Making another ‘Splash’

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/music/30339992

Making another ‘Splash’

music March 03, 2018 01:00

By Agence France-Presse
New York

2,487 Viewed

The Breeders revive their distinct rock voice with a new album

When the Breeders reunited in 2013 to mark 20 years since “Last Splash”, it looked like a straightforward nostalgia tour for an album that had become an alternative rock cornerstone.

“We had a great time and people responded and loved it. And then we started getting calls to do shows in 2014 and so, hmmm, that was technically not a 20th anniversary anymore,” Kim Deal, the Breeders’ frontwoman, says with a robust laugh.

“People would say, ‘We don’t care, we just want you guys to play’, We could do any songs. And it just opened up a whole new thing.”

The fruition is “All Nerve”, which comes out next Friday and is the first album to bring back together the Breeders’ classic lineup from 1993’s “Last Splash”.

 

Despite the Breeders’ enduring influence on a generation of artists, the intervening 25 years produced their share of internal friction, as well as substance abuse struggles, that inhibited the band’s rebirth.

“All Nerve”, to be accompanied by an extensive tour, manages to revive the Breeders’ brand of insouciant grunge that struck such a chord in the alternative rock era while still sounding fresh.

Deal – until 2013 also the bassist of alternative rock icons the Pixies – infuses the music with reverbhazy guitar and her distinctly sandy yet warm voice.

The Breeders initially started as a side project for Deal, who shares guitar duties with her twin sister Kelley. Josephine Wiggs plays a dominant bass – so exemplified by “Cannonball”, the signature song off “Last Splash”, whose bass salvo slinks both high and low – while Jim Macpherson cranks up the band’s volume with his vigorous drums. The lyricism is both self-reflective and surreal.

“Good morning!” Deal bellows at the start of the album on “Wait in the Car”.

“Consider, I always struggle with the right word. Meow meow meow meow meow meow,” she bellows with a force more punk than housecat.

The title track on “All Nerve” manages to be tender and bellicose at once. “You don’t know how much I missed you,” she sings, before the guitars crush forward and she warns: “I won’t stop. I will run you down.”

Deal says the song’s lines came into her head spontaneously one morning before she presented it to the band for one of its decidedly low-tech jam sessions.

“It was very organic,” she explains. “We’re not a laptop band. There is never a laptop in the room.”

The Breeders recorded the album in three studios including Chicago’s Electrical Audio with Steve Albini, the producer known for his raw, heavy sound, most notably in his work with Nirvana.

“Blues on the Acropolis”, the album’s closing track, reflects sadly on how so many world monuments are also known for drunkards and rabble-rousers.

“Walking with a Killer” eerily recounts the fright strolling the outer stretches of US Route 35 that cuts through Dayton, the military city where Deal was born and returned to help care for her Alzheimer’sstricken mother.

“I think every town has their creepy backroads. They have cornfields that come right to the side with cars whizzing past,” Deal says.

“It’s a summer night with the crickets and the headlights are coming your way. It really writes itself, doesn’t it?” she adds, her voice building with enthusiasm.

If “Last Splash”, which made the Rolling Stone and Pitchfork lists of best albums of the 1990s, came out when alternative rock was entering the mainstream, “All Nerve” coincidentally appears at a very different moment – with rock arguably losing prominence and much of the broader entertainment world galvanised by activism.

Asked for her thoughts on the #MeToo movement against sexual harassment, Deal – one of the most prominent women in alternative rock – pauses to reflect. Small incidents, she recalls, in retrospect reflected the double standards for women.

She recounted an incident when Wiggs needed bass equipment while in Dayton and the store owner insisted on a hug – behaviour Deal doubts any man would encounter.

But women, Deal adds, have always been part of rock – just that power brokers, from concert bookers to journalists, did not always embrace them.

“Just because you don’t find woman bands in festivals this year doesn’t mean there aren’t any women in bands. They’re just not getting invited,” she says.

Top of the vocal pops

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/music/30339940

  • Coach Singto Numchok raises Maimhon’s arm as his victory is announced.
  • Washiravit “Maimhon” Geenkerd was declared the winner of “The Voice Thailand, Season 6”.

