Vann Nath, survivor of Tuol Sleng, dies at 66

AP reports that Vann Nath, among a handful of souls to survive imprisonment at Tuol Sleng, has passed away. He was 66.

Posted September 5, 2011, in Art | Tagged | Leave a comment

Buying a piece of Angkor

An American couple traveling through Thailand stumbled upon an antiques gallery in Bangkok, where they “fell in love” with a bas relief reportedly acquired from the Baphuon temple at Angkor Wat.

The couple had doubts, of course. Was it authentic? And if it was, how would they get it past customs? The dealer assured them that the statue was real, that papers were easy to forge, and that clearing U.S. customs would be a breeze. (The dealer did it all the time.)  The couple also, apparently, felt the mildest pangs of a moral dilemma, which they quickly concluded were unwarranted.

The remaining questions we had were moral.  Selling, importing and exporting antiquities is not illegal in Thailand, as long as they are not Thai antiquities.  That said, to virtually all developed countries ban the trade.  Though the Vatican, British and French have plundered many of the world’s treasures, such plundering is no longer in style.  Though they are no longer plundering, they are not returning their ill-gotten gains.  This may not be a bad thing, as one could argue they are safer in the museums of Europe and America than in their original countries.  I cannot argue with that, if safety and preservation is concerned, a museum in France, or even my living room, is probably superior to a Cambodian storeroom.

This is, of course, so wrong on so many levels. But it really does beg the question: Can you just walk in to a random antique shop in Bangkok and find genuine looted Angkorean artifacts on sale?

The answer to that question is almost certainly no.

Tales of artifact smuggling abound on the Interwebs. All of them describe smuggling as, well, smuggling — elaborate networks of insiders and all manner of subterfuge to hide the artwork as it crossed international borders. If it were as easy as waving some fake papers at clueless customs officials, it seems more than likely that the billion-dollar-per-year smuggling industry would have figured that out by now.

Clueless tourists, maybe not.

Posted September 5, 2011, in Angkor Wat, Art | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

The Wires, September 2011

Perfect Exposure: The Angkor Photography Festival serves as a showcase for Asia’s most gifted photography talents.

Nothing But the Blues: Little Duke and the Mekong Blues Messengers bring their electrified style of Chicago blues to The FCC Phnom Penh on Sept 10.

Triptrotting: Triptrotting, a kind of social-media inspired travel trend that pairs globe-trotting travelers with entrenched local residents, is holding a “trip up” Sept 9 at The FCC Phnom Penh.

(PHOTO: Little Duke and the Mekong Blues Messengers. Vinh Dao)

Posted September 2, 2011, in Music, Nightlife, Phnom Penh, Siem Reap | Tagged | Leave a comment

Royal Palace, Phnom Penh

The Royal Palace, Phnom Penh, Cambodia.

Posted September 2, 2011, in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Vann Nath update

From Jean-Sien, posted today:

Vann Nath’s status has been very changing today (heart beat, tension, oxygen blood rate) and we had to face medical complications. His family and friends keep on standing by his side. Doctor thinks that the situation is still desperate and that such incidents are about to happen in the next days. However, today, situation has been stabilized, his brain activity is a little better, and he begins to breath by himself a little.

Fingers crossed.

Posted September 1, 2011, in Art | Tagged | Leave a comment

Shooting for new gear

Some staffers at the Phnom Penh Post are putting together a fund-raiser for Tracey Shelton, the former Post photography editor who was recently beaten and robbed of all her camera gear in Libya.

Cantina and the OPCC are seeking donations to help Tracey get back on her feet and working. Anything you could contribute is appreciated, and can be dropped off at the bar at Cantina. Hurley will be taking donations through Wednesday night and through Thursday, which coincides with Cantina’s eighth anniversary.

Cantina is located at 367 Sisowath Quay, next to Happy Herbs. If you can’t make it down, contact Rick Valenzuela (t: 092 470 702, e: rick@rickv.com) , who can help you make other arrangements.

Posted August 31, 2011, in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Nothing but the blues

Little Duke and the Mekong Blues Messengers bring their electrified style of Chicago blues to The FCC Phnom Penh on Sept 10.

