Saturday, December 27, 2008

Ocean Park Hotel Singapore With Wilma Tang

            This image of Wilma Tang has been copyrighted by its owner.

We have our own well-known female vocalists too. I shared the same stage with WILMA TANG (image taken off a dance-ball magazine) when she sang at a charity dinner in the 60s.

She was a hit those days as a professional singer and appeared regularly at the Ocean Park nightclub at East Coast Road, Singapore.

Singing both in English and Chinese, she was also one of the earlier personalities who graced the television screen locally.

While Miss Teng Siew Ping was entertaining patrons at the Cathay Restaurant in town, Wilma was entertaining her nightclubbers at Ocean Park Hotel near the sea, accompanied by Sid Gomez and His Band.
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Wilma Tang, Ahmad Daud and Winston Filmer. Image by: Mun Chor Seng.
Do you know Ms Tang? If you have more information about her please write in. Wilma is the mother of youthful pop singer, Marie Tang.

Image/Article: Andy Lim Collection.

Article In Full:


Ocean Park Hotel: Rehearsal To Reality Dec 1963.



Andy Young with Susan during a rehearsal for the big show that night. Now whatever happened to Susan?

Ocean Park Hotel Dinner and Dance Venue was held at an open hall where the sea breeze, cool evening and great entertainment made it a memorable night for many patrons, guests and performers.

It was situated at Upper East Coast Road near the present St. Patrick's School and Jackie's Bowl, one of the first few bowling alleys in the 60s. Andy Young is seen singing to Susan during the rehearsal for an end of year dinner and dance at the hotel. It was held on December 21st, 1963.

The practice song was Paul Anka's Diana as Andy had to sing it to Susan that evening. The song became Andy's signature tune whenever he appeared during the many variety shows held in the 1960's. All this came about before he joined the Velvetones and the Silver Strings. 
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Partying at Ocean Park Hotel. Image by Mun Chor Seng
For the show that evening, Andy was accompanied by Robert Suriya and his band, one of the groups that performed. Both Robert and Henry Suriya came from St. Andrew's School so they were familiar faces then. Were they known as The Boys already? Naomi wasn't present that night.

Called the Queen of Queens Grand Finale, the other guest artistes included MC Siri Perera, The Checkmates, Kiss Me Quick singer David Baskaran, Siva and James Choy better known as the Cyclones, talentime winner and jazz specialist Eunice Sim, Singapore cowpoke Henry Suriya (he came well before Matthew Tan) and the 60's version of cross-dresser Kumar, Ms Percy Leceister.

Percy could wow the crowd with his shimmy, songs and sensuality. The crowd would get very excited when Percy appeared as they would shout his name and clapped whenever he did his Latin dance routines on stage to the beat of bongo drums and the maracas.
The entrance to the Ocean Park Hotel and nightclub at East Coast Road.

It was organised by Hitachi and a fashion house. The night was hauntingly frightful because a Pontianak and vampire were roaming around the nightclub, disturbing the young ladies... Remember it was late 1963 and the bands and singers were just blooming.

Because there was hardly any entertainment in the evenings back then and the usual sophisticated Singaporeans could not adapt themselves to the crowd at the Happy World in Geylang, many Katongnites, Siglapians, the Peranakans and Eurasians would patronise these dances during the weekends. Because such an activity came few and far between, a night like this one practically drew the East Coast Road population to Ocean Park.

As Elvis would say it in one of his songs, "Such A Night!"

Image 1/original article: Andy Lim Collection.
Image 2: by Mun Chor Seng.

Image 3: by singas.co.uk

Eartha Kitt And Others At National Theatre Singapore


Eartha Kitt sang at the National Theatre and Hotel Malaysia, Singapore in March 1969. Even then we had our share of top international artistes. But was it cheaper to buy a ticket then? And was the show at Hotel Malaysia confined only to an exclusive group?

She wasn't the only one of international standing who came to entertain in Singapore. Others just as well-renowned visited our shores. Check out this blog as you follow my trail cause I cannot tell you now who they were but they were quite a bunch...


Latest:

She was a singer whose music I enjoy and whose influence was worldwide. EARTHA KITT has passed on at 81.

I had to write this blog as one of her songs, C'est Si Bon is my all time favourite and I remember singing it at the Ocean Park Nite Club a long, long time ago. That's the connection.

The sensual, husky voice of Eartha Kitt lasted for more than 60 years. Her biggest hit was, "Santa Baby". We have all been influenced by her music somehow. May you rest in peace dear lady.

Official website: http://www.earthakitt.com/

Friday, December 26, 2008

Harold Pinter (Playwright) Gone At 78 - Nobel


Pinter, "whose gift for finding the ominous in the everyday and the noise within silence made him the most influential and imitated dramatist of (my) generation (NYT: 26.12.08)."