Top of the vocal pops

music March 03, 2018 01:00

By Kitchana Lersakvanitchakul
THE NATION

2,060 Viewed

Season six of “The Voice Thailand” comes down to the wire with two very talented singers battling for first place

It was a close fought battle until the very end but Silpakorn University freshman Washiravit “Maimhon” Geenkerd finally pipped vocal instructor Benjamin James Dooley to the post, becoming the winner of the sixth reason of reality television singing competition “The Voice Thailand”.

While Maimhon was overwhelmed by his victory, Dooley was far from disappointed, telling The Nation: “My main reason for taking part in ‘The Voice’ had nothing to do with becoming a star but was the best way of presenting my new vocal work.”

The former vocalist with pop-rock outfit Gear Knight who now teaches at Mahidol University’s College of Music, adds that he is now on a journey of discovery.

 

“These days I don’t perform the same type of music as I did with Gear Knight, but am focusing on a blend of rock and opera, the two genres I grew up with and love. While I am not sure it qualified as what is known in the West as ‘rock opera’, it was great being able to present my song during the Blind Audition. And looking at the result of the public vote, it seems that the audience was impressed,” Dooley continues, adding that he was inspired by Andrea Bocelli’s “The Prayer”.

“When I was a teenager, I really wanted to be popular and knew I could only achieve that kind of fame if I sang about love and broken hearts. These days, I focus on my voice and my new music style. For ‘The Voice’ I chose to concentrate on presenting my skills and technique so didn’t perform any rock as such other than in the finale when I sang Queen’s ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’. I usually sing Italian operatic works but that is such a niche market that I’m planning to write my own operatic songs, which will be more easy-listening and therefore appeal to Thais. The result of public votes was good feedback as it showed that some voters care more about vocal quality than music. I’m not trying to make a comeback because I need fame or money but I would like to make music I believe is good. ‘The Voice’ was my way of telling everybody that I’m back,” adds the 33-year-old instructor, who is now married and a father of two.

 

Maimhon is also on a journey of discovery but his path is very different from Dooley’s. As winner, he takes home the tidy sum of Bt3 million and a contract with Universal Music (Thailand).

The Mukdahan native, who moved to Bangkok as a child with his father, a railways official, and his teacher mother, started his musical career playing bass guitar then switched to drums while studying at Sangsom Elementary School. He turned his attention to the songs-for-life genre after listening to his mother’s recordings of Pongsit “Poo” Kamphee’s songs.

 

“Phi Poo is my favourite artist,” says the 19-year-old winner with a smile. “I like the way he sings and the way he conveys the meaning of words. I appreciate the meaning behind songs-for-life as well as its moral messages, which are applicable to the way we live. My mum was also a major Carabao fan and used to listen to ‘Loong Khi Mao’(‘Old Drunkard’). I remember her explaining to me that the ‘uncle’ in the song is a good guy but follows the wrong path in trying to solve his problems and ends up dying homeless under a footbridge. I also grew to like the Bodyslam song ‘Yapis’.

 

At high school, Maimhon formed a band called Wowpup with his classmates, playing mainly rock covers by Bodyslam, Flure, The Yers, and Silly Fools. And Wowpup entered several music contest, the band never won a prize. Now a student at Silpakorn University, he has formed another band, Lynchee, but says it’s more of an adhoc outfit that performs at various university activities.

 

“This was the first time I applied for ‘The Voice’, although I have been watching the show since it started. This year, for the first time, applicants were invited to submit a video clip. My clip showed me singing Pongsit’s ‘Fah Soong Ya Tum’ and it won me a place. I performed the song again during the Blind Audition and coach Singto Numchok was the first to press his red button. Saharat ‘Kong Nuvo’ Sangkapricha was second. I selected Singto,” says the young man.

“I love this song because the lyrics relate to my own life, especially the bit about raising my hopes too high. That happened to me at high school when I fell in love with a senior female student who went on to break my heart. I was like ‘ya tum’ (low grass) while she was more ‘fah soong’ (high sky). I love everything about the song – the lyrics, the melody and Phi Poo’s voice. Before singing it in the Blind Audition, the music director suggested that I use my voice to express my emotions on the words ‘fah soong’ and ‘ya tum’. I found it hard at first to get my feelings across but after lots of listening and practising, I got it right,” recalls Maimhon, who got a congratulatory hug from his parents, his sister and his girlfriend.

