thơm music festival 2019
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- Thơm Music Festival 2019 (8000 attendees) - Ngọt 3 Concert 2019 in Ha Noi (4000 attendees) - Hội Music Festival 2020 (7000 attendees) - Hoàng Dũng 25 Concert Tour (7000 attendees over 2 locations) Show more Show less Operations Manager Tan Chi Hung Trading and Investment Ltd. Company Jul 2017 - Apr 2018 10 months. Ho Chi Minh City
Vay Tiền Trả Góp Theo Tháng Chỉ Cần Cmnd Hỗ Trợ Nợ Xấu. LAKEVIEW — A festival celebrating Thai culture in Chicago is making its return for the first time in four years. Thai Festival Chicago returns from 10 Saturday and 11 Sunday at Thorek Hospital’s parking lot, 851 W. Irving Park Road. The festival has not been held since 2019 as it went on hiatus during the pandemic, said Dew Suriyawan, owner of Uptown’s Immm Rice & Beyond. Suriyawan is organizing the event along with the Thai American Association of Illinois. The festival launched in 2017 and ran for three consecutive years before the previous years of the festival focused on Thai food, this year’s festival highlights the entirety of Chicago’s Thai cultural offerings, Suriyawan said. The fest will feature over 30 vendors, including popular Thai restaurants like Immm Rice & Beyond, Sticky Rice and Paula’s Thai Kitchen. Other vendors will sell traditional Thai merchandise and crafts, Suriyawan said. A beer tent will feature Thai brews including Singha and Leo, organizers said. Each day of the festival will begin with a traditional Thai drum parade. There will be live Thai music and DJs, traditional Thai dance performances, a Muay Thai martial arts demonstration and culinary workshops. The Thai custom of daily Buddhist prayer will also be observed, organizers said. The festival is free with a suggested donation of $5 to support organizers. For more on Thai Festival Chicago, click here. Subscribe to Block Club Chicago, an independent, 501c3, journalist-run newsroom. Every dime we make funds reporting from Chicago’s here to support Block Club with a tax-deductible donation. Thanks for subscribing to Block Club Chicago, an independent, 501c3, journalist-run newsroom. Every dime we make funds reporting from Chicago’s neighborhoods. Click here to support Block Club with a tax-deductible to “It’s All Good A Block Club Chicago Podcast”
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The Seldom Scene played the annual Festival of the Bluegrass at the Kentucky Horse Park in 2016. They will be back for the inaugural Spirit in the Bluegrass. rcopley In 1974, when he was 10 years old, Sam Karr attended the very first Festival of the Bluegrass. The event triggered a sense of involvement that would bring him back — year after year and, eventually, decade after decade — to what would become Central Kentucky’s longest running bluegrass gathering. That was until COVID-19 wiped the festival out in 2020. By then Karr was a successful promoter and organizer, with business partner Rick Greene, of his own bluegrass events, including the five-day SamJam in Piketon, Ohio. When it became known that COVID-caused derailments had prevented the Cornett family, the independent organizers for the entire history of the Festival of the Bluegrass, from continuing it, Karr and Greene offered a start a new festival at the same time the second weekend of June, the same place the Kentucky Horse Park campground, home to the Festival of the Bluegrass since the early 1980s and even some of the same performance names including the veteran band The Seldom Scene.The new event, based on the old event, debuts this weekend at the Horse Park as Spirit in the Bluegrass.“When I went to college I came back for the Festival of the Bluegrass,” Karr said. “When I started working after college, I made that weekend a part of my life. All of our friends and family did, too. To the last year when COVID took it down, we never missed it. It’s been a regular part of my life. That’s how special it is. I’m really invested in this.“Did I ever think I would be in this position? No, I did not, so it’s gratifying in more ways than one, really, to see it back. I would have been thrilled if anybody brought it back. The fact that I’ve got a hand in it and can take what this meant to me and make it mean that to other people, is beyond gratifying.” The Seldom Scene was the traditional closing act at the Festival of the Bluegrass. They will be back for the new Spirit in the Bluegrass. Jeromie Stephens Jeromie B Stephens The arrival of Spirit in the Bluegrass means this will be the first mid-June weekend that live bluegrass music will take over the campground area of the Horse Park since 2019. Fans, especially of the former Festival of the Bluegrass, seem ecstatic.