Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Malaysian Artistes For Unity

Latest Updates - May 24th
The video is currently No.7 in Metro (free newspaper in UK) 'weekly most viralled video'. This is incredible - and is an indication of the amazing response by which Malaysians have received this video throughout the world.


Malaysian Artistes For Unity is an independent, non-partisan, non-profit
national unity project made possible by the participation of over 120 notable
Malaysians. Enlisted to the project over a short period of 2 weeks in April
2008, these participants range from artistes, celebrities, arts activists, media-
personalities, musicians, dancers, sportsmen, filmmakers, web designers,
producers, technicians, poets, models and more. All participants contributed
their effort on a pro-bono basis. The project has a production budget of
exactly zero.

The project is centered on 2 things: (1) a multi-artistes recording of an
original racial unity song; and (2) a music video of that song featuring over 50
notable Malaysians. When completed, both the song and the video will be
broadcasted and distributed to the public for free via traditional media
channels as well as the Internet.


Artistes [Singers]
Adflin Shauki / Awie / Ning Baizura /Jacklyn Victor / Reshmonu / Pete Teo /
Attilia / Jason Lo / KLG Sqwad / Altimet / Suki / Daniel Lee / Nikki Palikat / Melina
William

Cast [Cameo]
Tony Fernandez / Maya Karin / Harith Iskander / Adibah Nor / Singletrackmind /
Stephen Chua / Izzy Mohamed / Shebby Singh / Nell Ng / Mak Ho / Badri Ibrahim / Hans Isaac / Chan Fong / Mark Teh / Kamal Sabran / Sharifah Amani / Ng Choo Seong / Evelyn Hii / Nurfatimah / Justin Lim / Pang Khee Teik / Jerome Kugan / January Low / Sharifah Aleya / Azmyl Yunor / Amber Chia

Here's a trailer on you tube

more info here.

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Happenings at Attic

Up and coming singer/songwriter Nick Davis on vocals and guitar
Llew Marsh on vocals and piano, Savvy on violin
Apr 30 2008
No cover charge
Tel: +603 2093 8842
http://attickl.blogspot.com/

Sunday attic jazz jam
Every Sunday 7pm – 10pm
Expect surprise guests jamming with the house band
Happy hours all night long
20% off everything
No cover charge
Tel: +603 2093 8842
http://attickl.blogspot.com/

Attic’s got talent
If you’re a musician struggling to break into the scene
this is your opportunity. You have six months to strut
your stuff. 9 pm on the following days
Apr 15 and 29
May 6 and 20
Jun 9
No cover charge
Tel: +603 2093 8842
http://attickl.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Alert - Stolen Bass Guitar

click on pix to enlarge

Frigglive is issuing an All Points Bulletin (APB) on a Musicman 5 string Stingray Bass which belongs to our brother Jingles. His career has spanned the musical spectrum – singer, songwriter, touring as a session musician, working in the field of Studio Recording/Production, as a Musical Director and as a Music Teacher.

His bass was stolen recently. It is a very unusual bass as it is the only Musicman bass with 2 pickups, main original pickup has been moved back to 1 inch from the bridge and a Kent Armstrong pickup added to the front.

Serial Number – 50098. It is natural wood in color with a maple neck and fingerboard. Please see attached photograph.

If you spot this unique one-oh-a-kind bass guitar anywhere, it is urgent that you contact either Jingles or frigglive or report to the nearest police station immediately.

Jingles’ cell - +6016 6292686
Skype - jingles-1
MSN - jingles1@mac.com
http://www.jaxtr.com/jingles1
www.myspace.com/jinglesmusicbiz

Reward offered for the successful recovery of Jingles’ beloved axe. He will personally buy you a beer; give you a hug and a kiss and an autographed picture of him with his bass.

Let’s reunite these estranged lovers, people. Thank you for your cooperation.

Monday, April 14, 2008

Genting International Jazz Festival 2008

I wouldn’t call the Genting International Jazz Festival a jazz festival per se, but the tagline was spot on – where passion meets fusion. It was all about crossing borders and successfully fusing different genres of music.

GIJF blew the audience away with a repertoire of groups from across the continents. Great selection of top-notch jazz performers, excellent sound engineering and an efficient crew made the festival a success, and here kudos are due to Yeoh Jun Lin and Yeo Yu Puay, the artistic duo that gave Rainforest World Music Festival its distinctive beat and their team (see accompanying story below).

Everything was great. The well-trained and efficient crew took only 10 minutes in between sets to setup the stage, host Kevin Tann was at his entertaining best, the acoustics at the Genting International Showroom were top-notch and the performers were in serious party mood.