 

“I liked it. He sung the number like he was telling a story. I see him as a new voice in the songs-for-life genre,” coach Singto noted during the Blind Audition.

Maimhon, who sang Hugo’s “Bandai See Daeng” in the Knockout round, went from strength to strength as the competition continued. Unlike other teens, his voice was always clear and his articulation perfect, especially in differentiating between the R and L sounds.

“I love the lyrics and listened to this song from the day it was released, long before the music video was banned. To put across it properly, I worked hard on making my voice more powerful and controlling my breathing. It was rearranged with a 3 chas tempo and the music director told me I should sing it like I was inviting guests to come to the ‘bandai see dang’, which is this case is a brothel. The lyrics are clear: you don’t look for love here but for sex. That was difficult for me to imagine because I have never experienced such a place,” he laughs.

 

The next step for Maimhon was a vocal battle with Rotbus on LoSo’s “Jai Sang Ma”, with coach Singto picking Maimhon as the winner.

Coach Joey Boy was also impressed, saying: “You are more attentive to the lyrics and make listeners understand the story you are singing.”

During the live show, Maimhon surprised his coach by singing Natthawut “Max” Jenmana’s “Wan Nueng Chan Dern Khao Pa.”

“Maimhon, you aren’t here for the contest but to showcase your work,” Singto told him admiringly.

“This song also tells a story and compares love to being in the forest. I particularly like the verse that refers to a tiger: ‘One day, I go to the forest and find a tiger, who asks me ‘Are you scared of me?’ I answer, ‘no, because you are better than someone without a heart’. I think the guy must have been so badly hurt by love if he is no longer afraid of anything, least of all a tiger,” Maimhon says.

For the finale, Maimhon chose his mother’s favourite song “Loong Khi Mao” by Carabao.

“Now I know songs-for-life will not disappear. A new wave of artists is coming,” said Singto.

Feasts by the beach

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/music/30339996

Feasts by the beach

music March 03, 2018 01:00

By THE NATION

2,955 Viewed

Phuket’s annual food & music festival returns for a second year to Laguna Phuket from April 27-29. With its “East-Meets-West” theme, the three-day extravaganza will once again heighten the Pearl of the Andaman’s status as a “City of Gastronomy” and attract food and music lovers from around the world to the resort complex located alongside the pristine Bangtao Beach of Phuket, Thailand.

Bodyslam and Sweet Mullet will be on the stage on April 27, Russian pianist and opera singer Ivan Sharapov on April 28, and Jo & Kong on April 29. Entry is free and proceeds go to the Children First Fund in support of Phuket children. Online booking is now open at http://www.LagunaPhuket.com/ foodandmusicfestival.

Just born to beat

South Korean boy band BtoB heads back to Thailand for a fan meeting at Thunder Dome, Muang Thong Thani, on March 24 starting at 5pm. The group, which features Seo Eunkwang, Lee Minhyuk, Lee Changsub, Im Hyunsik, Peniel Shin, Jung Ilhoon, and Yook Sungjae, released its debut EP “Born to Beat” in 2012 and its first full-length album “Complete”, in 2015. Tickets costing from Bt1,800 to Bt5,800 are now on sale at Thai Ticket Major counters and online at http://www.ThaiTicketMajor.com.

Bangkok, full of grace

Bangkok City Ballet School collaborates with Bangkok City Ballet Company (BCB) in presenting its annual school performance, “The 21st Junior Ballet Concert”, at the Thailand Cultural Centre on March 24 at 6pm and March 25 at 3pm. The purpose of the concert is to contribute and expand performing arts in Thailand while demonstrating BCBS students’ performance skills. The programme includes classical ballet pieces, “Coppelia Divertissement” and contemporary dance pieces. Tickets priced at Bt800 are available at Thai Ticket Major.

Music for the holidays

Pom Autobahn – a pop pianist much loved for his mellow vocals – welcomes the holiday season with the concert, “Vacation”, at Chalermkrung Royal Theatre on March 25 at 2pm. A former member of pop band Autobahn, hence the name, he turned solo in 1993 with album “Phu Chai See Nam Thalay.”  He’ll be backed at the concert by the Chalermraj big band. Tickets cost Bt700 and Bt1,000 at Thai Ticket Major and at the door.

