Peter Serkin, adventurous pianist from a celebrated musical family, dies at 72 #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

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Peter Serkin, adventurous pianist from a celebrated musical family, dies at 72

Feb 04. 2020
By Harrison Smith
The Washington Post

A piano prodigy who made his professional debut at age 12, Peter Serkin seemed destined from childhood to carry on the legacy of his father, Rudolf Serkin, one of the 20th century’s most revered pianists.

But while the elder Serkin was celebrated for breathing new life into Beethoven and other old masters, his son became known for championing the work of 20th-century composers such as Oliver Knussen, Toru Takemitsu, Stefan Wolpe and his childhood friend Peter Lieberson, even as he worked to reveal rich new textures in the classical repertoire so cherished by his father.

Serkin, who was 72 when he died Feb. 1, played everything from Bach to Berio and Mozart to Messiaen, sometimes using a 19th-century fortepiano to perform period works. He also acquired a reputation as something of a concert-hall rebel, performing in a dashiki and love beads in the early 1970s before trading his countercultural attire for three-piece pinstripe suits, settling into a role as one of his generation’s preeminent performers.

“He’s one of a handful of pianists who not only possess a cerebral understanding of the music of our time but the ability to communicate it with feeling,” music critic Ira Rosenblum once wrote in the New York Times. “In his hands, even the most formidable works are fluid and expressive.”

Serkin regularly commissioned works from contemporary composers and, like other members of his prodigiously talented family, described music in near-religious terms, telling the Boston Globe it was “a kind of ecstatic experience.”

But his devotion to new music was a stark departure from the traditionalism of his father and maternal grandfather, conductor and violinist Adolf Busch. Together, Rudolf Serkin and the Busch and Moyse music families founded the Marlboro school and chamber festival in Vermont, creating a classical-music incubator that shaped legions of young musicians, including Serkin.

“I like music that I can let enter my head and body, and live with,” he told the Times in 1973, explaining that he listened to Frank Zappa, John McLaughlin, the Grateful Dead, John Coltrane and Sun Ra in addition to classical works. Among the latter, his favorites included Arnold Schoenberg’s keyboard compositions, which he recorded in full, and Olivier Messiaen’s eight-movement “Quartet for the End of Time,” which he performed roughly 150 times with his chamber group the Tashi Quartet.

Serkin recorded numerous albums for RCA Red Seal Records, performed solo recitals around the world, accompanied leading orchestras and chamber groups, and taught at the Juilliard School, Tanglewood, Curtis Institute of Music and Bard College Conservatory of Music. Tall and thin, with a piercing gaze behind a pair of large glasses, he eschewed publicity and once declared that he’d “rather play 20 concerts before 3,000 people than give one interview.”

Early on, it seemed that his music career might collapse under the weight of professional pressures and family expectations. Beginning in the late 1960s, when he was in his mid-20s and primarily focused on standard repertory, Serkin abandoned the piano to embark on soul-searching journeys to Mexico and India. He became interested in religion, immersing himself in the Sufi, Buddhist and Hindu faiths, and recalled ending his Mexico trip after hearing a radio broadcast of Bach’s Fifth Brandenburg Concerto wafting on the breeze.

It was the kind of loose, emotionally intense performance that had long eluded him. For years, he told the Times, he had been “playing concerts largely out of compulsion. . . . I had just fallen into it without ever deciding for myself that it was what I wanted to do.” He returned from his travels with a more relaxed approach to music, even as he maintained an academic rigor that he learned from his father, studying composers’ letters and examining first editions of their scores.

“The idea so many musicians have – that you have to act out the music for the audience, to supply it as a solidified object – is death,” he said. “Music is change, it’s process, not a static thing. And if you want to be part of that process you have to continue to grow.”

The fifth of seven children,Peter Adolf Serkin was born in Manhattan on July 24, 1947. His middle name was an homage to his grandfather Busch, whom the Bohemian-born Rudolf Serkin began performing with in Berlin as a teenager; both men immigrated to the United States after the outbreak of World War II.

His mother, the former Irene Busch, was also a musician who played piano, violin and viola. She was credited with helping to keep the Marlboro festival afloat after Adolf’s death in 1952, and it was there that Serkin made his formal debut, performing a Haydn concerto under conductor Alexander Schneider.

Serkin studied at the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia, taking lessons from Polish-born virtuoso Mieczyslaw Horszowski, American pianist Lee Luvisi and his own father before graduating in 1964. Two years later, his recording of Bach’s Goldberg Variations earned him a Grammy Award for most promising new classical recording artist.