The Flying Inkpot reviews Betrayal - SRT (our own Singapore repertory theatre at Robertson Quay.) Reading his plays, well... but watching it on stage, that's something!

Like listening to a singer on record or on stage. Different lah! Curtains are down. Encore please.

Eartha Kitt Has Passed Away at 81 Years Young

She was a singer whose music I enjoy and whose influence was world wide. EARTHA KIDD has passed on at 81.

I had to write this blog as one of her songs, "C'est Si Bon" is my all time favourite and I remember singing it at the Ocean Park Nite Club a long, long time ago. That's the connection.

The sensual, husky voice of Eartha Kitt lasted for more than 60 years. Her biggest hit was, "Santa Baby". We have all been influenced by her music somehow. May you rest in peace dear lady.
Official website: http://www.earthakitt.com/

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Palace Cinema Katong - Lido Cinema Orchard


The former Lido Cinema at Orchard Road was one of the venues where tea-dances were held and the nitespot cum restaurant upstairs was called Rosee D'or.

There would be a main band like The Silver Strings in attendance and a Guest Band. It had a dance floor where the 60s youths soaked their shirts & pants out!
The Palace Cinema at East Coast Road was another hangout. The Trailers was the regular band here and lead singer Benny Koh fronted them.

Tea dances, usually held from 3.30 pm to 7 pm weekends, cost $3.50 each for entrance and a drink.

And Larry Lai, Rediffusion DJ extraodinaire, met his wife at the Rosee D'or in the Lido Cinema building.

Images: National Heritage Board/Shaw Brothers Organisation.


Tube Radios In Singapore - Grundig, Pye, Telefunken, Normende, Siemens

The 60s - That's about 20 years after World War II, so when people settled in after the fighting, Elvis Presley mumbled over the airwaves and I heard him on my father's GRUNDIG radio. Later when b/w television appeared he gyrated his way into the living rooms of Singapore homes.
Cliff Richard, Gene Vincent, Tommy Sands and the rest came, churning out songs like stencilled copies off the Gestetner hand-cranked machines at the office. Similarly Singapore had its copies of singers who aped artistes from the West. Do you remember these local singers?
Image: img.alibaba.com


Singpore Music Scene Disappeared in 70's

JOY asks: "I wasn't part of the scene but what I'd like to know is... why did it suddenly disappeared?"

(1) It probably disappeared because of the Singapore Government's clampdown on drugs in the early 70s, which was at that time associated with rock music and western depravity. It was called, "Yellow Culture."

(2) According to some 60s Singapore artistes that Andy has interviewed, it also disappeared because of the extreme record-piracy then. Much money was lost because pirated records were being sold on the open market.


(3) Henry Suriya, a 60s crooner and elder brother to Naomi and Robert (The Boys), remembers that when his fans pushed him his EP records to be signed, he noticed that they were mostly pirated copies. 

He smiled and signed them all but it was an unpleasant experience to see only bootleg versions of his own records. Imagine the amount of revenue/royalties the local artistes would have lost. Ironically, the pirates who made copies of these records benefited.

(4) Unpleasant conflicts in some of the 60s nightspots led to physical abuse and fights. There were also unruly elements at the nightclubs and dance venues. As these incidents increased, these places were closed down.


Images: Google.

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Monday, December 22, 2008

Did The Velvetones Record In Minangkabau?

When The Velvetones accompanied Z. Tjaniago was he singing in the Minangkabau language*? It is spoken by the people of West Sumatra in the western part of Riau.

Response please. (Picture by courtesy of: Mr. Dennis Tan.)

*Or dialect.


## A Merry Christmas & A Happy New Year! ##

Cheers To 60s Music! Let's Hope For More Concerts Too!

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Elizabeth & Marilyn. Know Where They Are?

Do you remember GIRVIN SISTERS? If you do, write and tell us. They were accompanied by The Dukes, another Singapore 60s band, when they cut an EP record singing, My Drummer Boy, Dream Up A Dream, Without You, L'Edera.

Elizabeth and Marilyn also accompanied Keith Locke and the Quests in their very popular, Don't Play That Song. Charming, with harmonizing vocals and clear diction make these songs worthwhile listening to.

Image: 
David Greenfield's MetaFilter Community Weblog/Universal Music, Singapore.

Drumming Culture With A Difference


Vibrating like the drums he beats, I met Albert (seated, bottom left) within the corridors of a recording studio while we were practising for the 60s Reunion Concert.

Albert, who started off with the October Cherries in 1968, was in his last band Culture Vulture in the 90s. The group has recordings and one song, "Merry Christmas, Singapore," is still being played over the local radio stations.

Besides his ethnic-fusion sounds and international exposure Albert uses drums to help patients in the most natural and imaginative way. Read Albert's own website as he explains what it all means in an interview with CNAs Susan Jung at http://www.culturevulture.per.sg/

Mine is another successful venture to find out what former band members are doing.

Image: Louis Albert Collection.