Thursday, October 04, 2018

Jimmy Chan: Singapore's Favourite Pianist Ever


I've yet to meet Jimmy Chan again after the last time at Grandma Mary's home but we kept in touch on the mobile phone. And it is the same question again and again, "When are you coming to Tiong Bahru market for kopi Andy?" But we never met although he agreed to our interview on the phone.

Thanks, Jimmy.


Jimmy Chan is on YouTube


UP TO 9,200 VIEWS 
     50 COMMENTS.   

If you meet Jimmy Chan you won't know he's a maestro at the piano. Humble, quiet and always keeping away from the limelight, I easily identify him as Gentleman Jim. Yes, he's a gentleman all the way. 


Jimmy is a natural with the piano. Without notes on his piano music rack and without having to refer to music sheets, Jimmy is able to play most any song by heart. From jazz standards to pops, classical pieces or Latin and depending on what he's playing, his fingers would either dexterously fly or gently touch on the ivories, depending on the melody he is interpreting.


There's a uniqueness about his performance because he plays from within, inspired, feeling the melody so much that he would posture himself close to the piano near the keyboard with his head to one side (image below), transported into his world, one where his melodies flow naturally without assistance from any structured documentation. The classical pianist.
He is not like some keyboard players (not pianists) who read from the notes direct and sounding like the auto-chords on many computer-enhanced organs in the market. Anyone could play on these gadgets without feel or purpose. But not Jimmy. He delivers with soul and silent perpetuity. 

In the early sixties, Jimmy Chan used to work in a bank in Singapore. He was known enough to be with a popular big band called The Flamingos and accompanied singer Robert Song and vocal group, The Gay Lads.  The Trailers, another established guitar group, held on to Jimmy when he joined them afterwards.

He only left his job at the bank after The Quests invited him to join this already pop guitar group for a contract in Hong Kong. Count the years because he was in Suzie Wong's world for some time.

After completing his stint he came home and because he was popular and well-loved at the Mandarin Hotel, Singapore, the management engaged him for 20 years. Now twenty years is a long time and Jimmy became the official pianist at the first class hotel at Orchard Road from 1974 to 1994.


He joined Dennis Foo at his Club 97 for two years after he left and went over to the other Mandarin, the Marina Mandarin in 1996. You can still enjoy his piano serenades at the same hotel on any week evenings from 6.30 to 8.00 except Sunday. (He would be on leave now.)

I have a few Chinese songs on vinyl since Jimmy had recorded many pop instrumentals on cassettes and CDs. It was great to have him autograph one of them (image above). But I wanted to listen to more of Jimmy's recordings, so a friend's wife obliged and handed me a pile of his CDs; they were a mile high. She is a fan!

"All his recordings," she mentioned, "He's my favourite star." I glanced at her husband and smiled. He was flabbergasted.


A few years ago a group of us with Jimmy, Larry Lai, the late Tan Swee Leong and our wives and lady friends, were at Grandma Mary's home for a private function with her family. After Swee Leong's favourite mee-siam dinner we were entertained by Gentleman Jim. 

His songs on the ivory tinkled the night away. The Eddy Duchin Theme song when Kim Novak swayed in the moonlight with Gregory Peck in Picnic, took me years back when I saw the movie at the Capitol Cinema. 

Jimmy also played Chinese melodies by Teresa Teng and other Chinese pops; April Love was sung by - surprise, surprise, Larry Lai - with other love hits of the era.

Requests for piano favourites reached the sky and no one wanted to go home that evening; everyone was humming, whistling or singing to the maestro's performance.

(from left, clockwise): Andy Young, the late Tan Swee Leong, Larry Lai, Grandma Mary and Jimmy Chan.

Jimmy mesmerises his audience like no piano man can. He is no keyboardist but a concert pianist and definitely one of the best amongst SG musicians.
One posting isn't sufficient for this great pianist but he promised a more detailed one soon. 

Thanks, Jimmy for entertainment plus.

Connect to the Grandma Mary meet:

http://singapore60smusic.blogspot.com/2012/06/mary-music-mee-siam-merry-mayhem.html
An original article by Andy Lim.
Images: A Private Collection.
Copyrights Reserved.

From the pages of Jimmy Chan's fan, FRED CHING's Facebook postings.