In 1967, at age 19, he made his grand-scale New York debut, performing Beethoven’s notoriously difficult Diabelli Variations at Philharmonic Hall. His ambition and mannerisms, which included humming and crouching over the keys, spurred debate among critics such as Harold C. Schonberg, who wrote in the Times: “His career can go one of two ways – into that of an eccentric, or into that of an unconventional pianist with all kinds of unusual ideas that will be made convincing by intellectual strength.”

In effect, Serkin had it both ways, angering some members of the music establishment with his hippie attire and unconventional music selections before gaining widespread recognition as a bridge between old and new musical traditions. Through the Tashi Quartet, formed in 1973 and named for the Tibetan word for good fortune, he also helped bring younger audiences to the repertoire, touring alongside violinist Ida Kavafian, cellist Fred Sherry and clarinetist Richard Stoltzman.

“Mr. Serkin’s recitals compel a focused quiet that is almost Oriental,” cultural critic Leslie Kandell later wrote in the Times. “His best interpretations are strikingly pristine, as if an immense intellect were illuminating notes from the bottom. To say he is lost in his playing does not give the right image. He is found in it.”

He died at his home in Red Hook, N.Y., from pancreatic cancer, said his manager, Shirley Kirshbaum.

His marriages to Wendy Spinner and Regina Touhey ended in divorce. Survivors include a daughter from his first marriage, Karina Serkin Spitzley; four children from his second marriage, Maya, Elena, Stefan and William Serkin; a brother; three sisters; and two grandchildren.

Serkin’s recitals often featured a mix of old and new, surveying hundreds of years of musical tradition in less than 90 minutes. But he dismissed suggestions that he was trying to update old works, telling the Globe in 1987 that he aimed “to project the up-to-date-ness that already exists in the music.”

Composers like Bach and Beethoven “were so infamous in their own day for being outlandish, outrageous,” he continued. “That’s expressed in the music in a very healthy way. Like crazy sanity. Wild discipline. I try to relate to these pieces now as part of our own lives, in a very personal way, with feeling and emotion, but never with a concern that I want to show the listener how deep my feelings are.”

At the Super Bowl, J-Lo and Shakira shake off boundaries to put on a ferocious master dance class #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

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https://www.nationthailand.com/lifestyle/30381537?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

At the Super Bowl, J-Lo and Shakira shake off boundaries to put on a ferocious master dance class

Feb 04. 2020

Shakira and Jennifer Lopez made history on Feb. 2 when they became the first Latina singers to perform together at a Super Bowl halftime show.

Shakira and Jennifer Lopez made history on Feb. 2 when they became the first Latina singers to perform together at a Super Bowl halftime show.
By The Washington Post · Sarah L. Kaufman · FEATURES, ENTERTAINMENT
As the first Latina headliners of a Super Bowl halftime show, Jennifer Lopez and Shakira didn’t have to do much more than swivel their famous hair and hips to make good on promises of honoring their culture and delivering a message of empowerment. Yet it turned out that endless jiggling was not the key motif of the two global stars known for fine control of their hindquarters. Their show went deeper, beyond assumptions about age, ethnicity, gender and motherhood.

Shakira, marking her 43rd birthday Sunday, showed off her multifaceted musicianship with impressive turns on the guitar and drums, while belting a medley of her hits – “Whenever, Wherever” and “Hips Don’t Lie” among them – with seemingly effortless vocal power. As if that wasn’t enough of a feat, she sang while in constant, furious motion: whipping her long blond mane, pounding the stage in a jubilant mix of salsa steps and the wide-legged stomping and squatting of African dance, along with the winding and undulating pelvic gyrations of the Colombian-born singer’s Middle Eastern patrimony. She also incorporated the rope dance from her Oral Fixation tour, coiling a length of cord around her wrists and stretching it overhead, adding a frisson of bondage play and the shifts in power that implies, while also using the rope’s lines to emphasize her graceful hands and arms and the sinuous, snakelike movements of her body.

J-Lo, looking like a CrossFit enthusiast on her way to the Met Gala in a sheer bodysuit splashed with sequins, shinnied up a stripper pole and found just the right friction coefficient to balance herself in a horizontal move, inspired by her starring role in the 2019 film about exotic dancers, “Hustlers.” Those impressive abdominals came into play later as the 50-year-old pop star flipped upside down and cartwheeled, with the help of her backup dancers, landing neatly to scoot into place next to Shakira without missing a beat. Cue the hip-grinding finale.

