Hidden Treasures: Music in Unexpected Places in Southeast Asia

Joel Carillet's picture

Below are five places in the Southeast Asia where, during my travels, I've heard music played and was particularly glad I did.

 

Hat Yai, Thailand

Hat Yai, Thailand:

Hat Yai is known as southern Thailand's transportation hub and sex capital. But too few know it has the West Side Saloon, where bar tenders and waitstaff are dressed in cowboy gear, serving jovial customers as a band plays the likes of John Denver, the Carpenters, and the Cranberries. In my journeys through Southeast Asia in recent years, I've stopped here four times, thankful for the taste of home. For a guy from Appalachia, after months on the road there's nothing like hearing a Thai band sing, "Take me home country roads, to the place I belong."

 

Ko Phangan, Thailand

Ko Phangan, Thailand:

One of the many islands popular with visitors to Thailand, Ko Phangan has a lot of bungalows and huts with porches and hammocks, and on many of these you'll find a traveler or two playing an instrument. These travelers are from Israel and South Africa. 

 

Nha Trang, Vietnam

Nha Trang, Vietnam:

On a day long boat trip off the coast of Nha Trang, music is one of the things served up (the other things include, fresh fruit, cheap wine, lunch, and snorkeling gear). Here travelers listen to a Vietnamese men sing John Lennon's "Imagine".

 

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia:

A Japanese naval band made a call to downtown Kuala Lumpur, where they did a performance at the KLCC Park.

 

Kanchanaburi, Thailand

Kanchanaburi, Thailand:

Since 2009, 51-year-old Lek has played his violin on one of the world's more famous bridges: The Bridge on the River Kwai. Popularized by the 1957 film of the same name, the bridge was constructed during World War by the Japanese, who used Allied POWS and conscripted Asian laborers to do the actual building. The sounds from Lek's violin greets visitors as they walk across the bridge. Among his repertoire: Frank Sinatra, Lady Gaga, and The Bridge on the River Kwai theme.

 

 

Joel Carillet, chief editor of wanderingeducators.com, is a freelance writer and photographer based in Tennessee. He is the author of 30 Reasons to Travel: Photographs and Reflections from Southeast Asia. To learn more about him, follow his regular photoblog, or purchase images, visit www.joelcarillet.com or www.istockphoto.com/jcarillet.

 

 

 

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