Since every other review is going to sound more or less the same, frigglive.com is taking a different angle. We’re going to rate and award the music, bands and performances.

image credit: eugene ong, all dat jazz

When the first band jUnKoFuNc walked on stage I was in for a pleasant surprise. I’ve known Badar for years, and he’s always tucked away in the back behind his beloved percussions. Not this time. Attired in blue denim dungarees and sporting a badass attitude he stirred up the crowd with “Ain’t That Peculiar”. That guy can not only sing, he does it well. Sweet.

Midway through their set, “Anusha” written by Andy Peterson for his only daughter of the same name was performed by Andy, John and Justin. The tempo was then brought down by Albert Sirimal singing a cover of Marvin Gaye’s “Sexual Healing”. Badar joined Albert in closing with “Soul with a Capital S”.

Only local band picked by the organizers to play alongside the international line-up, making Malaysia proud – jUnKoFuNc.

image credit: eugene ong, all dat jazz

Next up, Ben’s Belinga proved to be an arresting entertainer as not only is his self-taught mastery of the saxophone evident, he also used his body language to good effect, with facial gestures and scat calls.

The soulful and pensive piano, the throbbing rhythm section, the melodious horns and the ability to juggle Caribbean and Afro-Cuban rhythms carry the ghostly echoes of jazz greats Charlie Parker and John Coltrane.

Ben’s claim that Jazz is in actual fact tribal African music turned out to have a ring of truth to it as there is an African spiritual undertone to his music.

Most enigmatic performer -Ben’s Belinga.

image credit: johan nasir

Diamond Dave and the Doodaddies are not a technical band, but man do they know how to have fun onstage. Their infectious brand of good ol’ Chicago Blues certainly endeared them to the crowd. Diamond Dave Billing and Dave Brewer front the band. Brewer’s wailing electric guitar complemented Diamond Dave’s moving and soulful blues harmonica throughout the band’s repertoire of original material.

Diamond had the audience eating out of his hands and singing along when he walked into and partied with the audience. It turns out the blues don’t make you blue, after all.

People’s favorite - Diamond Dave and the Doodaddies

image credit: johan nasir

Hamilton de Holanda and band established their superior jazz chops, executing complex time changes and deftly navigating tricky melodic and harmonic variations. Holanda is a speed demon on the track, spilling out rippling lead runs, which the supporting musicians have no trouble keeping up with. But technique and tempo are not the only tricks they have up their sleeves as the bulk of the set is gentler and more studied, concerned with conveying emotion rather than impressing.

The Brazilian samba tradition and Flamenco-reminiscent arpeggios; devilish high-speed syncopations apply extreme duress on ensemble work only to come off like a dream; unexpected time gates; scintillating tremolos following bass lines in lock step; sophisticated harmonic progressions; dreamy Tropicana melodies; sneaky percussion art; gorgeous harmonica riffs; suave guitar work.

Best solo - Hamilton de Holanda's "Disparada" on the 10 string mandolin. The big fella is arguably the most virtuosic mandolinist in the world today. His fingers flying around the tiny fret board with each note ringing true and full of emotion is a sight to behold. Truly an awesome performance.

Best duet - Hamilton de Holanda on the mandolin with Gabriel Grossi on the harmonica. It seemed as if both instruments were in perfect sync.

image credit: johan nasir

Salsa Celtica certainly knew how to make a grand entrance as they made their way to the stage through the audience while playing a rousing Celtic number. Salsa dance enthusiasts wasted no time in joining them on stage.

Salsa Celtica’s remarkable success story started with salsa music and the prevailing climate of fusion at that time where some guys joined in the band to jam and it sort of grew organically. When Salsa first started it was a mix of Afro-Cuban music and South American folk music with jazz, a mix of the music in Europe.

They were an immediate hit with the locals and the newly arrived Hispanic community. After recording their debut album 'Monstruos y Demonios' (Monsters and Demons), Salsa Celtica took their music on the road. They eventually landed in Cuba to hang out with salsa groups, including Son14 and Sonora La Calle,

Most successful fusion - salsa and celtic music, complete with bagpipes!

image credit: johan nasir

Singapore’s A Cappella group Key Elements kicked off the second night with an easygoing note by singing a modified rendition of The Sound of Music’s “Do Re Mi” as an introduction to themselves. They performed Chinese numbers and all-time favourites, such as Teresa Teng’s “The Moon Represents My Heart”, and Barry Manilow’s “Meet Me Midnight”.

Most unusual song - their version of the theme from Spiderman. Extra points for the quaint choreography and “fight” sounds effects.

image credit: johan nasir

Best vocalist - Tangora. Her scat improvisations were breathtaking and although I could not understood a word of her singing as it was in French, she proved beyond doubt that music does indeed cross language boundaries.

Best keyboard duel - Mario Canonge on piano vs award-winning organist Emmanuel Bex. Whenever Bex pumped up the volume on the Hammond it was just surreal. Mario on the other hand was absolutely smoking.