The dancing ended too soon. It was almost too much to take in at such a pace, the blinding lights, the sparkling costumes with glitter and fringe flashing everywhere, and the extreme-strength moves and displays of stamina. Reggaeton artists Bad Bunny, from Puerto Rico, and J Balvin, from Colombia, joined the headliners for duets – Shakira and Bad Bunny in “Chantaje” and J-Lo and J Balvin in “Mi Gente” and “Love Don’t Cost a Thing.” The men grounded the 12-minute show with a smoother, heavier feel, but they didn’t distract from the storm of female energy that powered this halftime performance and gave it a surprising political sharpness.

The two women, both mothers of young children, had a pointed message to share. It was squarely aimed at treatment of Latinos at the U.S.-Mexico border and in Puerto Rico, which has been shattered by several natural disasters and delays in aid. An overhead camera slowly revealed children posed in individual white orbs, a stylized but unmistakable motif of children separated from their parents and held captive at the border. The stage was rimmed in lights that formed the circular gender sign for female. Shakira smashed the drums and Lopez’s young daughter, Emme Maribel Muñiz, began singing “Let’s Get Loud,” leading a children’s choir. Segueing to her next message, Lopez appeared draped in a giant feathered Puerto Rican flag that she unfurled triumphantly as Muñiz sang a few lines from “Born in the U.S.A.” while her mother hollered, “Let’s get loud!” It was a moving tribute to the Puerto Rican family origins of mother and daughter, and a reminder of the citizenship of the island’s people.

A Twitter crossfire quickly erupted, with heavy favoritism of Shakira’s dance skills and rear-end wiggling over J-Lo’s. But this misses the point. Shakira had opened the show with a greeting to the Miami audience in Spanish; she closed it in Spanish – a meaningful circularity in a nation torn over immigration. Lopez echoed her in English, capping a performance that was unabashedly sexy, athletic and beautiful, and powerful in ways that went beyond the physical.

At this halftime show, the hips didn’t lie. And neither did the women in control of them, and their message.

‘Bad Boys for Life’ stays in No. 1 spot over Super Bowl weekend #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/lifestyle/30381493?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

‘Bad Boys for Life’ stays in No. 1 spot over Super Bowl weekend

Feb 03. 2020
By Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Hailey Waller 

Sony Corp.’s “Bad Boys for Life” remained No. 1 at the box office during a sluggish stretch for Hollywood releases, holding on for a third straight weekend. Its biggest competition was the Super Bowl taking a bite out of movie ticket sales.

The film, starring Will Smith and Martin Lawrence, held off newcomers from Paramount and United Artists Releasing, taking in $17.7 million, researcher Comscore Inc. estimated Sunday. Analysts had expected about $18 million.

Studios shy away from releasing big movies during the Super Bowl weekend, but the continued strength of “Bad Boys” helped revenue post an improvement from last year. Box Office Pro had projected that the weekend’s top 10 films would rise 23% to 28% from the same weekend of 2019, when the New England Patriots beat the Los Angeles Rams.

New releases this weekend, United Artists’ “Gretel & Hansel” and Paramount’s “The Rhythm Section” and landed in fourth and 10th places, respectively. “Gretel & Hansel” generated $6.1 million while “The Rhythm Section” took in $2.8 million.

In “The Rhythm Section,” Blake Lively plays a heroin-addicted prostitute who works with a special agent played by Jude Law to hunt down the terrorists who bombed her family’s plane. It’s directed by Reed Morano, who worked on Hulu’s “The Handmaid’s Tale,” and produced by Barbara Broccoli and Michael Wilson, who oversee the James Bond franchise. Most critics gave poor reviews to the picture.

The fairy tale spinoff “Gretel & Hansel,” got a better reception, though still mixed. At under 90 minutes, the movie “needs a bit more meat on its bones,” writes the New York Times.

An international smorgasbord of jazz #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

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https://www.nationthailand.com/lifestyle/30380798?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

An international smorgasbord of jazz

Jan 20. 2020
By The Nation

After over a decade of its establishment, the upcoming 12th Thailand International Jazz Conference 2020 (TIJC2020) from January 31 to February 2, 2020 will be the most international with the most diverse array of musical styles — from traditional standard, flamenco and Latin, big band music, rhythm and blues, jungle and drum ‘n’ bass, to the most current contemporary jazz and the most eclectic classical-influenced “third stream” jazz.

TIJC 2020 will be the first year where a contemporary jazz group will headline the festival. The superstar-packed contemporary jazz project “Ozmosys” will close out the TIJC on the night of February 2.

