El Dealbreakers, Saturday Night

When was the last time your heard live accordion?

Well … that’s too long.

El Dealbrakers. Saturday night. No cover.

Posted January 13, 2012, in Music, Nightlife, Phnom Penh | Tagged | Leave a comment

Banteay Chhmar

AP visits the remote jungle temple of Banteay Chhmar.

Called the “second Angkor Wat,” Banteay Chhmar approaches it in size, is more frozen in time than the manicured and made-over superstar, and has so far been spared the blights of mass tourism of recent years at Angkor.

In 2011, an average of 7,000 tourists a day visited Angkor, one of Asia’s top tourist draws located near the booming northwestern city of Siem Reap. Banteay Chhmar saw an average of two a day, with no tour buses and bullhorn-wielding guides to disturb the temple’s total tranquility or traditional life in the surrounding village.

Sounds magical.

Posted January 6, 2012, in Angkor Wat, Tourism, Travel | Tagged | Leave a comment

El Dealbreakers: Rhythm & Greens

If Edward Lear had penned music instead of poems, El Dealbreakers is exactly what it would sound like. This squeaking, honking, tub-thumping cacophony is as close to musical nonsense as you can get — and it’s indisputably brilliant.

They call it rhythm and greens.

“It’s kind of polka-billy or something,” says 51-year-old accordionist Frank Ruffolo, whose dulcet Californian drawl suggests the folk icons of the La Canyons more than the ’70s punk rockers who influenced him most. “We lay it down, make up the parts and then take other people’s songs — Elvis Costello or Iggy Pop — and we try to beat it into some sort of rock-metal polka, using horn parts instead of guitar parts. We just try to mess things up. We play the right songs with the wrong band.”

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Posted January 5, 2012, in Music | Tagged | Leave a comment

Happy New Year

Welcome to 2012. We’re taking a week off from our regular weekend events here at The FCC Phnom Penh. Everyone really needs a bit of a break after a busy end of the year rush.

Next up is the absolutely fabulous El Dealbreaks, who play the FCC rooftop Sat Jan 14.

If Edward Lear had penned music instead of poems, El Dealbreakers is exactly what it would sound like. This squeaking, honking, tub-thumping cacophony is as close to musical nonsense as you can get — and it’s indisputably brilliant. They call it rhythm and greens.

Check out the El Dealbreakers web site for downloads and other goodies.

Posted January 5, 2012, in Music, Phnom Penh, Propaganda | Tagged | Leave a comment

Juram

The smoky, soulful vocals of Filipino native Juram Gavero return to The FCC Phnom Penh this weekend. The singer-songwriter plays one show Saturday night, Dec 3.

Based in Saigon, Juram has in recent years become something of a regular on the Phnom Penh live music scene, where he has steadily built a loyal following.

At a previous solo show at Chow, the bar’s front doors were opened to let the music pour into the street. People walking past couldn’t help but stop and take note of Juram’s deep, powerful vocals.

Yet for a lead singer with an award-winning voice, the 32-year-old Juram remains remarkably humble. He refuses to skate on talent alone — although anyone who has heard him sing knows he could do just that. The foundation of his success, he says, comes from being an entertainer first, not a singer.

“When people tell you, oh, you sing so well, you have such a great voice, you can’t listen to that stuff,” he says. “You can’t let that go to your head.”

Soothing his vocal chords with a glass of red wine, Juram says the audience is the most important part of any gig and connecting with the crowd is his number one priority. He makes eye contact with everyone who walks through the door, and between sets, he likes to mingle with the crowd, shaking hands and making friends.

While many musicians often play from a prepared song list, Juram the entertainer lets serendipity and intuition lead the direction of his shows.

“I study the rhythm of the people,” he says.

He likes to play a few songs and see how people react, then let the energy of the crowd guide him.

Juram plays mostly rock ‘n’ roll classics, but like every good musician, he is well-versed in the standards of other genres as well, and he is comfortable playing everything from Johnny Cash to Metallica.

Raised in Mindanao, Juram first left the Philippines in 1998 at the age of 20. His band, named Juram, had just won a nation-wide battle of the bands contest, and the grand prize was guaranteed work on either a cruise ship or in Singapore.

He says life on a boat did not appeal to him, so he hopped the flight to Singapore. When the gig was up, he followed some friends to Vietnam, where he is now a fixture in Saigon’s live music scene.

“Music is my passion,” he says. “If the sound is right, and I am sitting with the right people, I can play until morning.”

Posted November 30, 2011, in Music, Nightlife, Phnom Penh | Leave a comment

The legend of ‘Silk King’ Jim Thompson

Like Tony Poe, the American soldier who went native with the hill tribes in Laos, Jim Thompson was a larger-than-life military man who commanded the allegiance of the men who followed him. An intelligence analyst for the U.S. military, Thompson stayed on in Southeast Asia after World War II. He created the Thai Silk company, and dabbled in this and that.

