Showing 1 - 7 of 7
Life, Published on 23/02/2023
» After the success of the Rimpha Music Festival in Nakhon Ratchasima two weeks ago, Heavy Organizer will present two more festivals for music lovers in Phetchaburi and Surat Thani next month.
News, Mae Moo, Published on 04/12/2022
» An Udon Thani woman whose unfaithful behaviour drove her husband to attack her lover says she is now looking around for someone else.
Life, Suwitcha Chaiyong, Published on 30/12/2020
» Like other industries, everything related to the art industry, from museums, art festivals, art fairs, galleries and more took a hiatus during the pandemic lockdown. However, after the lockdown was lifted, the country's art scene started to get a little more vibrant. Even Thailand's largest art festivals, Bangkok Art Biennale, returned.
B Magazine, Chanun Poomsawai, Published on 03/09/2017
» When she was still the singer of Canadian electro-punk duo Crystal Castles, Alice Glass seldom sang. Her vocals, distorted and manipulated, sometimes worked in tandem with the harsh, glitchy production of her bandmate Ethan Kath. Other times, they barely rose above it. Such sonic characteristics had provided the backbone for Crystal Castles' first three albums until Glass decided to leave the band in 2014 and made her foray into a solo career with one-off single Stillbirth. Kath, on the other hand, stuck with the project and went on to release a new Crystal Castles record by himself two years later.
Life, Pattramon Sukprasert, Published on 05/01/2016
» Last year was considered a banner year for concert fans in Thailand. We had One Direction, Jason Mraz, Katy Perry, The Script, Big Bang, Muse and Bon Jovi, all brought in by BEC-Tero.
Life, Kaona Pongpipat, Published on 07/09/2015
» Last month, a 3 tonne load of rare books and magazines from Silpakorn University Central Library were "mistakenly" sold to an old bookshop in Bang Bon district. Some of them were antique books dating back to the reign of King Rama VI, others were old sociological and anthropological journals that can no longer be found anywhere.
Life, Chris Baker, Published on 05/11/2012
» In 1998, the British archaeologist Charles Higham and Rachanie Thosarat, formerly of the Fine Arts Department, published Prehistoric Thailand which conveniently summarised the results of the growing number of archaeological projects in the country. Fourteen years on they have decided the work needs updating. There has been a lot more digging, but more importantly there are now better dating techniques, the new science of DNA, and a new vision of early human history.