Drummer and leader of this all-star jazz project, the legendary Omar Hakim, is well recognised today as one of the world’s top jazz and overall drummers who has performed with everyone, from Miles Davis and Weather Report to the likes of Michael Jackson, Madonna and countless others. Joining Omar Harkim in Ozmosys on the keyboard is Rachel Z, one of the most influential contemporary keyboardists who has also collaborated with countless artists such as Wayne Shorter, Steps Ahead, Marcus Miller, and Najee. Bassist Linley Marthe, famous for his collaboration with the great Joe Zawinul, has now become one of the most sought-after contemporary jazz and popular bassists.

Last but not least, the name of jazz guitar superhero Kurt Rosenwinkel needs no introduction. He is acknowledged by the jazz world nowadays as one of the most influential jazz guitarists of the 21st century. Encompassing a variety of musical styles from jazz, rock, ambient music, to classical music, Rosenwinkel became internationally prominent for his distinctive improvisational style, extremely fluent guitar skill, and visionary composition. One of the outstanding projects is the “Big Road Blues”, which documents Kurt’s collaboration with the legendary Eric Clapton.

Ozmosys will close out the night (February 2) on the “Main Stage” at TIJC with their highly energetic and tasteful contemporary jazz featuring all the heavyweights in today’s world jazz scene.

Besides performing with Ozmosys, Rosenwinkel will also perform a very special concert featuring his original composition, with Thailand Philharmonic Orchestra (TPO) in the “Jazz with TPO” concert on Saturday (4pm onwards) at Prince Mahidol Hall. Orchestral jazz is not something you can hear every day. Plus, Rosenwinkel is the world’s top jazz guitarist, described by the Jazz Book as “a visionary composer, with an infinitely sensitive way of layering electronic sounds, borrowed from ambient music, dub, and drum and bass, and manipulating them intelligently”. You may not be able to imagine how astonishing it would be when Kurt’s extremely imaginative composition and skillful and original guitar performance will sound like in front of the lush, sophisticated, and powerful background from the philharmonic orchestra. Hence, this is one of the must-see concerts.

Great Russian trumpeter Alex Sipiagin also joins the same orchestral afternoon as a soloist for TPO. Over the past decades, Sipiagin has established his reputation in the New York jazz scene as a world-class jazz trumpet player. In the TIJC2020, his session with TPO will also feature a masterful trumpet performance of his own amazing composition performed with rich orchestral arrangement – again a must for any jazz and orchestral music lovers.

Also joining the TPO evening is Jorge Pardo, Spanish flutist and saxophonist, whose reputation is guaranteed by his long-time collaboration with the great Chick Corea and Paco de Lucia. Over decades of his music profession, Pardo has been a major force that created a new musical language embracing jazz with Flamenco. The same TPO session will give you a great experience of jazz music with flamenco, jazz, world, and orchestral classical characters.

The main event, considered to be a highlight of TIJC, is the evening concert series to be held at the “Main Stage” located in the College of Music’s scenic Musica Arboretum. In addition to Ozmosys who will headline Sunday night, the headliners for Friday (January 31) and Saturday (February 1) nights include Javon Jackson, a tenor saxophonist who came into international prominence as a touring and recording member of the legendary drummer “Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers” and The Rajiv Jayaweera Quintet Featuring Chris Cheek, respectively.

Other international artists to highlight the TIJC2020 include topnotch jazz artists from around the world, including Jorge Pardo Trio (Spain), Loop Doctors (Hungary), Pekka Pylkkanen Nu Unit (Finland), Jazz Association Singapore Orchestra (Singapore), Cherryl Hayes (USA), and others.

With its focus on the artistic value of jazz music, as well as the development of the society via jazz education, TIJC has now marked its place on the world map as one of the dream destinations for jazz aficionados and players around the country, region, and the world.

In addition to all the above, this is the year that we are so much into the concept of “Jazz for All” to make the jazz music available and well-known by all.

For TIJC2020, all kids under 10 years old can participate free of charge, with some special discount for parents as well.

