Category Archives: Upcoming Events

CBC TV's new show “49th and Main” debuts tonight

CBC TV's new show "49th and Main" debuts tonight

This just in from CBC TV, sounds interesting!
Sounds like a good way to demonstrate the intercultural
nature of Canada... imagine a South-Asian, born in Africa,
but who studied in England and now raising his own son in Canada.
- Todd


New half-hour serial drama, piloted for CBC Television:

49th & MAIN

Broadcast Dates: July 18, 19, 20 and 25, 26, 27
Time: 2:30 p.m.

Starting Tuesday July 18th, 49th & MAIN is a brand new drama for CBC
Television.


This 6-episode series takes a dramatic look at the many worlds that revolve

around a new medical practice opening its doors in one of Vancouver's most

diverse neighbourhoods – 49th & MAIN.



It's not what young Dr Cedric Ferreira with his Indian heritage, his African

birth-place and his best-of-boarding schools British upbringing expected when,

alone with his young son, he decided to take up medical practice

in the “Dominion” of Canada.



Soap opera? Maybe. But not one like you've seen before. Tune in to CBC Television,

Tuesday July 18th, to get caught up in something unique, something entertaining,

something moving.

Tippy Agogo coming to Vanocouver's “Rime” on the Drive – July 21

Tippy Agogo coming to Vanocouver's “Rime” on the Drive

– July 21


Tacheles Cafe    Tacheles Cafe – Berlin, Nov/93

I have known Tippy Agogo since the mid-1980's when we “rocked” the Capilano Courier, the student newspaper at Capilano College.



Tippy is an amazing performer, frequently appearing a folk festivals, children’s festivals, punk festivals. 
He is known for his musical explorations utilizing commonly found items
such as tin cans and anything he can get his hands on.




From his web site www.tippyagogo.com


TIPPY AGOGO, the “One Man Orchestra” and
Mouth Musician, is known throughout the free world for making
beautiful, scary, heavy, and insightful music on reclaimed tin cans,
broken guitars, and racks full of technological gadgetry. He performs
for children, punk rockers, folkies, metal heads, high brows, low
brows, and all those in-between!

TIPPY has performed on albums with artists as diverse as Sarah McLachlan, SNFU, German Techno/Industrial Bands, Sun God, Aurora Sutra,
and a host of other famous people. He tours constantly. He wins awards
for his soundtracks for film and theatre projects. He makes his mother
proud.

Tippy sent me the following communication:


Hiya
haggis rice man!  How are ya?  Comin soon in from Edm, and
fests!    See ya hopfully!   TIP



PRESS RELEASE



FRIDAY JULY 21/06 



at RIME  9pm



Once again, the three brothers in musical explorations

are brought TOGETHER from Saskatoon, Edmonton & Vancouver,

for a fine evening at RIME, on the Drive.  All welcome!!



TIPPY AGOGO(Edm), GILLES ZOLTY(S'toon), & WAYNE ADAMS(Van)



RIME 1130 Commercial Drive ($5-$10, yer choice)



604/614.8955



ps  Album release slated for the Fall, assembled by

     Darryl Neudorf(Neko Case, the Sadies)…







Sincerely, D.A. Mark aka Tippy Agogo

 

please see:        www.tippyagogo.com

Check out the No Luck Club at the Folk Festival in Vancouver this weekend

The No Luck Club is performing at the Vancouver Folk Festival this weekend…

During the middle of the Chinese Head Tax Redress campaign during the
Federal Election – Trevor Chan came up with a track called Our Story –
detailing samples adressing Racisim, and Chinese in Canada.

Check it out!

Check out their information on the Folk Fest Website
http://www.thefestival.bc.ca/artists.php?perID=2739

British Columbia

A lot of this Festival is about listening. So is the instrumental
hip hop created by no luck club. That's why brothers Trevor and Matt
Chan, and Paul Belen were part of last year's Collaboratory. For a
group that had never worked with acoustic musicians before, or even
attended a folk festival, agreeing to take part was a great leap of
faith that said a lot to me about their creative approach as artists
and music lovers. Over the winter I went to see them perform several
times and was more deeply impressed each time with the depth,
complexity and full-on groove they could throw down. (Note: In the
interest of full disclosure, I should mention that my Muse is bonkers
about nlc. We started talking about a special project for this summer's
Festival. For more on that, see Folk 109 below.)