Move in with Room 39

Acoustic pop trio Room 39, featuring Issara “Tom” Kitnitchi, Chutimon “Mon” Vichitrissadee and Olran “Wan Yai” Chujai, take to the stage of Hall 105, Bitec Bang Na on March 31 for the concert “The Truth in Room 39”. Tickets starting at Bt1,500 are on sale at http://www.ThaiTicketMajor.com.

Making another ‘Splash’

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/music/30339992

Making another ‘Splash’

music March 03, 2018 01:00

By Agence France-Presse
New York

2,487 Viewed

The Breeders revive their distinct rock voice with a new album

When the Breeders reunited in 2013 to mark 20 years since “Last Splash”, it looked like a straightforward nostalgia tour for an album that had become an alternative rock cornerstone.

“We had a great time and people responded and loved it. And then we started getting calls to do shows in 2014 and so, hmmm, that was technically not a 20th anniversary anymore,” Kim Deal, the Breeders’ frontwoman, says with a robust laugh.

“People would say, ‘We don’t care, we just want you guys to play’, We could do any songs. And it just opened up a whole new thing.”

The fruition is “All Nerve”, which comes out next Friday and is the first album to bring back together the Breeders’ classic lineup from 1993’s “Last Splash”.

 

Despite the Breeders’ enduring influence on a generation of artists, the intervening 25 years produced their share of internal friction, as well as substance abuse struggles, that inhibited the band’s rebirth.

“All Nerve”, to be accompanied by an extensive tour, manages to revive the Breeders’ brand of insouciant grunge that struck such a chord in the alternative rock era while still sounding fresh.

Deal – until 2013 also the bassist of alternative rock icons the Pixies – infuses the music with reverbhazy guitar and her distinctly sandy yet warm voice.

The Breeders initially started as a side project for Deal, who shares guitar duties with her twin sister Kelley. Josephine Wiggs plays a dominant bass – so exemplified by “Cannonball”, the signature song off “Last Splash”, whose bass salvo slinks both high and low – while Jim Macpherson cranks up the band’s volume with his vigorous drums. The lyricism is both self-reflective and surreal.

“Good morning!” Deal bellows at the start of the album on “Wait in the Car”.

“Consider, I always struggle with the right word. Meow meow meow meow meow meow,” she bellows with a force more punk than housecat.

The title track on “All Nerve” manages to be tender and bellicose at once. “You don’t know how much I missed you,” she sings, before the guitars crush forward and she warns: “I won’t stop. I will run you down.”

Deal says the song’s lines came into her head spontaneously one morning before she presented it to the band for one of its decidedly low-tech jam sessions.

“It was very organic,” she explains. “We’re not a laptop band. There is never a laptop in the room.”

The Breeders recorded the album in three studios including Chicago’s Electrical Audio with Steve Albini, the producer known for his raw, heavy sound, most notably in his work with Nirvana.

“Blues on the Acropolis”, the album’s closing track, reflects sadly on how so many world monuments are also known for drunkards and rabble-rousers.

“Walking with a Killer” eerily recounts the fright strolling the outer stretches of US Route 35 that cuts through Dayton, the military city where Deal was born and returned to help care for her Alzheimer’sstricken mother.

“I think every town has their creepy backroads. They have cornfields that come right to the side with cars whizzing past,” Deal says.

“It’s a summer night with the crickets and the headlights are coming your way. It really writes itself, doesn’t it?” she adds, her voice building with enthusiasm.

If “Last Splash”, which made the Rolling Stone and Pitchfork lists of best albums of the 1990s, came out when alternative rock was entering the mainstream, “All Nerve” coincidentally appears at a very different moment – with rock arguably losing prominence and much of the broader entertainment world galvanised by activism.

Asked for her thoughts on the #MeToo movement against sexual harassment, Deal – one of the most prominent women in alternative rock – pauses to reflect. Small incidents, she recalls, in retrospect reflected the double standards for women.

She recounted an incident when Wiggs needed bass equipment while in Dayton and the store owner insisted on a hug – behaviour Deal doubts any man would encounter.

But women, Deal adds, have always been part of rock – just that power brokers, from concert bookers to journalists, did not always embrace them.

“Just because you don’t find woman bands in festivals this year doesn’t mean there aren’t any women in bands. They’re just not getting invited,” she says.