The Thailand International Jazz Conference 2020 (TIJC2020) will be held from January 31 to February 2 at the College of Music, Mahidol University. For more information, visit www.tijc.net.2

Super Junior’s Hee-chul, TWICE’s Momo in romantic relationship #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/lifestyle/30380066?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Super Junior’s Hee-chul, TWICE’s Momo in romantic relationship

Jan 02. 2020
Kim Hee-chul of boy band Super Junior and girl group TWICE's Japanese member Momo are in a romantic relationship, the artists' management agencies confirms Thursday.(Yonhap)

Kim Hee-chul of boy band Super Junior and girl group TWICE’s Japanese member Momo are in a romantic relationship, the artists’ management agencies confirms Thursday.(Yonhap)
By The Korea Herald/ANN

Kim Hee-chul of boy band Super Junior and girl group TWICE’s Japanese member Momo are in a romantic relationship, the artists’ management agencies confirmed Thursday. “After getting along as close colleagues of show business, the two have recently started liking and dating each other,” Kim’s agency, Label SJ, said.

The relationship was also confirmed by JYP Entertainment, the talent agency of TWICE.

The artists from some of South Korea’s most loved idol bands make them one of the highest-profile couple at the K-pop scene.

Born in 1983, Kim debuted as a member of Super Junior in 2005 and has expanded his career to reality shows. Born in 1996, Momo is from Japan’s Kyoto Prefecture and joined TWICE through a South Korean reality idol audition program in 2015. Her legal name is Hirai Momo.

The agencies admitted to the two idol stars’ relationship following a local news report earlier in the day. (Yonhap)

http://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20200102000082

Twice singer Tzuyu has world’s most beautiful face, BTS singer Jungkook is most handsome #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/lifestyle/30379974?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Twice singer Tzuyu has world’s most beautiful face, BTS singer Jungkook is most handsome

Dec 29. 2019
Taiwan-born singer Tzuyu of K-pop girl group Twice and South Korean boyband BTS singer Jungkook took the top places as the world's Most Beautiful Face.PHOTOS: TWICETAGRAM/INSTAGRAM, BTS.JUNGKOOK/INSTAGRAM

Taiwan-born singer Tzuyu of K-pop girl group Twice and South Korean boyband BTS singer Jungkook took the top places as the world’s Most Beautiful Face.PHOTOS: TWICETAGRAM/INSTAGRAM, BTS.JUNGKOOK/INSTAGRAM
By The Straits Times, ANN

French model Thylane Blondeau has been dethroned as the world’s Most Beautiful Face.

The 18-year-old drops to the fourth spot in this year’s list of 100 names compiled by TC Candler, with Taiwan-born singer Tzuyu of K-pop girl group Twice sitting pretty at No. 1.

TC Candler has rated the world’s top male and female lookers since 1990.

The 20-year-old Tzuyu is followed by 18-year-old Israeli model Yael Shelbia in No. 2, and 22-year-old Thailand-born singer Lisa in No. 3.

Lisa is part of the successful Korean girl group Blackpink.

British actress Naomi Scott, 26, who stars in Aladdin (2019), completes the top 5 list.

In the Most Handsome Face ranking, actor Jason Momoa, 40, who starred in Aquaman (2018), has also lost his crown.

He is in the No. 5 spot in this year’s survey that is topped by Jungkook, 22.

He is a singer in South Korean boyband BTS.

Most beautiful face winners over the past 30 years include actresses Nicole Kidman, Keira Knightley and Natalie Portman.

The men’s list, which started only in 2013, has seen actors Michael Fassbender and Michiel Huisman named as most handsome faces.

Tzuyu has turned more heads over the years.

She was placed third in 2017 and second last year.

Jungkook scaled the peak after he was ranked second last year.

Swedish YouTuber Felix Kjellberg, 30, better-known as Pewdiepie, is in second spot while singer Shawn Mendes, 21, is in third.

Another BTS singer, 23-year-old V, is at No. 4.

Year in review: The biggest K-pop news of the year #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/lifestyle/30379730?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Year in review: The biggest K-pop news of the year

Dec 22. 2019
Seungri, former Big Bang member, in May attends arrest warrant hearing on charges of embezzlement and procuring sexual services. The court denied to issue an arrest warrant. (Yonhap)

Seungri, former Big Bang member, in May attends arrest warrant hearing on charges of embezzlement and procuring sexual services. The court denied to issue an arrest warrant. (Yonhap)
By The Korea Herald/ANN

2,113 Viewed

To say the least, the year 2019 was a tumultuous one. Ups and downs, tears of joy and sorrow dominated the headlines.

Here are some of the major stories that dominated K-pop news.

1. Plight of YG Entertainment

At the beginning of the year, it seemed like K-pop powerhouse YG Entertainment would have a solid 2019. YG’s girl group Blackpink was enjoying growing popularity around the world, while the label’s crown jewel Big Bang was gearing up for a possible comeback when all the members were discharged from the military.

