没错!是微晶创作坊的时间了。。。因为太久没有gathering,所以在这里syok sensiri一下。
不认识微晶的人,老夫就再讲故事前谈谈它的由来吧。大概在6-7年前,一群就读马六甲多媒体大学的古人,因为对音乐拥有一股很大的热诚,对创作充满憧憬,于是古人们就在华文学会里成立了一个可以让他们发挥他们才华的组织----微晶创作坊是也!!!
okie, 过去的事情不必多提(那还有什么好提?)。创作坊成立后,为校园带来许多的好处。一些平常只会吃饭睡觉打机和放屁的人,这回总算多了一个选择。创作坊除了让会员能够交流一下彼此在音乐上的心得以外,还能让会员们学会办活动。在这里聚集了各式各样的人,有才华的,没料到的,低调的,爱出风头的,废的,老的。。。。。。。。。这班人会聚在创作坊,不是因为这里有卖直销AMWAY,UPTREND 等,是因为大家都是在某程度上都是音乐爱好者。音乐与创作才是微晶的根。讲到这里。。。突然心凉了一下,因为有人YM我说电油又起了十仙。。。顶!
anyway..微晶带给我很多的好处,通过它,我对音乐得到进一步的了解。我也认识了许多好朋友,办了不少活动,学会很多东西。如果要把所有事情一一交代,那我有时间写,恐怕读者们也读到sien... 所以我决定BACK TO THE BASIC!以看图作文的方式来呈现。 在图片里的人可以顺便回味一下。。。。
2001 年--Pantai kundur. 在那里我些了第一首歌。改自一首ham 歌的。
废人们。。。
集会中。
这张勉强算关创作坊事,因为相片中的寂寞男孩因为相片
中的女孩写了一首代表作--Ice Latte
强!实在是强!
MMU华语歌曲创作比赛
史上最强!!!
创作坊也可以做媒人。。。
蓝雪(华山派)
全国冠军!!!
左拥右抱!
又惊又险的晶叹号!
告别作- 晶音之乐
还有太多了。。。一些遗漏的人请别见怪。
现在的创作坊已改朝换代。。。办的活动比起以前的有过之而无不及。可惜我发觉活动的意义已不存在。创作坊里没人尝试写歌,等于做警察的看到坏人不捉,警察不捉贼,那他就失去他存在的意义。。。创作坊不创作,那。。。没有创作的创作坊,就算搞了10个成功的歌唱比赛,也只能说活动办好,却和创作没扯上关系。如果微晶还是朝着现在的方向走下去,那可以考虑改名叫做“微晶音乐活动坊”,干脆不跟创作扯上关系好了。所以,说到最后我们还是要back to the basic!!创作坊应该以音乐创作为中心,然后在有比要时才做别的事情。
Thursday, June 30, 2005
Tuesday, June 28, 2005
Instead of making up gossips, music industrial actually has another function..
Im tired of reading all those gossip news about some singers. Or some of the so called "artist" tend to making up news to make sure their photos will appear in the frontpage of newspapers. The medias and readers seem to pay more attention to the private life of musicians, rather than their music. I never heard of Boomtown Rats, but i do heard of Geldof and Live Aid. I guess... if it is necessary to attach something with music, let the thing be love and charity, or public awareness.. instead of gossips that do nothing good at all.
To achieve this... He is the perfect role model.
Geldof formed the punk group Boomtown Rats in 1975. During the band's existence, it moved from the pure energy and aggression of hits like "Looking After No. 1" to the more sophisticated, but still provocative, "I Don't Like Mondays" (its title derived from the answer given by a San Diego schoolgirl when asked why she'd killed her classmates). The band became a moderate success in the U.K., though it never really broke through in the U.S.