International piano summer school heads to Bangkok

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/music/30339735

International piano summer school heads to Bangkok

music February 27, 2018 09:25

By The Nation

4,222 Viewed

The Robinson School of Music on Sukhumvit Soi 31 is hosting the inaugural International Festival & Summer School Piano Week from April 15 to 22, in the run up to the fourth Thailand Steinway Competition.

The tailored programme of master classes, one-to-one and duet lessons and concerto classes, as well as general musicianship and composition training is available to participants of any age and ability.

Headed by British concert pianist Samantha Ward (founder and artistic director) and Polish concert pianist Maciej Raginia (creative director), the festival is full of high calibre performances from the in-house team of concert pianists. In April, the award-winning pianists and pedagogues Maiko Mori (Japan), Yuki Negishi (Japan) and composer Neil Luck (UK) will join he faculty members.

The origins of the festival go back to the summer of 2013 when it was launched in Bangor, North Wales. Since then Piano Week expanded to Germany, Italy and China with further invitations to set up international residencies in Japan and Hong Kong.

During the past five years, it has welcomed world-renowned artists such as Stephen Kovacevich, Leon McCawley, David Fung, Chenyin Li whilst attracting an growing faculty of concert pianists and pedagogues at the top of their profession from all over the world.

In 2018, the festival will travel three times to Weston Rhyn (UK), twice to Beijing (China), Bangkok (Thailand), Sankt Goar (Germany) and Foligno (Italy).

Participant fees are from Bt56,000 to Bt80,000. A special discount of 10-percent off Piano Week fees is offered to all readers of The Nation. Apply for a place by March 19 directly online at http://www.PianoWeek.com.

Songs to remember

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

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Songs to remember

music February 24, 2018 01:00

By THE NATION

Pan Paibulkiat, Taem Charas, Suda Chuenban, Mam Patcharida, Chompoo Fruity, Ford Sobchai, Noo Meter, Dao Mayuree, Tom Rainbow, and Stamp are among the stars taking to the stage of the Thailand Cultural Centre on March 3 from 5pm for “Remember Me” – the first concert organised by Music Copyright (Thailand).

Tickets costing from Bt800 to Bt2,500 are on sale at Thai Ticket Major counters as well as online at http://www.ThaiTicketMajor.com.

Food for the tummy and the ears

Cat Foodival returns to Oasis Arena, Show DC on March 3 for its third edition and this year’s event promises to be bigger and better than ever with 100 food stalls manned by many artists and music shows by Scrubb, Sqweez Animal, Stamp, Deepsea Drive Machine, Boy Imagine, Max Jenmana, The Richman Toy and Greasy Cafe.

Tickets costs a mere Bt300 at Thai Ticket Major. Find out more at http://www.ThisIsCat.com, or follow the conversation at Cat Radio’s Facebook, IG and Twitter pages at thisiscatradio.

New start for Tor+

After spending five years preparing his latest album, pianist and pop star Saksit “Tor+” Vejsupaporn takes to the stage of at KBank Siam Pic-Ganesha Theatre, on the seventh floor of Siam Square One, for “Chapter I Live Showcase” on March 4 at 2.30pm. During the show, he’ll be talking about his new beginning.

Tickets cost Bt1,500 and Bt2,000 including a copy of the CD at Thai Ticket Major.

Girls, girls, girls

Soundbox is back with first show in the 2018 series featuring hot girl group Fifth Harmony, who will perform at GMM Live House of CentralWorld on March 5. Expect to hear pop/r’n’b hits “Down”, “Worth It”, “Work From Home”, and “Sledgehammer.” OZMO and Tor+ Saksit are the opening acts.

Tickets are priced at Bt1,600 at Thai Ticket Major.

Legend in Darkness and Light

John Legend stops off in Thailand next month, entertaining his legions of Thai fans at Hall 106 of Bitec Bangna on March 23 at 8pm, as a part of his “Darkness and Light” tour. Tickets are from Bt2,800 to Bt8,000 at Thai Ticket Major.

The drumming of giants

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

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Percussion ensemble Tiger Drum Thailand will share a global spotlight while performing at the Thailand International Balloon Festival in Chiang Mai next week.
Percussion ensemble Tiger Drum Thailand will share a global spotlight while performing at the Thailand International Balloon Festival in Chiang Mai next week.