Monday, October 01, 2018

When Japan Summits Elvis Presley's Hit Jailhouse Rock


This posting is not about Japanese Elvis Presley Tribute Artistes but about the interpretation of the song Jailhouse Rock. Listen to how the Japanese lyrics combine well with the English words used. They really locked it. Oooooh!



You heard and witnessed the Hindi or Bollywood version earlier; here are two more versions from the land of the rising sun. Compare them, as both are serious interpretations, one a Japanese copy but the other a totally new ideal about county jail conditions.


Masaaki Hirao 1957 Sings Some Rock n Roll
YouTube Video by: Heppest of the Hep
From the Japanese movie: 'The Stormy Man'
Please take these musicians seriously 😎.
Because they do.

And a big thank you to the people behind these wonderful videos without whom these postings would never have been available.

Read this one too. Click connection:

Elvis Presley's Jailhouse Rock Video by rotocanum. Thank you very much.

This posting is for good friend Michael Bangar, whose understanding of the pop music world, both locally and internationally is beyond many of us. I am sure he has much to say about these interpretations.

Images and Videos: Google and YouTube.

Saturday, September 29, 2018

Quiz Trivia Or Whatever On 60's Music, Etc

TRIVIA, QUIZ OR WHATEVER

1. NAME THE PERSON
2. WHAT IS THE PERSON KNOWN FOR?
3. ANY SONG CONNECTED TO THE PERSON?

(NOT ALL PERSONALITIES ARE THAT FAMOUS BUT 
THEY HAVE BEEN FEATURED ON THIS BLOG.)







Guess 5 correct and you're good because some are Singaporeans.
No prizes to be given out. It's just fun and games like this blog.
Thanks for bearing with my nonsense.

Images mostly from Google.

Saturday, September 22, 2018

Mooncake Festival (城里的月光) In Singapore 2018

As a child, I enjoyed the mooncakes provided by my mother. She would go all the way to North Bridge Road to buy them from a particular shop that was supposed to be selling the best moon-cakes on our island.

When you take a bus to this shop, look out from the window and you will see this huge building with a giant poster hanging on the outside wall, displaying a picture of the prettiest and most famous lady that season, the Queen of the Mooncakes. 

Most of us are familiar with mooncakes and the myriads found commercially today in different colours and shapes (ugh, they get so ugly and tasteless). I go beyond the cakes and try to learn the many Chinese moon songs? Some came from my mother...
Under The Silvery Moon (在银色月光下 俞淑琴) Video from Philopentatonia


Here's a short, short list of Chinese songs with moon themes that could get you going, some classics, some new:

Go After The Moon (月亮走我也走)
Blooming Flowers, Full Moon (月圓花好)
Moonlight In The City (城里的月光)

Moon On the 15th (十五的月亮)
Under The Silvery Moon (在银色月光下 俞淑琴)
Half Moon Rising (半个月亮爬上来)

The Crescent Moon (弯弯的月亮)
Look At The Moon's Face  (你看你看月亮的脸)
Like The Moon, Like The Stars (如月如星)
Wishing We Could Last Forever (但愿人长久)
The Moon Cries Privately (月亮偷着哭)
It Was The Fault Of The Moon (都是月亮惹的祸)

The Moon Represents My Heart (月亮代表我的心)
Western Cool Moon (西凉月) 
Abyss Moon (黄泉月)


A lovely Mid-Autumn Festival to all readers.

Most of the above songs were selected by Peter Wang for a culture and history magazine called, China Whisper.) 

Moon Festival and Moon Symbols. Check them out:

Images and YouTube Videos

Sunday, September 16, 2018

Anneke Gronloh Is Gone: A Tribute From Singapore

June 1942 to September 2018

     UP TO 7,000 VIEWS,   
 50 CHATS, COMMENTS  

She has one of the most powerhouse voices in local 60's pop music history. With her trademark Dutch, Indonesian electrifying 'r' consonant pronunciation and pretty sparkling eyes, you remember her as Anneke.

At 76 another pop singer from the 60's has passed away. Anneke Gronloh famous for her hit song, Boeroeng Kakak Tua, Nina Bobo, Asmara (Love)  and a cover Mama He's Making Eyes At Me, died, according to news items, of a lung ailment. Altogether, especially in Europe and South East Asia, she was a huge success and sold millions of records.