But that all changed when the label became mired in an industry-wide scandal that started at the Burning Sun Nightclub, owned by Big Bang’s ex-member Seungri. The Burning Sun scandal then snowballed to allegations ranging from prostitution, sexual assault, police corruption, spycam, and drug, among others, involving multiple K-pop artists. The scandal forced Seungri to quit the entertainment industry, while YG’s head and founder Yang Hyun-suk also stepped down for his involvement, including allegedly colluding with police to cover up past drug incidents involving one of his artists, iKON’s B.I. His brother Yang Min-suk, who served as agency’s CEO, also stepped down in June.

 

YG is now led by new appointed CEO Hwang Bo-kyung, but industry watchers speculate it will take a while for one of the once powerful K-pop agencies to regain its foothold. The scandal has halved YG’s stock price from earlier this year, and the future looks bleak at the moment. But there is some hope. Blackpink is slated to return with new music early next year, while Big Bang could possibly still make comeback.

2. BTS global domination

As the year kicked off, BTS continued its global domination, reaching places that no other K-pop group has. In February, the seven members, dressed in sleek black tuxedos, walked the red carpet of the 61st Grammy Awards in Los Angeles. At music’s big night, BTS graced the stage to present the best R&B album of the year to H.E.R. While BTS did not take home any trophies — after being nominated for best album package — it made history as the first-ever Korean act to appear at the Grammys.

BTS performs at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, as part of their world tour “Love Yourself: Speak Yourself.” (Big Hit Entertainment)

BTS performs at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, as part of their world tour “Love Yourself: Speak Yourself.” (Big Hit Entertainment)

In April, BTS made its much-awaited return to music with “Map of the Soul: Persona,” slashing global charts and its own records. The seven-track EP debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200, becoming the first group since the Beatles to earn three top spots in less than a year. The album also ranked No. 1 on the UK’s Official Albums Chart, becoming the first Korean act to do so. The title track “Boy With Luv,” featuring Halsey, debuted at No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming the band’s highest-charting song, as well the best score by a K-pop group.Meanwhile, the band traveled all around the world, hitting major stadiums in its world tour “Love Yourself: Speak Yourself.” The UK’s Wembley Stadium, California’s Rose Bowl Stadium are among the stops that BTS turned the colossal stadium into purple. With its stop at the King Fahd International Stadium, BTS also became the first-ever foreign act to perform at a stadium in Saudi Arabia.

On the awards front, BTS won two prizes at the Billboard Music Awards and three at the American Music Awards. It’s not over yet. With the year-end music awards, BTS has been sweeping the scene, taking home multiple top prizes at the latest MMA and MAMA shows.

3. K-pop romances

K-pop stars sing about love, but romance is not so easy in the industry where singers are closely watched and bound by strict rules — where some agencies even put no dating clause in the contract.

Nevertheless, new lovers are born, as well as some heartbreaks in this cutthroat K-pop industry. Some manage to stay strong and steady.

HyunA and Dawn pose at press showchase in November. (Yonhap)

HyunA and Dawn pose at press showchase in November. (Yonhap)

To kick of the New Year, K-pop fans woke up to a news that K-pop darlings EXO’s Kai and Blackpink’s Jennie were dating, which was later confirmed by the agency. The news met with feverish media attention as well as mixed responses from fans.

The fire, however, was short-lived. Less than a month after their relationship was exposed, EXO’s SM Entertainment said the two had split ways, without giving a reason.

A new idol couple emerged when Kang Daniel, former Wanna One member, and Twice’s Jihyo were confirmed to be dating in August. The news shocked their fans with some expressing disappointment, but support as well. The two reportedly were introduced through an unnamed K-pop idol. Despite some breakup rumors, they still seem to be going steady.

Then there is K-pop power couple HyunA and Dawn, who have been going strong for four years. Earlier this year, both singers signed with Psy’s new agency P Nation, after being kicked out from Cube Entertainment for dating last year. Their relationship carried through to their work, as the two made the rare decision to release albums on the same day. In November, HyunA dropped “Flower Shower,” while Dawn released “Money” at a joint showcase, openly expressing gratitude and affection toward each other.