Their parents watched Trevor and Matt, and Paul, head off to
university, hoping they would apply themselves studiously to becoming
doctors, lawyers or accountants, but didn't factor in the unique
attractions of campus radio. Trevor and Matt started spending more and
more time around the station, working on shows and listening to the
latest hardcore, hip hop and every other kind of music on offer.
Ultimately they fell under the spell of the Bomb Squad, the production
team of Public Enemy, who were in the process of changing the sound of
hip hop forever.

You can still hear some Bomb Squad in their work today. nlc's music
is a dense sonic wonderland where scratches, samples and melody lines
roll together with a love of old-school funk. It's smart, it's fun and
it kicks. There's a big difference between a beat and a groove, and nlc
draws on a groove 40 years long, reaching back to Stax, Sly, Say It
Loud, and all the way up to the state-of-the-art right now. It's a
groove that has never forgotten its roots in the rise of hip hop: the
sound of the dance parties in the Bronx that went out to all kinds of
chocolate cities and those vanilla suburbs.

You'll also find other history in nlc, rare sounds plucked out of a
North American popular culture where Asians appeared only as
caricatures drawn from racist ignorance. Having grown up in that
hyphenated-Canadian way, they can also drop Asian film and other
popular culture into the mix to create instrumental hip hop that has a
lot to say about our city in 2006. -DS

Visit this artist's website at www.noluckclub.com 

Tang Dynasty Concubine story premiering in Vancouver

Tang Dynasty Concubine story premiering in Vancouver
Each
time I attend the Action Musicals at the Centre in Vancouver for
Performing Arts, I find I learn more about Chinese history, culture and
art.  Unfortunately I will be missing the opening night
presentation tonight, Friday July 14 – but I hope to review the show
when I return from dragon boat racing in Seattle this weekend.



The Tang Dynasty is one of the
most powerful and artistic epochs in Chinese history.  I was
thrilled to visit the museums in Bejing and Xi'an during my visit in
1993, as well as seeing the Ming dynasty tombs and the Terracotta
Warriors.  Growing up in Canada, we really develop with a
Euro-centric view of history

This show is in Mandarin Chinese, with surtitles in English.


– Todd

The following is from the website for http://www.centreinvancouver.com/upcoming.php

Sight, Sound & Action Presents

The 2nd Annual Chinese Performing Arts Festival




Tang Concubines

Deciding the fate of a dynasty

July 14 – 23

This new Action-Musical portrays the lives and loves of two of the most famous women in all of Chinese history, Wu Zetian and Yang Guifei. Their notorious and celebrated lives played a major role in deciding the fate of the Tang dynasty [618-906 AD].

Tang Concubines combines a unique story with palatial sets and costumes
and stunning dance and action. The show contrasts the treacherous power
of one concubine who became China's only Empress with the love and
sacrifice of another whose legendary beauty was immortalized by
countless poets.

Both had amazing love affairs with father and son Emperors and
both used their sexuality and beauty to their fullest advantage. Most
importantly, each attained great power and changed the course of
Chinese history.




Terracotta Warriors

Ruled by terror. Loyalty by force. Love by decree.

July 28 – 30

This haunting story of China's First Emperor is seen through the
eyes of his beloved concubine and scheming eunuch. The most incredible
Chinese historical facts are revealed on stage against a backdrop of
epic sets and lavish costumes. The audience will marvel at the dance,
music and action used to tell a story of power and lust, of betrayal
and forbidden passion.

Battles and conquest, forbidden love, burning of books, live
burial of scholars and even the building of the Great Wall end with a
final climax of the Dance of the Terracotta Warriors. It's a theatrical
event to be remembered!




Of Heaven and Earth

The Wrath of a God, the Love of a Woman

August 4 – 6

Of Heaven and Earth tells a story of gods and mortals. Passion
ignites a war between heaven and earth and forbidden love becomes
immortal. This acclaimed production was unveiled at Beijing's renowned
Poly Theater in August 2001 and premiered in North America on May 29th,
2002 at The Centre in Vancouver for Performing Arts.

A true fusion of East and West, Of Heaven and Earth combines the
grand scale of a Broadway production with the ancient traditions of
Chinese dance, music and martial arts. Under the art direction and
costume design of Tim Yip [winner of the 2001 Academy Award for the Art
Direction for Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon], Of Heaven and Earth
introduces Western audiences to a stunning new genre of live-stage
entertainment. It is a spectacular combination of Chinese classical and
folk dance, different styles of martial arts, and a new kind of Chinese
acrobatics.