In the fall of 1984, Geldof watched a BBC documentary on Ethiopian poverty and was inspired to put together a charity single, "Do They Know It's Christmas." It featured a large number of British pop stars performing under the name Band Aid and became the best-selling single in U.K. history. Michael Jackson and Lionel Richie repeated the feat the following year in the U.S. with "We Are the World." By then Geldof was involved in plans for a massive charity concert that eventually became Live Aid, two marathon shows held July 13, 1985, at Wembley Stadium in London and at JFK Stadium in Philadelphia, featuring a Who's Who of pop/rock talent. Millions were raised and distributed to the African poor. Geldof was nominated for a Nobel Prize and knighted, and his autobiography Is That All? became a U.K. best-seller. In 1986, The Rats split and Geldof launched a solo career, again with greater success in England than in the U.S. Deep In the Heart of Nowhere appeared that same year, however Geldof's signature lyrical intellect wasn't up to par. He fared a bit better on 1990's The Vegetarians of Love. Instead of using an all-star cast found on his previous two albums, Geldof put a band together for the solid 1993 release Happy Club.
For the rest of the decade, Geldof continued his fight against world hunger, specifically African famine. He joined Wyclef Jean, Bono and others such as Bryan Ferry, Jimmy Page, Stereophonics and Sean "Puffy" Combs for NetAid in October 1999. Three stadium concerts, which took place in New York, London, and Geneva, were simulcasted live on the Internet, radio, and television, staging a multimedia event that aimed to help end world poverty. In the new millennium, Geldof returned to music for 2002's Sex, Age and Death. In 2004 he was asked to participate in DMC Records Under the Influence series, a project that compiles songs that influenced the chosen performer's career, with extensive liner notes from the artists themselves.
Quoted from "http://music.channel.aol.com/artist/main.adp?tab=bio&artistid=4348&albumid=0"
To achieve this... He is the perfect role model.
Geldof formed the punk group Boomtown Rats in 1975. During the band's existence, it moved from the pure energy and aggression of hits like "Looking After No. 1" to the more sophisticated, but still provocative, "I Don't Like Mondays" (its title derived from the answer given by a San Diego schoolgirl when asked why she'd killed her classmates). The band became a moderate success in the U.K., though it never really broke through in the U.S.
In the fall of 1984, Geldof watched a BBC documentary on Ethiopian poverty and was inspired to put together a charity single, "Do They Know It's Christmas." It featured a large number of British pop stars performing under the name Band Aid and became the best-selling single in U.K. history. Michael Jackson and Lionel Richie repeated the feat the following year in the U.S. with "We Are the World." By then Geldof was involved in plans for a massive charity concert that eventually became Live Aid, two marathon shows held July 13, 1985, at Wembley Stadium in London and at JFK Stadium in Philadelphia, featuring a Who's Who of pop/rock talent. Millions were raised and distributed to the African poor. Geldof was nominated for a Nobel Prize and knighted, and his autobiography Is That All? became a U.K. best-seller. In 1986, The Rats split and Geldof launched a solo career, again with greater success in England than in the U.S. Deep In the Heart of Nowhere appeared that same year, however Geldof's signature lyrical intellect wasn't up to par. He fared a bit better on 1990's The Vegetarians of Love. Instead of using an all-star cast found on his previous two albums, Geldof put a band together for the solid 1993 release Happy Club.
For the rest of the decade, Geldof continued his fight against world hunger, specifically African famine. He joined Wyclef Jean, Bono and others such as Bryan Ferry, Jimmy Page, Stereophonics and Sean "Puffy" Combs for NetAid in October 1999. Three stadium concerts, which took place in New York, London, and Geneva, were simulcasted live on the Internet, radio, and television, staging a multimedia event that aimed to help end world poverty. In the new millennium, Geldof returned to music for 2002's Sex, Age and Death. In 2004 he was asked to participate in DMC Records Under the Influence series, a project that compiles songs that influenced the chosen performer's career, with extensive liner notes from the artists themselves.
Quoted from "http://music.channel.aol.com/artist/main.adp?tab=bio&artistid=4348&albumid=0"
跳槽!!
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