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LIFE

Musical marvel

Life, James Keller, Published on 14/09/2023

» The visit of a genuine classical virtuoso to the Thailand Cultural Centre is guaranteed to tempt a larger than usual audience, and indeed it was most refreshing to witness an almost packed auditorium towards the end of August for the latest concert by the Royal Bangkok Symphony Orchestra, supported by B.Grimm Group.

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LIFE

RBSO to play Queen Mother birthday concert

Life, Published on 22/08/2023

» The Royal Bangkok Symphony Orchestra will give a concert to mark the 91st birthday of HM Queen Sirikit The Queen Mother, in the Main Hall of Thailand Cultural Centre, Ratchadaphisek Road, on Saturday at 7.30pm.

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LIFE

An all-French affair at Sala Sudasiri Sobha

Life, Published on 14/03/2023

» Violinist Yada Lee and pianist Kant Lormsomboon will return to Sala Sudasiri Sobha throne hall for an evening of all-French music, on Sunday at 4pm.

LIFE

Little Monk Project goes international

Life, Published on 27/07/2018

» For the seventh year running, CP and True have jointly created True Little Monk: A Wisdom Training Programme For Novices as the first dhamma reality documentary in the world. To celebrate the show has taken an international twist by seeking 12 children from across the globe to join the programme with the hope of spreading the teachings of Lord Buddha to a global audience and its contribution to enhancing people into conscious beings.

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LIFE

Stunning visuals with a Thai-French flavour

Life, Amitha Amranand, Published on 25/06/2015

» The final La Fete, a French-Thai cultural festival, drew to a close last Saturday. For years, the festival provided the city its staple of wonder-filled and visually inventive dance and new-circus performances from France. It also occasionally supported experimental works by local artists.

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LIFE

A life full of changes in rhythm

Life, Published on 13/04/2015

» When Philip Glass was 15, his father, who owned a record store in Baltimore, put him in charge of buying classical albums. Glass was then a precocious freshman at the University of Chicago and taking the first steps on the path to becoming a composer. When he learned of a new recording of the complete Schoenberg string quartets played by the Juilliard String Quartet, he ordered four copies. Aghast, his father asked if he was trying to put him out of business. To teach his son a lesson, he told him to put the recordings of these atonal chamber works on the shelves with the more mainstream classical records and report back when the last copy had been sold. That took seven years. The lesson Glass learned? "I can sell anything if I have enough time."