Extravagant costumes and futuristic stage design, uncharacteristic
of Chinese musical theatre, combine to create an original theatrical
experience for the audience. Of Heaven and Earth was the first
Action-Musical that paved the way for Sight, Sound & Action to help
invent the future of Chinese musical theatre for the international
arena. This re-arrangement of a thousand years of tradition Chinese
performing arts for use in musical live-theatre to showcase the beauty
of the human form was indeed unprecedented.

June 23, Gung Haggis Fat JOY KOGAWA HOUSE fundraiser dinner

Historic Joy Kogawa House has now been purchased by

The Land Conservancy of BC. But the journey to create a national
historic landmark and writing centre for all Canadians is just
beginning.  We now need to raise funds for restoration of the house to
when Joy and her family left it in 1942 when they were interned during
WW2, and to create an endowment for its operation.

        


Please join us for a special fundraiser dinner
 for historic
Joy Kogawa House. 



Gung Haggis

Fat JOY

KOGAWA HOUSE







June 23rd.
Flamingo Chinese Restaurant
3489 Fraser St.
Vancouver, BC

6:00pm  Reception
7:00pm  Dinner starts.


“Fat Choy” means “prosperity” in Chinese language

We say “Fat JOY” means “Big Love”

Join us in “Fat Joy” as we celebrate:


Purchase of Kogawa House by The Land Conservancy (May 31)

Order of BC for Joy Kogawa
(June 22)



The inaugural Gung Haggis Fat Choy
Intercultural Arts Achievement Award presented
to Vancouver Opera for “Naomi's Road”

    


There will be special musical and literary presentations and readings of Joy Kogawa's works, with special guests, including:
Dr. Anton Wagner, filmaker and secretary of the
Save Kogawa House committee.

There will also be raffle prizes, silent auction
and a special
First Nations style blanket toss.

Fundraiser for Kogawa House and
Gung Haggis Fat Choy Kogawa House dragon boat team

Tickets:
$40 Advance  – $50 at the door upon
availability

Children 13 and under $30 Advance, $40 at the door.
Reserve a table for $400 for yourself and friends.
All tickets are reserved seating and assigned in order of purchase


Order your Tickets, or make a donation
604-733-2313

The Land Conservancy of BC,
Vancouver Office
5655 Sperling Ave., Burnaby BC

Media inquiries
call Todd Wong:  604-240-7090

Presented by: Gung Haggis Productions, The Land Conservancy of BC, Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.

Please see:
Save Kogawa House committee
www.kogawahouse.com
TLC – The Land Conservancy of BC
www.conservancy.bc.ca
Gung Haggis Fat
Choy productions and dragon boat team.

www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com
 

Night of the Sultans at the River Rock Casino

Night of the Sultans

 

Night of the Sultans
At the River Rock Casino until June 11
By Deb Martin – special for GungHaggisFatChoy.com

I must admit that half the reason I went to see this show was to see
the new theatre at the casino. I wanted to see how people with real
money build a performance facility. I was impressed with the design.
The house holds 1022 people, but felt much cozier, and I doubt there is
a bad seat in it. I am always happier when I am close enough to see the
expressions on the performers faces and the details in the costumes.
Part of the seating can also be dropped to create a larger floor area
for cabaret style dinner theatre.

It was apparent from the first number that this was not opening night
for this troupe of dancers. The performance was tight, polished and
very well rehearsed. It just got better after that. In a conversation
with some of the dancers after the show we were able to determine that
the group of about 60 performers had been on the road traveling the
world with the show for two years. All but 10 were Turkish, and a lack
of Turkish on my part put an end to further questions. The other 10
were Russian.

These dancers are eye-candy for both genders, and very skilled in all
genres of dance, from folk to modern to ballet. The level of fitness
required to perform this show is astounding. You can excuse the hokey
story of Pandora and Prometheus that ties the numbers together – it’s
merely marketing to draw an audience. I doubt a show called
“Turkish-Arabic Folk Dancing” would sell. The story also creates
opportunities for solo dancers to be showcased. The real spectacle is
the phenomenal group dances with colorful and creative costumes. The
show-stopper is a number with just the men in a line at the front of
the stage.

