Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Makiyo madness engulfs Taiwan

What's the big story in Taiwan? You might think it is Linsanity, but when I opened the Taipei Times just moments ago, the top 5 stories were:

1 Makiyo, friend released on bail
2 Makiyo, friend charged with assaulting driver
3 Police face charges in Makiyo case
4 Watchdog urges media restraint in Makiyo case
5 Fong Fei-fei, the ‘Queen of Hats,’ passes away at 58

Makiyo was also the week's most read story at the China Post as well.

The Makiyo story is gigantic. A bare bones summary from the first story:
The Taipei District Prosecutors’ Office yesterday wrapped up its investigation into a case involving singer-actress Makiyo and her friend Takateru Tomoyori, charging both with assault and asking for four and six years imprisonment respectively over the alleged beating of a taxi driver last week.
Another taxi driver had filmed the half-Japanese Makiyo and a friend in the act of beating the driver. Two other actresses in the vehicle were also charged with giving false testimony to the police. The police themselves may face charges since apparently the tape, available at the scene, was not given to the prosecutors until after it had appeared on TV, suggesting that policemen may have been trying to suppress it.

This event has led to much breathless Taiwan media Golden Retriever style "investigation" and reporting into the woman's alleged past as if it somehow meant something. From the same story:
Asked to comment on the singer-actress’ character, some sources within the Japanese community in Taipei said that Makiyo, who is half-Japanese, was not a well-behaved student when she attended the Taipei Japanese School.

Many parents were really troubled by some of her behavior, the source said, such as kissing her boyfriends in school.
Also involved was the famous staunchly pro-KMT gangster Chang An-lo, the White Wolf (long post, shorter one). In China, Chang stuck a finger into the case to offer cash and to stir up anti-Japanese sentiment. Not to mention get his name in the papers.

The case, which has been all over the internet here, sparked public concern that Makiyo was being tried in the media. Part of the problem was that Taiwan's news market is saturated with news stations demanding an endless supply of news, meaning that the event was repeatedly in the news as the stations updated their stories throughout the ensuing days. Even worse, some of the accused appeared on TV to discuss the case though it is still under investigation. Indeed, one deponent claimed that his testimony had been orchestrated by Makiyo's talent agency....
After being indicted by the prosecutor, Takateru Tomoyori, the Japanese man who participated with Makiyo in an attack on a taxi driver, revealed in a TV talk show that it was under the guidance of the agency that he made a false statement to the police. Tomoyori had said that only he, and not Makiyo, carried out the attack. This statement led to the police's investigation into possible perjury by Makiyo's agency.
Prosecutors said Makiyo herself faces a four year jail sentence in the case, Takateru Tomoyori is looking at six years.

The drunken beat down was triggered by the taxi driver's request that the people in the back buckle up as the law now requires.... *sigh*
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Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Taiwan Saxophones from Houli

My friend Clyde pointed out this wonderful article from NPR on the saxophone industry in Houli, right where the toll booth is on Highway 1 just north of Taichung. Taiwan is one of the world's most important producers of the instrument....
There are a dozen assembly lines — small, family operations like this one — throughout Houli. The town has a population of 50,000, but it produces about 40,000 saxophones a year.

Just how Houli became the world's unsung center of saxophone making is largely an accident of history. The story dates back to just after World War II. It stars a larger-than-life character named Chang Lien-cheng. He was a farmer's son who abandoned the family land to become a painter and jazz musician, says a spokeswoman for his company: "No one during that time was actually playing any kinds of Western instruments. But he was fascinated by this instrument called saxophone."

According to company legend, when Chang's saxophone was damaged in a fire, the inveterate tinkerer managed to build another. That was the first sax made in Taiwan.

Until his death several years ago, Chang trained a number of apprentices, and in the process, launched a lucrative export industry. By the 1980s, Taiwan was churning out so many saxes under contract to labels in the U.S. and Europe, the government estimates that 1 out of every 3 saxes in the world was made in Taiwan.

But then mainland China began ramping up its cheap saxophone assembly lines....

Friday, August 24, 2007

WAPO: ChThoniC: A Voice for Freedom

The Washington Post has a wonderful piece on ChThoniC, the Taiwan metal band that is raising our visibility in the US:

It's all part of an effort to drum up sympathy and support among a younger generation of music fans that may not be aware that Taiwan has been self-ruled since nationalist forces fled there in 1949 after losing a long-running civil war with communist forces. It had a U.N. seat as the Republic of China until 1971, when China asserted sovereignty and threatened military action if Taiwan tried to secede. The United States has been trying to encourage a peaceful resolution ever since.