Author Joshua Kurlantzick, a Fellow for Southeast Asia at the Council on Foreign Relations, profiles Thompson in a new book, “The Ideal Man: The Tragedy of Jim Thompson and the American Way of War,” slated for release this month.

Everyone at the dinner table would know his basic life story, from all the press coverage and gossip he attracted. He had arrived in Bangkok at the end of World War II, working for the CIA’s predecessor, the Office of Strategic Services. Even after his official resignation from government employment, he kept on as a freelance intelligence operative, his antiques-filled home a hub of vital information and even arms trafficking, according to a U.S. government investigation, as America became entangled in Vietnam. His legitimate business, the Thai Silk Co., was in itself enough to make him an international figure. “The Silk King,” the newspapers called him—the man who had built Thai silk from a cottage industry into a global fashion powerhouse, displayed at fashion capitals in Europe and America, and brought glamour to the Thai capital.

Thompson belonged to a now practically vanished breed: the larger-than-life American expatriates, often connected to U.S. intelligence, who held sway in odd corners of the globe back in the 1940s, ’50s, and ’60s, and up until the end of the Cold War. For better or worse, many of them have become legends.

Thompson’s home in Bangkok is a popular museum, the Jim Thompson House, and his silk company still thrives. Thompson himself, much in character with his mythical life, disappeared in Malaysia in 1967 — “he simply walked out of the cottage where he was staying, and never came back.”

Sebastian Strangio has more.

Posted November 14, 2011, in Misc | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Dengue Fever at The FCC Phnom Penh

Dengue Fever put on a terrific show Saturday night. Mr Brouwer has the wrap-up. For those of you taking pictures, we would love to see them. Please share on Facebook.

Congrats to Lina at MyBigFatFace, who scored a pair of free tickets from FCC_Cambodia on Twitter. (Follow us on twitter and maybe the next winner will be you.)

Posted November 13, 2011, in Music, Nightlife, Phnom Penh | Tagged | Leave a comment

Dengue Fever tonight!

With cannibalism largely banished to the holy men of the River Ganges and the odd rogue German, one can only imagine what the mating rituals of such flesh-eaters might sound like. But it’s safe to assume they’d be harder on the ears than what critics are calling Dengue Fever’s fourth and finest release.

“Cannibal Courtship,” far from channeling the rhythmic chomping of human flesh, is a kaleidoscopic cocktail of 1960s Cambodian pop and American surf-rock, garnished with a lively dash of Afro groove and garage psych. The ensemble’s first studio album since 2008′s Venus on Earth, it wouldn’t sound out of place in an Austin Powers film or at one of Ken Kesey’s infamous acid tests. This is truly the stuff that psychedelic dreams are made of.

Dubbed “a cross between Led Zeppelin and Blondie” by Ray Davies from the Kinks, the band, based in Los Angeles, traces its genesis back to 2001. Brothers Ethan (keyboards) and Zac (guitar) Holtzman, inspired by the unique spin Khmer culture had put on rock music, recruited saxophonist David Ralicke, drummer Paul Smith and bassist Senon Williams before going on the hunt for a Cambodian singer.

Enter Chhom Nimol, whose exotic, hypnotic vocals (she sings in both English and her native Khmer) had regularly entertained Cambodian royalty.

“Before, it was partly Cambodian and partly Indie rock,” bassist Williams says of Dengue Fever’s evolution. “Now it’s 100 per cent both. We’ve been friends and a band for a long time and everything has led to this moment. It’s all us and all focused; that’s the vibe, from beginning to end.”

What constitutes “us” is a kinetic, mood-altering sound that swings from spooky vocals to spiky rock in an East-West fusion as infectious as the tropical malady from which the band takes its name.

Drummer Smith, who mixed “Cannibal Courtship,” considers their latest venture a study in the very essence of groove.

“Things are just going through our filter now and we’re no longer questioning what the filter is. The result is music that does have a distinct feel and sound but still encompasses what people know us for. Senon and I made a concerted effort to get to the rhythmic essence — even more than in the past. We felt like stripping everything down and trying to create a really strong foundation. Not making it simple, per se, but getting to the heart of the groove and letting that shine. With this new material, we’ve really found the space to be ourselves without worrying that things have to be this or that. That’s what allowed us to unleash what we had inside.”

And shine they have: Dengue Fever has been heard on HBO’s “True Blood” (the band is a favourite of lead vampire Bill Compton), Showtime’s “Weeds,” a National Geographic documentary and “Dirty Sanchez,” the British equivalent of “Jackass.” The band has also surfaced on the big screen: for the Cambodia-based drama “City of Ghosts,” star Matt Dillon invited them to contribute a version of Joni Mitchell’s classic “Both Sides Now.”

Don’t miss Dengue Fever’s globe-trotting brand of eclecticism, complete with thick organ grooves, horns and reeds, biting electric guitar and tight rhythm section, when the band touches down in Phnom Penh after an extended tour of the US and Europe.

