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SEPTEMBER 18, 2000 VOL. 156 NO. 11
The hottest singer in the tradition-steeped world of Thai country music comes from the land of ABBA By ROBERT HORN Nakhon Ratchasima ALSO 'Never Did I Imagine I Would Be Doing Something Like This' Web-Only interview with Jonas Anderson, the Swedish-born, Thai singing sensation Thailand's newest singing sensation defies the typical image of the country's hitmakers. He isn't a teenager. He isn't a part-time model. He certainly isn't a fashionable member of the Bangkok club scene. In fact, he isn't even Thai. That's right, the hottest name in luk thung, Thailand's country music, is Jonas Anderson: blond, blue-eyed and 100% Swedish. "I love his songs," says Wanna Chaprakon, a Thai luk thung singer who performs in nightclubs around northeastern Thailand. "He sings better than a Thai."
Anderson's is partly a novelty act. Few Westerners bother to learn the local language, let alone master the distinctive flavor and dialects of the nation's music. "Being a foreigner definitely helps," says Anderson, who moved to Thailand as a child with his parents. The extent of his popularity becomes abundantly clear on a recent Saturday night in the northeastern town of Nakhon Ratchasima. Although the show has hardly been advertised, 3,000 fans crowd around a temporary stage behind a shopping mall to watch the Swede belt out bluesy luk thung classics as he shakes and sways with the lithe, slightly effeminate moves typical of some Thai country singers, backed by a 10-piece band and a dozen Thai dancers. Old women clap and children dance on plastic chairs. One man at the concert shouts out repeatedly that he's going to change his name to Jonas. That outpouring of affection is ironic in many ways. Luk thung has traditionally been as much a symbol of Thailand as elephants or rice farming. During the economic boom of the late 1980s and early '90s, the music waned in popularity as Thais increasingly embraced Western dress, fast food and pop music. But after the financial collapse of 1997 many Thais blamed foreigners for the meltdown, and a renewed sense of national pride took hold. Campaigns were launched urging people to buy Thai products, eat Thai food and rediscover Thai culture. But the patriotic fervor didn't block Anderson's path to success. "Luk thung needed something new," says Suraphong Triamchanchai, president of Bangkok radio station Luk Thung FM. "Jonas came along at the right time." The road to singing stardom hasn't been especially glamorous. Anderson began singing the music only five years ago, teaching himself the tunes and asking Thai friends to write out lyrics and help him with pronunciation. A member of a Christian volunteer group, he would perform at orphanages, old-age homes and prisons. Word of his singing prowess spread, and in January he was offered a recording contract. Anderson says he always wanted a career in music: "But never did I imagine I would be doing something like this." At the moment, his songs are among the most requested on Luk Thung FM. But when the novelty dies down, it's hard to say how far the foreigner can go: even most Thai singers end up as one-hit wonders. For the moment, Anderson is happy to take whatever's coming. "I'll just keep touring and keep learning," he says. "It's all been such a rush." ALSO 'Never Did I Imagine I Would Be Doing Something Like This' Web-Only interview with Jonas Anderson, the Swedish-born, Thai singing sensation Write to TIME at mail@web.timeasia.com TIME Asia home
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