The running time was just over an hour, and I gather the show can be
expanded in time and the number of dancers adjusted to suit the stage.
I can compare it to the shows I saw while holidaying in Mexico at a
resort that has evening entertainment. My friend also says it compares
to cruise ship entertainment with a minimum of sets and projections
used as backdrops and scenery. We will overlook the canned music that
was just this side of acceptable for sound quality. This was the one
disappointment of the new theatre.

See
Night of the Sultans official website

Night of the Sultans – review by Alex Varty, Georgia Straight


Show brings a little Vegas to the Euphrates
interview by Alex Varty, Georgia Straight

www.greatcanadiancasinos.com/riverrock/

World Peace Forum features June 24 concert with Buffy Sainte-Marie, K'naan and The Be Good Tanyas

World Peace Forum features June 24 concert 
with Buffy Sainte-Marie,
K'naan and The Be Good Tanyas

World Peace is definitely intercultural. We have to learn to live together
in order for us to have peace. Buffy Sainte-Marie is defintely an intercultural
pioneer. She embraces both her Cree and her Canadian heritage. She is a
song writer famous for her 1960's songs "Universal Soldier," and "Until It's
Time for You to Go." In the 1980's she wrote "Up Where We Belong" for the movie
An Officer and a Gentleman. In the 1990's, she released her most poignant album,
"Coincidences and Likely Stories" featuring contemporary North American Native
songs such as "Starwalker," "The Big Ones Get Away", "Fallen Angels", and
"Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee."

The following message is from World Peace Forum secretary Ellen Woodsworth:


Please go to the World Peace Forum web site www.worldpeaceforum.ca and
join the 40,000 plus people a day to check out all the events that are
coming up over the next few weeks as part of the World Peace Forum.

This Sunday there is the Women's Craft Faire at the Heritage Hall on
Main St.

The Canadian Landmines Foundation and the World Peace Forum present

Two generations of Canadian Voices
Singing for a Peaceful World

Buffy Sainte-Marie K'Naan The Be Good Tanyas


A fundraising concert for the Canadian Landmines Foundation

Saturday, June 24, 8pm
Orpheum Theatre

Tickets at Ticketmaster.ca 604-280-4444

Towards a world without landmines

www.worldpeaceforum.ca I www.canadianlandmines.org

When wars end, the surviving soldiers take their weapons and go home.
Not landmines. They stay in the ground. They don't know the difference
between war and peace. They don't know the difference between the
footsteps of a soldier and the footsteps of a child. They don't wear out.
Today, as a result of the Ottawa Treaty of 1997, three quarters of the
countries of the world have repudiated this weapon. Trade has stopped. 60
million landmines held in stockpile have been destroyed. The Canadian
Landmine Foundation, a partner in the global Adopt-A-Minefield Campaign,
is working against time to remove the existing landmines before they
damage another farmer, mother, child, or peacekeeper and to aid those who
have already been hurt.

Canadian Club “SOARS awards” luncheon: featuring guest speaker Lilo Ljubsic

Canadian Club “SOARS awards” luncheon: featuring guest speaker Lilo Ljubsic

I hope you can join me at this important Canadian Club luncheon. 
I have really enjoyed being a Canadian Club director, and am inspired
by all the good work that the Canadian Club does to promote Canada's
identity and to foster inspiration amongst Canadians and especially
young people.

See below for the invitation to the luncheon.  Cost is $60 for non-members, $48 for members, and $42 for seniors.

The SOARS award acknowledges high achieving students who have written
essays about Canada.  They will be seated at many of the tables
for our guests to talk with.  Our Canadian Club members and
directors will also be distributed throughout the many tables.

Cheers, Todd

We
are very pleased to send you an invitation to celebrate the exemplary
achievements of young people in our community.

Please join the Canadian Club of Vancouver for an event on June
13th which will recognize and reward secondary-school students who have
competed for the ‘Canada Soars’ awards, offered by the Club in
collaboration with forestry company Weyerhaeuser. On the same occasion,
students who have ranked first in the province-wide ‘Concours d’art
oratoire’ in French will also be acknowledged.

The
event will feature not only the presentation of awards but also a brief
inspirational talk by a remarkable woman who has turned physical challenge
into extraordinary athletic triumph. See www.liloinspires.com for more
information on our guest speaker, Lilo Ljubisic.

Please see the form below, and attached, for detailed event
information and registration procedures.