(Words by LJ Snook. Photo by Lauren Dukoff)

Posted November 12, 2011, in Music, Nightlife, Phnom Penh, Propaganda | Tagged | Leave a comment

Soul Brother Number One

Sex Machine”

“Mr Dynamite”

“Soul Brother Number One”

“Original Disco Man”

“The Godfather of Soul”

James Brown, the “hardest working man in show business,” inspired almost as many honorific titles as he did devotees.

From his first hit “Please Please Please” in 1956, “The King of Funk” and his high-octane transformation of gospel fervor into the explosive intensity of rhythm & blues redefined the destiny of black music in America.

A child of the Great Depression, Brown picked cotton, shined shoes and spent three and a half years in a Toccoa, Georgia, reform school. It was there he first met Bobby Byrd, band leader of the Gospel Starlighters, a group that Brown would later join before being lured to the secular scene by the slamming live sound of rock ‘n’ roll legend Fats Domino.

As flamboyant front man for the James Brown Revue, Brown reportedly shed up to seven pounds a night in sweat as he whirled around stage, theatrically donning and doffing his cape and feigning the occasional heart attack.

The Elvis Presley of R&B

The Elvis Presley of R&B, according to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Brown racked up an astonishing 114 entries on Billboard’s R&B singles chart and amassed a total of 800 songs in his repertoire.

Also like Elvis, he’s inspired a legion of tribute ensembles — among them Supabad, a Bangkok-based ménage of mostly music teachers dedicated to the “super heavy, gritty funk” sound now synonymous with the ultimate Sex Machine. Supabad plays the FCC Phnom Penh on Nov 4 and 5.

A Big Band For a Big Man

A big band for a big man, the touring ten-piece’s horn-rich homage to a musical and cultural revolutionary cuts it with the best of them.

“James Brown completely revolutionized the world of modern music,” said guitarist, percussionist and vocalist David “DJ Kermie” Cameron. “We’re just starting to see that. Michael Jackson wouldn’t exist if it wasn’t for JB. So many dance moves, beats and riffs have been lifted off JB that it’s just impossible to imagine what any kind of modern music would sound like without his influence.”

What would JB make of today’s R&B?

“He’d dig the more underground stuff no one hears, such as Goodie Mob, but he’d be appalled with all the processing and artificiality of much of today’s music. James liked it loud, hard and dirty – not too neat and clean, if you know what I mean.”
Loud, Hard and Dirty

Loud, hard and dirty are precisely the JB elements that Supabad embodies.

“We’re really focused on the ‘larger than life’ aspect,” said Cameron (who by his own admission likes to jump around a lot and pinch bums). “The sequined suits, jump suits, hairy chest, big hair — JB’s time in the ’70s, when he was truly becoming the Number One Soul Brother, that seems to work best for us. And the hairy chest and tight suits seem to work best for Craig.”

British-born Craig “James Brown” Chambers, trained classical singer and fellow music teacher, is “calm and quiet at school,” but he “transforms into a lewd, crude funk machine on stage,” according to Cameron. “Craig’s dancing is a sight, that’s all I can say.”

As for the rest of the band, the semi-unofficial official history reads with similar outlandish verve.

Founder Mark Bourgeouis, from New Zealand, has toured Eastern Europe with a pop group. Fellow Kiwi Paul “Pablo” Romaine, guitarist and songwriter, is known for “looking cool when he plays (you’ll know when you see him).”

“Tama from another Mama”‘ Karena moonlights in global competitions playing the organ to silent films in old movie houses. Laidback “Tricky Dicky” Trurer (just don’t touch his gear) takes drums. On trumpet is “Moi Cowboy” Litchfield, the only woman in the band (“I don’t know how she puts up with us”). Supong “T-Bone” Soravit brings in the trombone. Saxophone is Ralf “Saxmeister” Gabriel, a German who “doesn’t allow for any tomfoolery at rehearsals.” And an extra dash of class comes courtesy of US-born tenor sax “Big Mac” Tony.

Supabad – a “good bunch of guys that are mature enough players to cut through all the crap and just make good music; at the same time, we’re immature enough to… well, you’ll see when Mr James Brown starts to do My Thang” – plays live at the FCC on Tuesday March 25th and 26th.

The band intends to “start getting nasty right from the get-go, so people should get their asses down there early!”

Posted November 2, 2011, in Music, Nightlife, Phnom Penh | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Supabad: Loud, Hard and Dirty

“Sex Machine”

“Mr Dynamite”

“Soul Brother Number One”

“Original Disco Man”

“The Godfather of Soul.”

James Brown, the “hardest working man in show business,” inspired almost as many honorific titles as he did devotees

From his first hit “Please Please Please” in 1956, “The King of Funk” and his high-octane transformation of gospel fervor into the explosive intensity of rhythm & blues redefined the destiny of black music in America.
Continue reading

Posted November 2, 2011, in Music, Nightlife, Phnom Penh, Propaganda | Tagged , | Leave a comment