Extreme Khmer Flashback

Lok Kru Frank takes us on a trip down memory lane as he looks up former students Phatry, Navin, Nirav in Cambodia.
Available via Youtube or StudyKhmer.com.
Actual classes? http://seassi.wisc.edu/

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In Search of Khmer Hip Hop Part 9:
Aaliyah Styles

aaliyah_styles

Walk inside and you’ll find doo-rags draped over… an oxcart. It’s a hip-hop boutique!

I’m pretty sure that model ain’t Aaliya either. But then, they spelled it with an ‘h’ at the end just to be safe.

On the row of shops bordering Soryia center, Phnom Penh.

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Beaucoup de Femmes

Beaucoup de Femmes

First I get an email about the upcoming “Portraits de Femmes” exhibition on the 9th.

Then I get a note about ‘Femme Fatale‘ pub night (3rd).

And finally, a long press release from Hôtel de la Paix, “Khmer
Feminitude
” exhibition beginning on Feb 14.

Am I beginning to see a theme for the coming month?

Illustration left: Christian Develter ,,

santana_small
Santana: the Cambodia Connection

I was on my way with some of the Sovanna Phum crew to pick up a new skor thom (big drum). Not just your run-of-the-mill drum, this huge object was essentially the cross-section of a tree. Kosal had plans for an animist blessing ceremony so the drum could get acclimated to the performance space and community. (You can see it in action every weekend.)

On the tape deck comes “Oye Como Va”. The truck driver grins and turns it up. This isn’t the first time I’ve heard Santana in Cambodia. Check out Cambodian Rocks (5th track) and you’ll discover Sinn Sisamouth’s reworking of “Black Magic Woman”.

(Wikipedia credits Sisamouth covering the song as “I Love Petite Women”, and “Quando My Love”, while the CD I have lists it as “I Recognize That Face”.)
It’s ususally best to go with tapes when digging up classic Khmer tunes, CDs are just one step further removed from the distant original recording.

There’s something about the guitar – the pitch, the style, the approach – that resonated deeply with Khmer popular music prior to the revolution, and still does today. I’ll hear Santana or covers of his music in the most unlikely places here.

I doubt the musician ever toured in Cambodia (or is getting any royalties), but if he came there’d be a sellout crowd. Got a Khmer Santana story? Drop me a line.

Santana Site: http://www.santana.com
Sinn Sisamouth: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinn_Sisamouth

Sketch idea by me, inks by Vuth, colors by Samphos. Tags:,,

Bloggies & more

Bloggies & more

Whew, wedding frenzy is over.

Voting’s open for 2007 ‘Bloggies’ awards. Voting closes February 02.
http://2007.bloggies.com

Other exciting tidbits:
Vireak’s 2007 predictions!
http://www.vireak.net/2007/01/05/2007-predictions/
http://www.vireak.net/2007/01/26/2007-predictions-part-ii/

Career Change! http://careerbreak33.blogspot.com/search/label/Cambodia

Firefighting training! http://oespnet.spaces.live.com/PersonalSpace.aspx?_c02_owner=1

Chath joins the blogosphere! http://chat4peace.wordpress.com

Khmerbird goes multilingual! http://khmerbird.com/

MySpace: ‘Spam 2.0′? http://valleywag.com/tech/myspace/myspace-the-business-of-spam-20-exhaustive-edition-199924.php

‘Cambodia’s Oil find could eliminate poverty’!
http://www.csr-asia.com/index.php?p=8830
Oh yeah, right. (Need more coffee.)


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