“We knew this festival meant a lot to people,” Greene said. “We just didn’t know how much it meant. I mean, we’ve had people calling us crying, telling us how happy they are that this festival is coming back to the Horse Park. This music is special to the people in this part of the country, to the entire state of Kentucky. It matters. It’s the kind of music that’s off the beaten path from the mainstream. But to the people that follow it and the people that understand and love it, it’s important. And we’re seeing that in spades.“This festival just couldn’t go away. It’s too important. The fact we’re bringing it back with the reaction we’re seeing is validating. It’s more than just two guys putting on a show. We’d like to make some money. Hopefully we’ll make some money. We hope it’s financially successful. But there is a bigger purpose here. We’ve got a responsibility to put on a good show, to establish a good program and create hopefully the kind of longevity that that the Festival of the Bluegrass enjoyed for decades.”There are similarities between Spirit of the Bluegrass and the Festival of the Bluegrass, but make no mistake. This is a new event. That meant the challenge facing Karr and Greene was to present a festival that continued the feel and tradition of its predecessor while making adjustments to address the needs of the demographics that support the present-day festival climate.“The place we started was the lineup,” Greene said. “We have The Seldom Scene, which will play on Saturday night. That was the traditional closer at the Festival of the Bluegrass. The Seldom Scene was synonymous with that festival. It was one of those things where we knew, Look, if you’re going to have a bluegrass festival at the Horse Park, it would just about be a crime not to have the Seldom Scene there.’ So that’s where started. “You’ll see a lot of the bands that are rich in bluegrass music history, that make sense to be there, are there. Then we have the Travelin’ McCourys a more genre-expanding version of the traditionally savvy Del McCoury Band without father Del at the helm. It’s a mix of the traditional bands synonymous with the Festival of the Bluegrass along with some powerhouse newer bands that are going to electrify this crowd.” The Travelin’ McCourys will play 8 Saturday at the Kentucky Horse Park Campground for the Spirit in the Bluegrass music festival. Provided “It’s difficult because you just don’t know, until you put it out there, how the response is going to be,” added Karr. “Some things you wonder about whether or not you do them. Other things, you say, Well, if we’re going to survive in the future, we have to do this.’ You have to make changes. You have to get younger people through the gate. You have to get teens and college age kids out there. If you do the same thing year after year, your audience gets older and stops coming. You’re killing yourself. So there are some things we’ve done at SamJam that we think will add a little bit of flare. We’re going to have a beer garden. We’re going to have an LED screen. Our lighting is going to be a little bit different and upgraded. You might even see a fog machine.“We’re just going to have fun. I think that’s the key thing – just having fun in the music. If you do that, everyone will like it. Is everybody going to love every band? No. But that’s just part of the festival experience – seeing new people, getting introduced to something you may not have seen in the past and putting it all together and at the end of the weekend and saying, Wow. That was cool.’ That’s what we’re trying to do.”Spirit in the BluegrassWhen June 8, 9 and 10Where Kentucky Horse Park CampgroundTickets $40-$300 at in the Bluegrass performance scheduleThursday, June 86 Lacy Creek730 The No Joke JimmysClosing Hancock & ShouseFriday, June 91 and 6 Bluegrass Cardinals Tribute2 and 7 The Po’ Ramblin’ Boys3 and 8 Tim Shelton Syndicate with Ronnie BowmanClosing Authentic UnlimitedSaturday, June 101 and 6 The Ben James Band2 and 7 The Goodwin Brothers3 and closing The Seldom Scene8 The Travelin’ McCourys
thơm music festival 2019