The roots of blues music start deep in the fertile soil around New Orleans, Louisiana, where the muddy Mississippi River pours into the Gulf of Mexico. From there they follow the river north to Natchez, along the back roads into Clarksdale, and then across the Mississippi state line into Memphis, Tennessee.

By most accounts, the blues evolved from work songs and field “hollers” sung by rural black labourers in the early 20th century. Singing helped alleviate the anguish of being poor and oppressed.

Few of those early crooners would have ever imagined that some 50 years later, the music of downtrodden African-Americans would turn into something of a global sensation, reaching not just beyond the Mississippi River basin, but across the oceans to Europe, Australia and beyond.

Misery, it turns out, likes to ride shotgun.

“Blues has always been a passion for me,” says Jonas “Little Duke” Hasting, a slide guitarist from Sweden who formed his first blues band in 1976 at the age of 13.

Called the Blues Benders, the group covered Willie Dixon and Elmore James numbers. Jonas played bass.

In high school, the budding Stockholm guitarist happened across a Texas bluesman nicknamed “Master of the Telecaster,” and the electrified sounds from his Fender guitar changed Jonas forever.

“When I was 15 I heard Albert Collins play his guitar, and I realized that the bass was not for me,” he recalls. “I swapped it for a second-hand Levin hollow body guitar and never looked back.”

From Collins’ early influence, Jonas immersed himself in the stylings of American blues. Three decades later, he is the namesake and lead guitarist for Little Duke and The Mekong Blues Messengers, who play The FCC Phnom Penh on September 10.

“We have a quite wide repertoire, with the classic amplified Chicago blues style as the base,” he says of the Messengers, rattling off a who’s who of influences from the Chicago scene: Hubert Sumlin, Jimmy Rogers, Buddy Guy, Elmore James, McKinley Morganfield, Robert Lockwood, Little Walter.

Yet just as quickly Jonas returns to his Lone Star beginnings — Albert Collins and T-Bone Walker, he continues, and let’s not forget “some younger white Texas musicians: Stevie Ray Vaughan, Johnny Winter and Kim Wilson.”

Kristen Rasmussen, from the US, sings lead vocals for The Messengers. Australian Ken White plays harmonica. Americans Chris Hilleary and Steve Miller round out the line-up on bass and drums.

Kristen, a classically trained vocalist, first took the stage at the age of 10, when she performed “Tomorrow” from the musical Annie on Singaporean television.

“As a girl I was fixated on show tunes,” she says, “and I dreamed of being on Broadway.”

As Kristen got older, her musical tastes evolved.

“When I started studying classical voice, I learned how to sing differently, but I was never moved by classical music the way that I have been moved by blues, soul and jazz,” she says. “I like the raw sound of blues — it’s just more soulful and real to me.”

Ken offers a more lyrical perspective.

“The sweet melodies and irresistible harmonic chord progressions of the dusty roads less traveled is a great attraction to blues,” he says. “The fact that it speaks of, and reminds us all of, the hardships once endured by traveling musicians of the southern U.S., and the soul, passion and truthfulness that pervades blues and endures the generations of our time is unmistakable.”

(PHOTO: Vinh Dao)

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Posted August 31, 2011, in Music, Nightlife, Phnom Penh, Propaganda | Leave a comment

Little Duke and the Mekong Blues Messengers

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

Vann Nath in coma

It is with great sadness that we pass along the following information.

Dear Friends,

I would like to share with you these very sad news about Vann Nath. He had a heart attack during Friday night in Phnom Penh. He lost conscience and did not wake up till now. He went into a cerebral coma. He is fighting and his family with him but the doctors have little hope regarding his chance to come to back to us. I will let you know if anything happens.

Sincerely, Rithy Panh

(Via Le Cercle des Amis de Vann Nath).

Posted August 28, 2011, in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

FCC passionfruit & mint caprioska

The passion fruit and mint caprioska, one of our most requested drinks,

  • 45ml Bacardi white rum
  • 50g fresh passion fruit
  • 10g white sugar
  • 5g  Fresh Mint
  • 1 Lime
  • crushed ice

Muddle in a shaker the lime wedges, passion fruit, mint leaves and sugar. Add in the Bacardi white rum, then top up the shaker with crushed ice. Shake vigorously. Serve in a rocks glass and garnish with a slice of lime.

Posted August 26, 2011, in Drinks, Recipes | Tagged | Leave a comment