4. Deaths of Sulli, Goo Hara

It was a heartbreaking year, having to bid farewell to two K-pop sweethearts. In October, Sulli, formerly of f(x), was found dead at her home. While the exact cause of death has not been revealed, the 25-year-old starlet, whose real name is Choi Jin-ri, had been suffering from depression, according to the police. Sulli had been target of severe public criticism for her outspoken positions on feminism, mental health and body image, which remain sensitive issues in the K-pop industry. Six weeks later, Goo Hara, an actor and singer who was part of Kara also died. The death of Goo, who was a close friend of Sulli, prompted another wave of grief and shock. Goo had been also suffering from online abuse and intense media attention, especially after her involvement in the court battle with her ex-boyfriend, accusing him of threatening her with a sex video filmed without her consent.

A memorial to Goo Hara at St.Mary’s Hospital in Seoul (Yonhap)

A memorial to Goo Hara at St.Mary’s Hospital in Seoul (Yonhap)

The tragic deaths of the two stars drew attention to wide-ranging issues, including mental health, the intense pressures K-pop stars face, and cyberbullying.

5. SuperM and EXO comebacks

In October, the latest supergroup was born from K-pop powerhouse SM Entertainment, partnering with Capitol Music Group for distribution. Dubbed the “Avengers of K-pop,” SuperM consists of the top talents from the agency’s major groups, including SHINee’s Taemin, EXO’s Baekhyun and Kai, NCT 127’s Taeyong and Mark and WayV’s Ten and Lucas.

SuperM (SM Entertainment)

SuperM (SM Entertainment)

The mega project debuted at the top of the Billboard 200 albums chart with its self-titled EP “SuperM,” led by title track “Jopping.” With the album launch, the group, on the back of strong fans, is eying to break into the US market, with its English songs and North America tour through February.

With no time to rest, EXO made a much-awaited return with its sixth full-length album “Obsession,” in November. The album bring six of the nine members, Kai, Chanyeol, Sehun, Baekhyun, Suho and Chen. D.O. and Xiumin are absent due to mandatory military service, while Lay is busy with solo activities in China.

Despite the absence, EXO put on electrifying performances for the album’s title track, introducing a new concept called X-EXO — the band’s evil clone. EXO has been releasing songs with two contradicting concepts, under the storyline of EXO members fighting against their darker, evil doppelgangers X-EXO.

6. Military service

Mandatory military service in Korea has always been a hotly debated issue. Especially for male K-pop stars, because enlistments mean about two years away from the entertainment industry.

Big Bang’s leader G-Dragon was discharged from military in October. (Yonhap)

Big Bang’s leader G-Dragon was discharged from military in October. (Yonhap)

While fans were hoping popular K-pop stars could possibly be exempt from service — as some top artists and sportsmen are — the government clarified in November that the exemption will not be granted, citing a shortage of conscripts every year.

This year, we saw EXO’s Xiumin and D.O taking leave for military service in May and July, respectively. In April, SHINee members Key and Minho were enlisted in March and April, following Onew last December. Following Yoon Doo-joon’s enlistment last August, all other Highlight members joined the service this year. 2PM’s Junho and Chansung also were enlisted in May and June, respectively.

After a long-wait, all Big Bang members were discharged from the military, starting with T.O.P in July, G-Dragon in October and Daesung and Taeyang in November. With all members discharged fans are anticipating a big comeback from the band, but nothing has been decided yet.

Wanyai wins MAMA music award in Japan

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/lifestyle/30379131?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Wanyai wins MAMA music award in Japan

Dec 06. 2019
By The Nation

2,024 Viewed

Olran “Wanyai” Chujai, a former member of the Room 39 band, and debuted as a solo artist under LOVEiS Entertainment, has won the Best New Asian Artist (Thailand) at the Mnet Asian Music Awards (MAMA) at Nagoya Dome in Japan.

He enjoyed huge success with his song “Enough”, that has now hit almost 100 million views on YouTube.

He said the MAMA award meant a lot to him and thanked LOVEiS Entertainment and Holyfox Records for their support.

Nont Tanont won Best Asian Artist (Thailand) but could not be present to receive the award due to his tight schedule.

Feast of classical music at Neilson Hays Library

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/lifestyle/30379116?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Feast of classical music at Neilson Hays Library

Dec 05. 2019
By THE NATION

1,330 Viewed

Neilson Hays Library has organised a special concert on Sunday (December 15) by a string quartet from the College of Music at Mahidol University.

The concert will feature classical compositions and songs to usher in the festive season.

In the first part of the concert, the string quartet will play compositions by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Ludwig van Beethoven, Karl Jenkins, Astor Piazzolla and other composers, while in the second part they will be playing traditional carols and popular Christmas songs.