I have always loved her singing on the first vinyl record I bought, the one that brought her accolades in our local pop 60's scene, with the four magical Indonesian folk songs: Boeroeng Kaka, Nina Bobo, Bengawan Solo and O, o, o, Papadja. This combination on one Extended Play vinyl was a commercial success, cleverly packaged to please both young and old.
Nearly every lady singer who appears in a 60's music show in Singapore would go on stage to perform Gronloh's Boeroeng Kakak Tua with the unending Lechrum, lechrum, letchrum, ooh, la, la. Even little children sing this refrain everywhere. She was loved by many of her fans, even today. 

Ms Gronloh was hugely popular in Singapore and the East and had been a regular visitor on this island many times, with the late Blue Diamonds brothers, Ruud and Riem de Wolff, pop singers on their own merit and just as successful. And their favourite stay-place was the Goodwood Park Hotel. They formed a great team these three Indonesian/Dutch friends (an LP with the Hotel facade below).
Strange that two of my grandchildren and I were singing Burung Kakak only last week at home as we shouted in unison the famous refrain.

Rest in Peace, sweet Anneke. I have more than 20 of your English, Indonesian and Dutch Long Plays, Singles and EP's so it'll be Anneke Gronloh remembrance night for us at home. 

Condolences to her family.

Check this one out:
https://singapore60smusic.blogspot.com/2009/05/images-of-anneke-gronloh-and-blue.html
Images: Google and a Personal Collection.
Video: YouTube.
My own personal collection of Anneke EPs. Lovely to look at and mostly in mint condition.

Saturday, September 15, 2018

JAILHOUSE ROCK INDIAN VERSION

An Indian film created quite a sensation when it was shown in 2010 and proved quite a success. I just loved the video that highlighted the music scene in the movie, which showed a version of JAILHOUSE ROCK that I have never witnessed before on screen. Riotous and explosive it showed that the talent exposed by the Indian film industry is far better than any show that I've seen on our local TV or movie productions.

Dil Khol Ke - Jail House Rock Song: Dharma Productions. Thank you.

Directed by Siddharth Malhotra and Karan Johar, here dear readers, is one of the better Jailhouse Rock music dramatisation. The movie starred Arjun Rampal, Kareena Kapor and Kajol.

I used to go watch Hindustani movies as a child, at the Garrick and Taj Cinemas in Geylang Serai and the Queens Cinema at Geylang. The fantasy scripts and screen action were not as far-fetched as it is today. The movies were enjoyable and some of the songs still stick in my mind. You can read about my experience watching Bollywood shows by clicking the connection below:

http://singapore60smusic.blogspot.com/search/label/Bollywood%2FIndian%20pops

and:

https://singapore60smusic.blogspot.com/2018/10/jailhouse-rock-japanese-versions.html

A HAPPY DEEPAVALI 2020 TO ALL HINDU FRIENDS N READERS.

Thanks to:
BollywoodHungama.com

Mid Autumn Festival: 2018 English Moon Songs

Check the different western songs that use the moon 
as symbolic ideals of love,
hate, lust, good, evil, situations and place, etc.

UP TO 3,000 VIEWS, 10 COMMENTS

月亮代表我的心 
Teresa Teng The Moon Represents My Heart.  

"You ask me how deeply I love you, how much I love you. My feelings are real, my love is also real, the moon represents my heart. You ask me how deeply I love you, how much I love you. My feelings will never move, my love will never change, the moon represents my heart. The gentlest of kisses has opened my heart. The deepest of love affairs, I think about it till today. You ask me how deeply I love you, how much I love you. Just think about it, just take a look, the moon represents my heart."

(Translated by George Murphy).

                                        Frank Sinatra Fly Me To The Moon.  Video.

I call them moon songs. Personally, the two best moon songs ever. If you have some in mind, and there are hundreds or thousands of them, whether in English, Chinese, Malay, Tamil or other languages please contribute. My best wishes to all. Watch that moon soon!

With English Lyrics:

Bad Moon Rising
Bad Side of The Moon Blue Moon
Blue Moon of Kentucky
By The Light of The Silvery Moon
Blue Moon

Carolina Moon 

Dark Side of The Moon
Everyone's Gone To The Moon
Heading for the Moon
It's Only a  Paper Moon


Moon at the Window
Moonglow
Moonlight Bay
Moonlight and Roses
Magic Is The Moonlight

Moon River

Moon Above Malaya                                            
Moonshadow
Mr Moonlight
Song About The Moon

Yellow Moon

Brain Damage
Dancing In The Moon
Moon Child
Moon Shadow

Moon Daydream

Moonlight Drive
Maiden of the Cancer Moon
Moon Dance
Dancing In The Moonlight

Pink Moon

Sisters of the Moon
Havana Moon
Dark Moon
Blue Moon Of Kentucky

And of course, Moonlight Sonata!