The drumming of giants

music February 24, 2018 01:00

By Kitchana Lersakvanitchakul
THE NATION

Hot-air balloons will be soaring over Chiang Mai next month to the rhythms of Tiger Drum Thailand

Tiger Drum Thailand will be performing at the Thailand International Balloon Festival in Chiang Mai next week and, if “Asura-Prahathan” – the percussion ensemble’s stunning recent debut show in Bangkok – was an indicator, the hot-air aviators are in for a treat.

“The balloon festival will be a chance to show our true identity to the world,” says founding member Kittichai Thaitae.

Kittichai wrote “Asura-Prahathan”, basically adding a new chapter to the classic Ramayana. He’d studied khon, the traditional masked-theatre form, but found it odd that, for all the yok rob (battle) scenes in the Ramayana, there’s no mention of the signalling that armies use in combat.

So he filled in the gap.

 

“The story starts in a city with an orchestra formed of eight giants who use drums and other traditional instruments to signal their intent to do battle with other cities.”

National Artist Kasem Thongaram (Khru Thoeng) provided the names for the giants and the title for the show.

Tiger Drum Thailand are well known at home through the TV contest “Thailand’s Got Talent”, having reached the semi-finals in Season 3 and presenting “Asura-Prahathan” during the fifth season.

In fact, they’re considered one of the highlight acts for the balloon festival, where they’ll perform on each of the three nights.

Kittichai likes to think that hot-air balloons – spheres floating in the air – fit well with his concept about giants. The group does use a giant drum, as well, signifying the festival’s “greatness”, he says.

“The eight giants from ‘Asura-Prahathan’ will jump out of balloons, as if from Heaven, and land on the big drums, creating a powerful sound.”

 

Tiger Drum Thailand began with Kittichai and five fellow College of Dramatic Arts students – Thapakorn Taewkratai, Asanee Jirayusayotin, Eakkaphan Mabandit, Patsorn Jittjeen and Thinnawat Thaitae. Chakaree Sengdam and Thakoon Boonma joined later, after jamming with Tiger Drum at the Tiger Maeklong Percussion Café near the Talad Rotfai night market.

A teacher had named the college’s football team the Tigers because all the players were born in the Year of the Tiger, Kittichai says. After the musician friends graduated, they borrowed the name for themselves.

“To be honest, I’d planned to work for my mother, who has a Thai-food restaurant in France, but I was refused a visa three times. I got a regular job here in Thailand, but it was too boring doing the same thing all the time.

“I was determined to buy drums and perform with my friends and we did several events, only to split up because we had different styles. My style is based on the cultural roots of drumming all over the world.”

 

Tiger Drum Thailand had a loose start in 2007, finally formalising as a working act in 2012.

“I wanted to work in the performing arts while studying at college and started collecting drums and other percussion instruments. I even got a Japanese taiko and went there to study it.”

Kittichai believes Thai drumming should be more varied – and there should be more drums, too. “And I have ideas about making Thai drums famous around the world,” he says. “I’ve studied several countries’ drumming roots and I build my own drums. I’ve learned about different accents that foreign players use, including some percussionists who did a workshop in Thailand. The most important thing is developing Thai drumming with originality and modernity, yet based in the classical Thai performing arts.”

Kittichai’s first instructor, Parinya Songsamut, owns a shop called Maeklong Percussion, and it was the two of them who opened the Tiger Maeklong Percussion Café in Chatuchak. “People think a drum has a only three or four sounds but, as my teacher says, there are more than 1,000,” Kittichai points out.

 

“Tiger Drum have been getting better and better since we began applying traditional foundations to theories of modernity. I like trying new things, such as using different sticks or brushes when I’m playing klong sabad chai [the sacred dance of the victory drum]. I’d discovered that players in our neighbouring countries experiment with different ways of striking the drums and percussion. Sometimes I don’t use sticks at all – just hands and elbows.

“Meanwhile you can also get some very weird sounds with different settings and tunings. I asked two traditional masters if they minded me playing in a non-traditional way and they agreed there’s nothing wrong with that. But you do have to know what you’re doing.

“At one event I wanted to lay a drum on my feet, but the organiser objected, saying it went against tradition. And yet a master told me I could do that. I think Thais tend to get stuck in traditions they don’t really understand. It’s a blind spot.”

Keep to the beat

– Tiger Drum Thailand will perform all three days of the Thailand International Balloon Festival, taking place at the Cowboy Army Riding Club (Larn Nern Noom) in Chiang Mai from March 2 to 4.