Musicians

Patis Intaramaha (violin) is currently studying under the Western Music Performance programme at the College of Music, Mahidol University, under the tutelage of the Thailand Philharmonic Orchestra Concertmaster.

Omiros Yavroumis is a principal of second violin for Mahidol Symphony Orchestra, concertmaster for Salaya Chamber, and has participated in many quartet groups.

Warubon Chongtron (violin) is studying at the Music Programme at the College of Music,  Mahidol University.  She is a member of the Mahidol Pre-College Orchestra and the highly prestigious Princess Galyani Vadhana Institute of Music Youth Orchestra.

Krittaboon Doktoey (viola) has been studying at the College of Music Mahidol University with Danny Keasler. He has participated in several chamber music concerts and has been a member of Salaya Chamber since 2016.

Chayuth Kaivikai (cello) has won the first prize in Princess Galyani Vadhana Institute of Music chamber competition. He also has been performing with several chamber orchestras, including Salaya Chamber, Galyani Vadhana Institute of Music Youth Orchestra, and Mahidol Symphony Orchestra.

 

Playlist

Palladio – Karl Jenkins;

Divertimento No 1 in D major – Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart;

String Quartet No 1 in F major, Op18, 1st movement – Ludwig van Beethoven;

String Quartet No 2 in A minor, 1st movement – Felix Mendelssohn;

Adagio for String – Samuel Barber;

Marche Militaire – Franz Schubert;

Eine kleine Nacthmusik. 1st movement – Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart;

Oblivion – Astor Piazzolla.

Intermission

Jingle Bells – James Lord Pierpont;

Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring – Johann Sebastian Bach;

Joy to the World – Traditional Carol;

The Coventry Carol – Traditional Carol;

12 Days of Christmas – John Dervor;

Deck the Halls – Thomas Oliphant;

O Christmas Tree – Traditional Carol;

The First Nowell – Traditional Carol;

O Come, All Ye Faithful – John Reading;

Christmas Carol Suite – Jeff Manookian;

Silent Night – Franz Gruber;

Let It Snow – Jule Styne.

Tickets can be purchased online at the library, or reserve seats by calling 02-233-1731, or emailing info@neilsonhayslibrary.org.

The organisers have urged people to use taxis or public transportation due to limited parking space.

“The Strings: Classical and Christmas”

When: Sunday, December 15 from 6pm to 8pm

Where: Neilson Hays Library

Ticket prices:  Bt450, Bt350 for library members, Bt100 for students

Billie Eilish, Lil Nas X, Lizzo relish Apple Music Awards

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/lifestyle/30379033?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Billie Eilish, Lil Nas X, Lizzo relish Apple Music Awards

Dec 03. 2019
By The Nation

1,391 Viewed

Billie Eilish has won the Apple Music Award for Artist of the Year while the Song of the Year trophy went to Lil Nas X for “Old Town Road”.

Billie Eilish

Billie Eilish

The Apple Music Awards honour achievements across five distinct categories and winners are chosen through a process that reflects editorial perspective, combined with the interest of customers around the world.

“The winners for global artist of the year, songwriter of the year and breakthrough artist of the year were hand-selected by Apple Music’s global editorial team of experts and given to artists who have true passion for their craft, who boldly defy conventions in the category and who embody a sense of humanity, where listeners are drawn as much to who they are as to their music,” a press statement from the company said.

Eilish’s blunt relatability helped turn her full-length debut album “When We Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?” co-written and produced by her brother Finneas, into an instant worldwide sensation, and the most played album on Apple Music this year. She won the award for the most-streamed album of 2019, with more than a billion streams on Apple Music.

Lil Nas X

Lil Nas X

Meanwhile, Lil Nas X’s “Old Town Road” was the biggest single of 2019 and the most-streamed song on Apple Music this year.

“I went into the realm of a loner cowboy, needing to run away from everything,” Lil Nas X told Apple Music. “But I also wanted to put it with what was on the rise, which is the whole meme culture, plus actually making it a listenable, catchy song.”

Lizzo

Lizzo

The other winner is Lizzo, who bagged the Breakthrough Artist of the Year award.

“This is what a breakthrough is all about, babies,” Lizzo told Apple Music.

There’s no point in being humble: it doesn’t get much bigger than “Cuz I Love You” and its chin-up single “Truth Hurts”, which dared to ask what pop stars should look and sound like – and whether they should play flute while twerking.

Apple designed the awards to celebrate the extraordinary craftsmanship integral to creating music. Each award features Apple’s custom silicon wafer suspended between a polished sheet of glass and a machined and anodised aluminium body.