We
look forward to seeing you in mid-June!

 

The
Canadian Club of Vancouver

 

 

Silk Road Music with Celso Machado & friends – June 17th at St. James Hall

Silk Road Music with Celso Machado & friends



Silk Road Music is the unique blend of music created by Qiu Xia He on pipa,

and Andre Thibault on guitar and flutes. I am pleased to be able to call
these wonderful people my friends. Andre and Qiu Xia have performed
at Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinners, and also were featured in the CBC tv
performance special that was broadcast in 2004 and 2005. We also
performed together for First Night 2005, at Library Square.

Saturday June 17th, 8pm
St. James Hall (3214 West 10th Avenue) Vancouver
Info/reservation Hotline:
604-736-3022

Performers:
Qiu Xia He on pipa and vocal  
Andre Thibault on guitar, oud and flutes  
Celso Machado on guitar, percussion  
Jun Rong on Erhu  
Zhimin Yu on Ruan

http://www.silkroadmusic.ca/sitefiles/qx.htm

A CD release concert by Silk Road Music. Autumn Cloud is their 3rd
recording . The concert  reflects the musical experiences and speaks
the languages of the Journey of Qiu Xia He with her Pipa: from
traditional Chinese to a Celtic reel; from a folk song to a
contemporary classic; from a Spanish guitar piece to a flamenco
rumba; add a Brazilian baiao, and a modern blues. Some of the
compositions are by well know local composers: Jin Zhang, Mark
Armanini and Celso Machado, as well as many pieces written by Qiu
Xia He or with Andre Thibault, who is an important part of the new CD
and show.  

Silk Road Music is a professional Chinese ensemble that has been
touring and recording since 1991. It has a consistently successful
rapport with audiences and their last two CDs have won Best World
Music Album at the West Coast Music Awards. Their debut CD, Endless,
was also nominated for a JUNO.  

“The new CD release concert promises to be a wonderful musical event
blending the familiar with the exotic, all expertly played and absolutely
captivating."


- Steve Edge-Rogue Folk Review


For more info:
www.silkroadmusic.ca
Tel: 604-434-9316
e-mail: qxcloud at telus dot net

explorASIAN creates benefit fundraiser for Indonesian Earthquake victims

explorASIAN creates benefit fundraiser for Indonesian Earthquake victims


the following is from explorASIAN executive director Don Montgomery

MEDIA ADVISORY – for immediate release – May 29,
2006
 

On the morning of May 27, 2006, at 05.54 AM local time (at 03.54
PM Pacific Time on May 26, 2006), a powerful earthquake shook the Special
Province of Yogyakarta, inhabited by 2.6 million people, located in the central
part of Java Island, Indonesia. The epicenter of the earthquake, registered 6.3
on the Richter scale, is 15 miles from Yogyakarta, the capital of the Special
Province of Yogyakarta. Fatalities based on the latest official report were
approximately 5,136 people, mostly the residents of the Bantul Regency, in the
Southern part of Yogyakarta (population more than 770.000).

In light of this recent earthquake in Indonesia,
the Vancouver Asian Heritage Month Society (explorASIAN Festival) will
turn its two free concert events at the explorINDONESIAN Batik
and Arts Exhibition at the Roundhouse Community Centre into benefit concerts for
earthquake relief.  Admission to both concerts will be by donation and all
proceeds will go to the Canadian Red Cross. 
We invite the Lower Mainland community to attend the exhibition and the
two concerts and make a donation.
 
 
Friday, June 2
6:00pm – 9:00 pm
Sharon Ong & Hartono's Jazz Trio
Concert
Benefit Concert for Earthquake Relief in Indonesia
Admission by Donation
Introductions by Margaret Gallagher (CBC Radio)
 
 
Saturday, June 3
1:00pm – 3:00pm
Angklung
Concert by Daeng Oktafiandi Udjo (from West Java)
Benefit Concert for
Earthquake Relief in Indonesia
Admission by Donation
 
 
explorINDONESIAN Batik and Arts Exhibition
May
23 – June 3, 2006
Monday to Friday – 10am to 9pm
Sat & Sun – 10am to
4pm
 
 
All three events held at the Roundhouse Community
Centre, Vancouver
181 Roundhouse Mews

 
– 30 –
 
 
Media Contact:
Don Montgomery
Executive Director
 
explorASIAN
Office
604.488.0119