"The things that we can do are not too much," Lim admits. "We didn't organize this tour for a political reason -- first of all, it's a musical tour -- but as citizens of Taiwan we had to express our political message in the same time when our country needs our support." Lim says the band has "met fans here and in Europe, even in high school, who are involved in social justice action and want to write about Taiwan, let their classmates know about Taiwan. Who knows? Those young people may be somebody who in different areas can support Taiwan in the future.

"So we do the most that we can do and hope that after we honestly express our opinion, we can inspire more Taiwanese citizens to bravely express their own opinions in international society, like the many movie directors and the baseball players in major league baseball in Japan. We are just a heavy metal act and we have to fight for our own musical career, but at the same time we want to fight for our country."

Seeking international political recognition while asserting its independence has been difficult for Taiwan, Lim says. "In my opinion -- and I think the opinion of all the citizens in Taiwan -- they consider Taiwan is already an independent country," he says. "We have all rights like the citizens of America: We pay the tax to our own government, we vote for our own president, we have our own army. It is for us an independent country, no doubt. That would be the point we want to mention: Accept 'unlimited Taiwan,' like the song.

"But we don't write anything political in other songs," Lim adds. "All our songs are about mythology in Taiwan. I'm a fan of all kinds of mythologies since I was in kindergarten. When I started to write music, I made up my mind to write about things that normally human beings cannot do -- I love to write about gods, ghosts, spirits."

Taiwan's "recognition entrepreneurs," private citizens who raise awareness of the island and its struggle for independence, are a key aspect of Taiwan's campaign. I wish more Taiwanese citizens took the time to speak with foreigners about the island's aspirations......the article goes into some detail on the band's creative influences and its music. Good stuff.

Wednesday, July 04, 2007

Ozzy Osbourne to Help Taiwan Gain UN Membership

My friend Peter sent me this link to a headline that is not made up folks. Reuters via WaPo has the call:

After 14 failed attempts at joining the United Nations using media campaigns and presidential appeals, Taiwan is turning to a local goth-style rock band backed by Ozzy Osbourne in its quest for membership to the world body.

The band, named ChthoniC, will travel to at least 80 cities in four countries by the end of the year, supported in part by the Taiwan government, which is providing pro-U.N. literature and a slogan-painted truck.

The band will visit Canada, Germany, Britain and the United States.

ChthoniC has also recorded a song urging the United Nations to let Taiwan join, even though its bid for membership keeps getting knocked down because of objections from Beijing.

"I'm not for any political party, but I'm for my poor country's joining the United Nations," band lyricist Freddy Lim told reporters on Wednesday at the tour's launch.

Ozzy Osbourne, a satanic-theme rocker known for biting heads off bats on stage, is helping set up 20 of the U.S. gigs, paying some transport costs and letting the Taiwan band promote U.N. membership as it wishes, Lim said. He said the band hooked up with Osbourne through personal connections.

ChthoniC is a well-known local band that supports democracy and independence. It's kind of cool that Taiwan is promoting itself in imaginative ways.

UPDATE: See the comments below for the tour schedule

UPDATE: a SF area friend said that a local radio station wants to interview Freddy. And another friend writes:

Wow, the whole "Ozzy/Chthonic" story has been getting a lot of play stateside today. NPR has a bumper this morning about it: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=11744876
And CNN has been mentioning it every 30 minutes today on Headline News. Right on!


Friday, April 06, 2007

Jazz Appreciation Month at AIT.

We didn't have much of a winter this year, but it doesn't seem to want to let go! If you want an escape from the Soviet-bloc weather we've been having, Jerome Keating informs us that Tuesday, April 10, the American Institute in Taiwan (AIT), as part of its cultural outreach, is hosting a Jazz Appreciation Month:

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Jazz Appreciation Month
爵士欣賞月
Each April, the United States celebrates Jazz Appreciation Month, an opportunity to savor a major American contribution to world culture. This month we focus public attention on the music, and on the many talented composers, musicians and other contributors to the American Jazz. ... [more]

- Jazz Appreciation Month
Smithsonian Jazz
- Jazz Video

Digital Video Conference
Topic: All About New Orleans Jazz

Date: April 10, 2007
Time: 9:00-10:30 am
Venue: American Cultural Center
U.S. Speakers:
Ben Jaffe, Creative Director, Preservation Hall in New Orleans
Dwayne Breashears, Program Director, WWOZ 90.7 FM, New Orleans

To Reserve Seats, Click Here!


Jazz Photos and Paintings
Photographs from the Golden Age of Jazz
Library of Congress

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The meet up tomorrow at 10:00 will also feature a talk on Blues music here in Taiwan.