[Dixielandjazz] The "King" of Swing & Dixieland
tcashwigg at aol.com
tcashwigg at aol.com
Mon Jun 12 21:51:20 PDT 2006
Not to worry amigo :))
I AM GOING THERE SHORTLY, AND will attempt to do so, I am working on a
Blues festival there in September and taking on the talent buying
services for a 500 Seat first class Blues club as we speak.
I do have some very good connections directly into the Royal Family,
two of their grandchildren have been members of our homestay operation
for international students in the past ten years and one of them
actually programmed my computers for me two years ago.
The world gets indeed smaller every year :)) Especially when you
think outside the box, and behind every door is an opportunity if ye
but open it :)) And yes somedays there is room full of horse doo doo,
but if you dig deep enough you just might find a Pony. :)) LOL
Cheers,
Tom Wiggins
-----Original Message-----
From: Steve barbone <barbonestreet at earthlink.net>
To: DJML <dixielandjazz at ml.islandnet.com>
Sent: Mon, 12 Jun 2006 22:19:26 -0400
Subject: [Dixielandjazz] The "King" of Swing & Dixieland
Hey Wiggins, we should produce a Dixieland festival in Thailand.
Cheers,
Steve Barbone
Thailand king's got that swing
Monday, June 12, 2006 - CNN On Line
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -- For so many Thais, King Bhumibol Adulyadej is
a
father figure for the nation. But for a small group of jazz musicians,
he is
also the King of Swing.
Every Saturday, Thailand's beloved 78-year-old monarch breaks out his
saxophone to jam with 10 other local musicians.
Bhumibol, the world's longest-reigning monarch, has also played with
jazz
legends like Benny Goodman, Stan Getz, Lionel Hampton and Benny Carter.
"He is simply the coolest king in the land," the late Hampton quipped
in a
1987 article in "Sawasdee" magazine. Bhumibol is well-known among Thais
and
some of the world's jazz legends as an accomplished musician and
composer.
Many can hum and sing his most popular tunes, influenced by his favorite
artists -- Louis Armstrong, Sidney Bechet and alto saxophonist Johnny
Hodges
of Duke Ellington's Orchestra. Bhumibol used to listen to their records
and
play along.
"The king's style is Dixieland or New Orleans style, like Sidney Bechet
when
he plays the soprano saxophone," said Manrat Srikaranonda, a pianist
who has
played with the king for more than half a century. Benny Carter was
also a
royal favorite, he said.
Les Brown and His Band of Renown in 1996 recorded several of the king's
compositions, but under an agreement with the palace, they can be heard
only
in Thailand. Brown, who died in 2001, once described Bhumibol as "a
superior
musician."
"I'm sure if he didn't have the job he has now, he'd be successful as a
bandleader," Brown said in the 1996 documentary "Gitarajan" about the
king
and his music.
The king began his musical education during his school years in
Switzerland.
He decided he wanted to play the trumpet after hearing a band at a
mountain
resort hotel. However, his mother thought the trumpet would be too
strenuous
for him, the king's daughter, Princess Sirindhorn, wrote in a 1996 book.
The king's mother "compromised by allowing his majesty to play the
saxophone," Sirindhorn wrote. After purchasing a secondhand saxophone,
Bhumibol played with other Thai students at his residence in Lausanne
during
school holidays.
His first composition was "Candlelight Blues," and his most popular are
the
catchy, lighthearted "Love at Sundown" and the more wistful "Falling
Rain"
-- all written in 1946, the year he became king.
"I became inspired while I was listening to music on the radio," he
said in
a 1981 speech. "I felt the music in my head sounded better, so I turned
off
the radio and scribbled it down on a piece of paper. I remember that it
was
in May. People liked that song. They said it was beautiful. I felt
overjoyed," he said.
Bhumibol formed a band that would play with him at the palace, and in
1952
he set up a new public radio station on which the 14-member band would
broadcast live performances every Friday.
In 1956, Benny Goodman played with the king in Bangkok at the Ambara
Throne
Hall. During a state visit to the United States in 1960, the king
played at
Goodman's residence in New York City.
In 1964, the Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts in Vienna named the
king an
honorary member -- the first Asian composer to be granted the honor.
Of the palace's original Friday band, only Manrat, its pianist,
continues to
play with the king today, their jam sessions having moved from Bangkok
to
the summer palace in Hua Hin, 230 kilometers (140 miles) south of the
capital.
"We love to play," Manrat, 78, told The Associated Press in an interview
granted by the palace. "This is not a duty." Most of the contemporary
band
members are amateurs; they include an architect, an engineer and an
adviser
to the king.
The only professional musician is Manrat's son, 33-year-old Pathorn
Srikaranonda, who is also the group's youngest player. Pathorn
describes the
weekly jams as comfortable and relaxed.
"It's not like a concert performance. It's not like a dress rehearsal,
that
you would die if you did something wrong," Pathorn said. "His Majesty
has a
personal warmth and aura in him. ... When he plays the saxophone, he
always
finds a way to express it from his inner thoughts. It's unbelievable."
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