Best overall duel - Duvone Stewart from Trinidad and Tobago on the steel pans and Jazz Jamaica trumpeter Abram Wilson. During the finale, most of the performers went up on stage for a mega jam and these two were really duking it out.

It started out fairly simply with a few blasts of the trumpet here and a few tinkles of the steel pan there; but then it got furious and the crowd were on their feet cheering them on.

Stewart eventually lifted the steel pan off its rack, placed it on the floor and spun it around while still playing it!

Best backup band - Tangora again.

image credit: johan nasir

Neander’s Jazz Band’s big band ‘ol skool New Orleans blues certainly got the audience bopping along. Their on-stage antics were very endearing. The Jazz scene in Denmark has never been popular and it’s barely surviving Hans Christian Rosendal, the clarinet/alto saxophone player of the group told us.

Young people don’t care much about jazz simply because they don’t like it he continued. I do hope that we are able to reach out to the younger audience to listen to Jazz because of our energetic and authentic music.

Per Neander’s deep throaty vocals emulating the legendary Louis Armstrong got the most cheers when he launched into 'What a Wonderful World' for their encore performance.

Best on-stage presence - Neanders Jazz Band.

image credit: johan nasir

Schalk Joubert and The Three Continents Sextet is all about crossing borders and fusing different genres of music, South African born bass player Joubert’s influences are the rhythms of Africa and the harmonies of Europe.

We’re all musicians with different musical background and influences from all over with different personas said Joubert. It’s a marvelous hybridisation when we get together and create a fresh new sound that is quite unlike anything we’ve heard before.

As a music composer, it’s a wonderful thing to see the concepts in your own head being understood by other musicians and with that, came alive in three dimensional form, said Joubert.

Best bassist - Schalk Joubert. He’s so into his playing that he actually stuck his finger into his mouth to make a pop sound to punctuate his music. Cool or what?

image credit: johan nasir

Hottest female performer - petite South African saxophonist Shannon Mowday, with her little skirt and boot kit and oh so sexy subtle dance moves.

image credit: johan nasir

Award-winning Jazz Jamaica with special guest Myrna Hague and a brand new set entitled Tighten Up! Proved to be an all-star group as they got the audience on their feet and dancing along to their blend of rock rhythms, ska beats, pumping reggae grooves interweaved with sophisticated jazz swing.

We perform not because of the awards or political messages. It’s solely about music and art said Gary Cosby. Jazz has lost the ability to connect with the audience, and that’s why we play to reach out to younger people and get them on their feet dancing to our music.

Jazz is unique because it can’t be recreated with modern day technologies, and it can only be presented live,” he added. It’s an integration of musicians working together. It’s more than just technology; it’s about the human experience.

Best dressed band - Jazz Jamaica, with their skinny neckties, leather berets, well tailored pants and Kevin Federline look-alike drummer complete with diamond stud earring.

Best all-star jam – all the performers in the finale. The riff from "Flight of The Bumblebee" which morphed into the theme from the Flintstones got roaring approval from the crowd.

My sincere thanks to Ms Yeoh Jun Lin, Ms Yeo Yu Puay and their team for putting together a fantastic show (I can only guess at the logistic nightmare) and Ms Lind Shah of Genting Berhad who ensured that we were comfortable and well looked after.

No prizes for guessing who’s already booked his place for next year.

Yeoh Jun Lin

Yeoh Jun Lin graduated from the prestigious Royal College of Music, London with the G.R.S.M. Honours course and also holds the A.R.C.M., L.R.A.M. and the L.T.C.L.. She passed both Grade 8 in piano and violin with high distinctions at the age of 13, but considers the piano her principal instrument which she studied with, first, her father, then Yeoh Geok Hoon in Penang, and later on the late David Parkhouse when she was 16.

She also pursued the violin with Kenneth Piper. She participated in the debut recording of the BBC’s “The African Sanctus” by David Fanshawe, but Jun Lin was most involved with chamber groups and was in demand as a pianist in duos and ensembles.

Now residing in Kuching, Jun Lin continues with her passion for music. She did a piano concerto in the Mozart bicentennial celebrations, performed with violinist Clarence Myerscough, as a trio with Isin Cakmakciuglu and Rachel Atkinson, with trombonist Gila Rayberg and violinist Fintan Murphy. She was also producer of the Christmas concert with Chan Hui Ling in 1995. She has a select group of students whom she tutors.

Jun Lin was the Chairman of the Sarawak Music Society from 1997-2000 where she organized a series of events which included the Young Musician of the Year Award in 1999. She also sat in the Kuching Festival Committee and adjudicated for several competitions.

She was in the organizing committee for the annual Rainforest World Music Festival in Kuching that started in 1998 under the Sarawak Tourism Board. She is perhaps best known as the Artistic Director for the festival 2001-2007. She was also the Artistic Director for the Miri International Jazz Festival (2006 – 2007), the Genting International Jazz Festival and the Penang World Music Festival.