duo The Chainsmokers are bringing their highly anticipated “World War Joy” Asia Tour to Bangkok playing at Impact Challenger Hall 1, Muang Thong Thani, on August 20.

Tickets starting at Bt1,900 go on sale on May 25 at Thai Ticket Major. Call (02) 262 3456 or visit http://www.ThaiTicketMajor.com.

Music in Paradise

Paradise Fest returns on May 25 and for this fifth edition is moving to the large 8 Speed Track in Khao Yai, Nakhon Ratchasima.

Among the 50 rock outfits who’ll be playing on the three stages are The Sun, Flure, Sweet Mullet, Ebola, Paradox, Retrospect, Silly Fools featuring Dax, Dezember, Kluaythai, Annalynn, Overdose, Bomb At Track, and Mad Pack It, as well as Life Awaits from China, Dagger from Hong Kong and Paledusk and Endzweck from Japan.

Tickets are priced Bt500 at 7Eleven, http://bit.ly/prdf5ticket and Facebook.com/ParadisefestTH.

Rhyming for religion

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/music/30369091

An Iraqi Shiite cleric guides youngsters as they beat their chests in mourning at their local mosque in the town of Midhatiya, about 100 kilometres south of the capital Baghdad. on March 22, 2019.
An Iraqi Shiite cleric guides youngsters as they beat their chests in mourning at their local mosque in the town of Midhatiya, about 100 kilometres south of the capital Baghdad. on March 22, 2019.

Rhyming for religion

music May 10, 2019 01:00

By Agence France-Presse
Midhatiya

In Iraq, rap meets a chorus of controversy

As the black-clad rapper spits lyrics into the microphone on stage, the Iraqi boys below beat their chests in mourning. He is, after all, paying homage to slain Shiite figurehead Hussein.

The ear-splitting drums reverberate around the hall as Iraqi teenagers shout back rhymes venerating the Prophet Mohammad’s grandson and other honoured figures in Islam.

In parts of conservative Iraq, a religious movement within the Shiite sect has adapted the traditional “latmiyat” – chanted verses mourning Muslim icons – to Western-style rap in an effort to keep youth interested in religion.

It appears to be working.

 

Iraqis Shiites beat their chests in mourning, at their local mosque in the town of Midhatiya, about 100 kilometres (60 miles) south of the capital Baghdad

In Midhatiya, a town roughly 100 kilometres south of Baghdad, teens in matching red shirts stand shoulder to shoulder in their local place of worship as if preparing for prayer.

But when the speakers crackle to life, they blare a staccato drum beat and the voice of a young performer in a black robe, rhyming with a speed befitting New York’s fiercest underground rap battles.

Even the elderly religious figures along the back wall sway to the rhythm, including Sheikh Salem alJanahi.

He hails from the Mahmoud al-Sarkhi movement, which has championed “Husseini” rap and is therefore regularly accused of distorting conservative traditions.

Straining to make himself heard over the loud music, Janahi says his more traditional counterparts “had become involved in corruption and politics, so young people began running away from religion”.

Religion and politics are deeply intertwined in Iraq, where government posts have been allocated according to sect since the US-led invasion in 2003.

The country’s 40 million people are mostly Shiites, with a burgeoning youth population navigating an increasingly modern, Westernised society.

That, says “Husseini” rapper Karrar al-Bederi, is exactly why this hybrid style of worship is necessary.

“Young people abandoned religion and morality because of backwards, classical clerics,” Bederi explains.

In comments peppered with Quranic verses, he adds that the refusal to meet young Muslims halfway has turned the youth towards “crime, drug use, ignorance and atheism”.

To fight this, he and fellow Muslims have appropriated rap – usually associated with the “invader” United States – to create a religiously-focused form of worship.

“It has become one of the important ways we reach out to youth, to spread a message of peace, moderation, but morals as well,” Bederi says.

It has also brought social media stardom to some performers, whose modernised “latmiyats” have earned them tens of thousands of online views.

One video published on Facebook shows a rapper in jeans and a cap, standing in a grassy field featuring a tall date palm – Iraq’s national tree.

“My Lord is unrivalled, he taught me to act with respect. I want to talk about the cause of our imam,” he sings.

In other footage, men in green appear to enter a trance, slamming their chests faster and faster to an electronic tune.

But even as they electrify crowds, the raps spark anger among clerics, shocked to see traditional psalms so distorted in Iraq’s rural south.

Shiite Imam Latif al-Amidi, for one, is not a fan.

“Religious deviant movements that have emerged recently have taken advantage of weak religious knowledge among young people to introduce to Islam things that have nothing to do with religion,” Amidi says.

“These movements brought singers, dancing and DJs into Islam, using the excuse that they want to attract youth.”

Aside from “anasheeds,” which are hymns performed without instruments, the permissibility of music in Islamic worship is disputed.

Hardline clerics say Islam forbids all music, even in daily life outside the mosque.

But other Muslim movements use drums and dance in their worship, including Iraq’s Sufis.

The “latmiyat” themselves predate Islam, going back around 4,000 years to Iraq’s Babylonian history, but have their own icons in modern-day Iraq, including Bassem al-Karbalai.

Iraq’s Shiite authorities have yet to issue a religious ruling (fatwa) on whether the rapped “latmiyat” is acceptable according to Shiite dogma.

The format has never been performed or used as a style of worship in the country’s two main Shiite holy cities, Najaf and Karbala.

That has not deterred Bederi however, who says calmly: “We have to address young people with the tools they know.”

Coaching workshop turns into a musical

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/music/30368932

Coaching workshop turns into a musical

music May 08, 2019 01:00

By THE NATION

A unique musical, “The Workshop, A Dress Rehearsal for Life!” written by renowned life coach Dr Cherie Carter-Scott, and based on the numerous coaching-workshops she has conducted, in more than 30 countries over four decades has its world premiere in Bangkok on May 18.

Like the famed Broadway musical “A Chorus Line” which was about various artists auditioning for the chorus line in a stage-production, this musical is about various characters gathering together for a “Personal Development” workshop.

The play is comprised of 11 individuals, of diverse ethnicity, occupation, sexual preference, who face challenges and are seeking solutions.

 

Carter-Scott co-wrote the play with her sister, Lynn to share this very human experience with audiences.

Known as the “Mother of Coaching,” American-born Carter-Scott, who started her work in 1974, has written more than 20 books on the subject, featured on numerous TV, radio, print media, and conducted her workshops in more than 30 countries. Her diverse range of clients have included the UN, many Fortune 500 companies, universities, hospitals, cruise liners and private individuals.

For last 10 years, she, her husband Michael Pomije and sister Lynn Stewart have been based in Thailand, conducting workshops, training corporate coaches, travelling to various other countries, to maintain their numerous Coach Training assignments.

 

The idea of writing a stage musical production based on her experiences, had been in her head for many years. She refers to the play as a musical for the young and old, for anyone who has “challenges” and wants “changes” in their lives.

“Workshop” has a live band and an excellent technical team including opera singer Stefan Sanchez of the Grand Opera Thailand company and choreographer Darren Royston.

 

Two Thai names to watch out for, are the wellknown singer Pete Pol of “The Star” and TV star Yah Janya.

“The Workshop, A Dress Rehearsal for Life!” will be held at the small hall of Thailand Cultural Centre on May 18-19, May 29-31, and June 1 at 7.30pm.

Tickets are available at http://www.ThaiTicketMajor.com.