– Festival passes cost Bt300 per day (Bt100 for children seven to 12) at the gate and in advance at http://www.Eventbrite.com.

Incubus strikes again

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

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This was the fourth visit to Thailand for Californian rockers Incubus.
This was the fourth visit to Thailand for Californian rockers Incubus.

Incubus strikes again

music February 24, 2018 01:00

By Kitchana Lersakvanitchakul
THE NATION

The was a night of mood swings as the Californian rockers layered metal atop melancholy

The fourth concert in Thailand by American rock band Incubus – at Central Lat Phrao’s BCC Hall last week – felt no less powerful than the first three, dating back to 2004.

It was clear that Thais’ enthusiasm for Incubus hasn’t waned, judging by the vigorous headbanging and boisterous singing along, and the band rewarded them with a visually striking production.

Singer Brandon Boyd, guitarist Mike Einziger, drummer Jose Pasillas, bassist Ben Kenney and turntablist Chris Kilmore hit the stage at 8pm sharp, roaring into “Glitterbomb” from their latest album, “8”.

 

Then came “Circles” from the 2001 disc “Morning View” and another track from the new one, “Nimble Bastard”.

Incubus’ eighth album contributed just five of its tracks to the evening’s set list, matching the number of songs presented from “Morning View”, the band’s fourth and top-selling album to date, which went double platinum.

And the Californians alternated between new and old throughout the concert, keeping the crowd intense, though the screams did get louder at the first few notes of “Anna Molly” from the 2006 album “Light Grenades”.

The quieter tunes “11AM” from “Morning View” and “Megalomaniac” from 2004’s “A Crow Left of the Murder” gave audience members chances to sing along.

 

“Megalomaniac” is a fascinating mix of mellowness and heavy rock and, more than a decade on, it still takes the breath away. Boyd widened the fans’ smiles by announcing that it was his “birthday song”.

More rock ballads – “If Not Now, When?” and “Drive” – seemed written to bring out the tears. After the mood got a little too mild during “Paper Shoes” and “Pantomime”, the 42-year-old singer pulled off his black shirt to reveal a vest barely covering an array of tattoos.

Then he lunged for the heart again with “Nice to Know You”.

The show played out with “Pistola”, “Stellar”, “Vitamin”, “Loneliest” and “Wish You Were Here” (an original, not a cover of eponymous Pink Floyd track).

The encore was a thundering medley of “No Fun” from the latest album and “Warning” from “Morning View”.

Grime steals the show

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/music/30339492

British singer-songwriter and rising star Dua Lipa, centre, performs during the Brit Awards ceremony.
British singer-songwriter and rising star Dua Lipa, centre, performs during the Brit Awards ceremony.

Grime steals the show

music February 24, 2018 01:00

By Agence France-Presse
London

Stormzy storms Brits as the dance music with machinelike sounds and hip-hop vocals makes its mark at the pop show-piece

Grime star Stormzy was the big winner at the Brit Awards in London on Wednesday, which included an emotional tribute from Oasis star Liam Gallagher to the victims of the Manchester terror attack.

The south London rapper, who closed out the show with a water-soaked performance, beat off competition from folk-pop phenomenon Ed Sheeran to win the best male solo award and best album for “Gang Signs & Prayer”.

“My mum and all my family are here, we done it!” he said on picking up his second award.

 

Rising British star Dua Lipa also claimed two awards for best female solo artist and best breakthrough artist, as Sheeran had an unexpectedly disappointing night.

US singer Ariana Grande was set to perform in honour of the 22 victims who died in a May terror attack at her Manchester show, but was forced to pull out due to illness.

Manchester rock icon Gallagher instead stepped in, performing a stirring rendition of Oasis classic “Live Forever”, with the cavernous O2 Arena lit up by thousands of mobile phone torches.

Kendrick Lamar was named best international male artist, receiving his award from football star Harry Kane, while Foo Fighters won the best international group category.

The US rapper later performed live, standing on top of a huge box containing a sports car, which was smashed to pieces as the song went on.

 

The Brits have often been a magnet for controversy – Pulp singer Jarvis Cocker invaded a performance by Michael Jackson in 1996 and then-deputy prime minister John Prescott was doused by a bucket of ice water in 1998.