Nothing specific here about traditions or beliefs but more about songs with that lunar word.

Ah-woohoo!

Images: Google.

Saturday, September 08, 2018

Remembering Burt Reynolds: Deliverance & Duelling Banjos

Burt Reynolds: 
11 February 1936 to 6 September 2018
Duelling Banjos (HD) performed by Eric Weissberg and Steve Mandell. Video by David and Broliath: 12 million YouTube viewers!!!

I am not much of a Burt Reynolds fan. I remember him in Boogie Nights (1997) and Cannonball Run (1981) but the song that went with the movie which impressed me was Duelling Banjos (1972) from the screen hit, Deliverance. It was also another of the New Zealand melodies that kept ringing in my mind - even today - when I studied there in 1973. 

The others were I Don't Know How To Love Him (1970) by Helen Reddy, Beautiful Sunday (1972) by Daniel Boone, and Killing Me Softly (1973) from Roberta Flack.

Deliverance was playing at one of the bigger cinema complexes on Lambton Quay, the main shopping street in Wellington, and had been showing for days. I was free after a gruelling morning test and wanted to break free when I saw this huge poster of Burt Reynolds with his bulging muscles acting beside another big star, John Voight.

What the heck I told myself; I had another half day to kill in boring Wellington, so I bought a ticket.
I was introduced to the song, one which kept my eyes on the screen and ears on the speakers. There were strains of Yankee Doodle in the song and I bought the vinyl later around the Quay's street corner.  More interestingly, the composer was Arthur Smith, the man who created Guitar Boogie, a song every guitarist should be familiar with. 

A rare combination that bonded into a memory: Burt Reynolds + Deliverance + Duelling Banjo + Arthur Smith + New Zealand. 

Good-by Mr Reynolds. May you Rest In Peace.
Images Google
Video YouTube

Monday, September 03, 2018

Silver Strings @ Pasir Ris East CC 15 September 2018

Left: Rickie Chng (lead), Nick Stravens (keyboard), Andy (vocals, blogger), Richie (vocals), John Cher (drums), Mike Bangar (rhythm), Audie Ng (bass, bandleader). YWCA Dinner and Dance 2018.

The Silver Strings
In Concert
(Free Tickets from Pasir Ris Elias CC)
Saturday 
7-10PM
15 September 2018
Pasir Ris Elias Community Club
Marquee
Singapore

If you've missed The Silver Strings before, don't forget to catch us this time around. Two other bands will be in attendance. 

Only some past concerts since 2008, are featured below. The Strings appeared with some other artistes but not all names are mentioned.
Andy, Mike n Herb, Veronica: Vivo City Roof Garden Concert 2008

European Beatles Tribute Artistes: Orchid Country Club 2009
Esplanade 2010
Platinum Music World Orchard Road 2013
Boys' Town Bukit Timah 2014
RELC International Hotel Orchard
Orange Grove 2014
Rick Astley, Dick Lee
'Rollin' Good Times' Media Corp Channel 5
2015
Moe Alkaff, Irene Ang
Promontory @ Marina Bay 2015
Silver Arts
The Plaza @ The National Library 2016
Jack Neo, Chua En Lai, Aileen Tan, Suhaimi Yusof
MEDIA CORP SINGAPORE Channel 5 
'NOT THE 5 SHOW' 2016
Vernon A., Justin Ang, Peter Chua
Kallang Wave Stadium 2016
Kallang Theatre 2017

Ceylon Sports Club 2018
The photographs from The Silver Strings albums and scrapbooks featured above are only some of the concerts that we have appeared in. Other performances were at The Pek Kio CC, Marine Parade CC, Sentosa Island, Kallang Mall, Jamiyah Home, etc.

Images and the write-up is by Andy Young, who also sings with the band. This post does not promote the band but shows the pictorial history of its members and venues where we had performed.
Pasir Ris, Elias Mall, The Marquee, Singapore. 
15 September 2018, Saturday evening from 7pm.