The stars were on their best behaviour this year, although Gorillaz frontman Damon Alban was cut off short when it appeared he was about to wax political during his acceptance speech for best British group.

“This country is a lovely place, its part of a beautiful world, but don’t let it become isolated,” he said.

But the entire ceremony had a political edge, with many stars wearing badges of small white roses to highlight sexual harassment in the industry and show solidarity with its victims.

“I think it’s brilliant that it’s come to the fore now,” said Paloma Faith, who arrived holding real white roses.

“But I just think I’ve not met a single woman in my entire life that hasn’t experienced some kind of sexism or sexual harassment of any kind.”

 

Singer-guitarist Sheeran, 27, was awarded the “global success” award, given to him by Rolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood who praised his talent and his ability to keep “his feet on the ground”.

His latest album “Divide” has smashed many records, including on streaming App Spotify, where it received 57 million listens on the day of its release.

Dua Lipa, 22, is the latest artist to break through on YouTube, and her single “New Rules” has surpassed one billion views on the video-sharing platform.

Born in London to Kosovo-Albanian parents, she tried modelling as a teenager before launching her musical career with a series of covers.

Her eponymous debut album, released in mid-2017, received rave reviews, with influential magazine NME praising her voice and a sound mature beyond her years.

“Thank you for starting my night off so magically,” she said as she picked up the award from Australian pop royalty Kylie Minogue.

When she was named British breakthrough act, she took her younger sister and brother on stage with her, declaring: “I told them to believe in magic because it’s real.”

The Brit Awards have recognised the cream of British pop music since they were first held in 1977, but in recent years have been criticised for failing to be bold.

Winners of the 2018 Brit Awards

– British album of the year – “Gang Signs & Prayer” by Stormzy

– British male solo artist – Stormzy

– British female solo artist – Dua Lipa

– British breakthrough act – Dua Lipa.

– British group – Gorillaz.

– British single – ‘Human’ by Rag’n’Bone Man

– International male solo artist – Kendrick Lamar

– International female solo artist – Lorde.

– International group – Foo Fighters

– British artist video – Harry Styles

Classical cuts

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/music/30339459

Classical cuts

music February 23, 2018 01:00

By THE NATION

Japanese violinist Airi Suzuki will perform Mendelssohn’s “Violin Concerto No 1 in E minor, Op 64” with the Royal Bangkok Symphony Orchestra at the Thailand Cultural Centre next Wednesday night at 8. The programme also includes Brahms’ “Academic Festival Overture, Op 80”, and Schumann’s “Symphony No 2 in C Major, Op 61.”

Tickets are from Bt300 to Bt1,500 at Thai Ticket Major counters and online at http://www.ThaiTicketMajor.com.

Franky comes to Bangkok

DJ, producer and music label owner Franky Rizardo – one of Holland’s finest exports in dance music – mans the decks at Glow Nightclub on Sukhumvit Soi 23 tonight from 9pm to 3am. A star of the EDM world, he has played at such prestigious music festivals as We Are FSTVL, Defected Croatia, Tomorrowland, and Mysteryland.

Book a table at (086) 614 3355.

Sounds like Kolour

Kolour in the Park returns to Thai Wake Park, Pathum Thani tomorrow and Sunday with 13 hours of nonstop music from 1pm to 2am on both days and a lineup that includes Mat.Joe, Nakadia, and Pomo.

Tickets are Bt2,300 for two days and Bt1,800 for one day at http://www.KolourinthePark.com/#Tickets.

Dropzone plugs in

Dropzone – a brandnew electronic music festival – takes place at Wonderworld Extreme Park on March 23 from 2pm to 2am. The two-day festival features three stages of trance/EDM, trap and techno. Headliners include Dash Berlin, Kaskade, Paul van Dyk, Futuristic Polar Bears, Liquid Soul and Kill The Noise 360 along with VR Dome and VR APainter. For tickets, go to http://www.TicketMelon.com.

Hungry for Hungary

Renowned Hungarian DJ and production duo Stadium X will be back in Bangkok next weekend, spinning at Insanity Nightclub on Sukhumvit Soi 11 on March 3 from 9pm to 2am. The duo is best known for their tracks “Howl At The Moon” and “Harmony” featuring Nicky Romero.

Book your table at (082) 731 8885.