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 Dengue Fever is in the vanguard of an emerging global pop sensibility, making
music that?s both familiar, yet eerily unique. Fronted by Cambodian pop star
Ch?hom Nimol, who sings in Khmer, the Los Angeles sextet blends the rhythms of
?60s Cambodian pop - heavily influenced by American surf, rock and early
psychedelic garage bands - with their own eclectic mix of American and
international styles.
Unlike the world music bands of the late 80s, Dengue Fever is more concerned
with a universal groove and breaking down musical barriers than with notions of
authenticity. There are echoes of Bollywood soundtracks, Ethiopian soul,
American R&B, Cambodian folk, Spaghetti Western weirdness and girl group angst
in the mix, but the resulting concoction is all their own.
In addition to vocalist Ch?hom Nimol ? who sang regularly for the King and Queen
of Cambodia - Dengue Fever includes Farfisa organist Ethan Holtzman, his
guitarist brother Zac (ex-Dieselhed), sax man David Ralicke (Beck/Brazzaville),
bassist Senon Williams (Radar Brothers) and drummer Paul Smith. The band?s
imaginative sound grabbed listeners from their first appearances. They won the
LA Weekly?s Best New Artist Award in 2002, being cited for Ch?hom Nimol?s
remarkable use of her high shimmering vibrato, theatrical stage moves and the
band?s understated virtuosity. The band was also tapped by actor/director Matt
Dillon to supply a Cambodian version of Joni Mitchell?s ?Both Sides Now? for his
Cambodian based thriller ?City of Ghosts.?
On
Escape from Dragon House (September 2005) on M80/BRG the sound is
denser, thicker and richer than on their 2003 self-titled debut. The songs on
Dengue Fever, with two exceptions, were covers of the bright, bouncy pop and
rock songs that dominated Cambodian music in the optimistic days of the early
?60s, songs of boy-girl romance and innocent pleasure. The two originals ?22
Nights,? a song inspired by Nimol?s arrest in 2002 during a post 9/11 code
Orange alert on an expired visa infraction that landed her in jail for 22 nights
and ?Connect Four,? a tale of the board games ladies play in Cambodian cafes and
shops as time slips between their fingers, hinted at the direction the band was
moving in, a sound that emerges fully developed on Dragon House.
?Dengue Fever was the springboard,? explains Zac. ?We were still
discovering how the songs were constructed, slowly finding a way to put our own
stamp on the music. We?ve come up with something that isn?t exactly Cambodian or
American, although it is rock?n?roll.? Bass player Senon Williams agrees. ?Dragon
House is expression, where Dengue Fever was interpretation. Sonically
Dragon House is more psychedelic, more free, more loose, more
experimental.?
There?s another unexpected international connection as well. The musicians
were all fans of Buda Musique?s Ethiopique series, CD compilations of ?60s
Ethiopian pop and jazz hits by artists influenced by the sounds of American and
British rock and soul. ?The Ethiopians play amazing grooves,? says
drummer Paul Smith. ?But the way they accent the beat and the melodic
approach is different, with longer phrases. It parallels what was going on in
Cambodia at the same time, a musical style crossing borders and getting
transformed into something new that comes back to its originators only to be
transformed once again.?
As promised, the songs on
Escape from Dragon House showcase a band moving in many directions
at the same time, forging a sound that?s all their own. ?Sni Bong,? which will
be the band?s first video, has a jittery Motown meets Funkadelic rhythm that
leads into a soaring chorus that Ch?hom Nimol delivers with a soulful wail,
before dropping a bit of Cambodian rap into the coda.
The mostly acoustic ?Sleepwalking? is based on a folk song Nimol used to sing
back in Cambodia and offers her a chance to show off her remarkable vocal
technique, sliding from note to note and ornamenting lines with short arpeggios.
Zac plays a dan bau, a single-string Vietnamese instrument and contributes
subtle guitar accents full of bent and slurred notes while David Ralicke?s flute
adds a soothing pastoral texture.
The title tune is a straightforward rock tune with a catchy melody and a
driving, garage band delivery. It tells the tale of a pretty girl forced to jump
from job to job after encounters with lecherous bosses.
The sinister groove of ?One Thousand Tears of a Taratula? matches its subject
matter. After the Khmer Rouge took over, pop singer Huoy Meas was taken out into
the jungle and forced to sing and walk in circles, naked, until she was
executed. Nimol?s dark, heavily processed vocals evoke the terror the musicians
must have felt in their last moments; when Ralicke?s sax breaks out of the mix,
his solo leaps up like a phoenix. Even though the singer is gone, the song lives
on.
Escape from Dragon House is darker musically and lyrically
than the band?s debut,
Dengue Fever, with a fully realized style that?s pure Dengue Fever.
While Ch?hom Nimol?s Khmer vocals may sound a bit strange to American ears at
first, her extraordinary range and impressive vocal power assure the listener
that this band is serious about its mission of blending Cambodian, American and,
yes, Ethiopian music to create something that?s beautifully new and distinctive.
In the 1960s, American Forces Radio stations in Vietnam were beaming out a mix
of rock and soul music that made an immediate impact on the popular music of
next-door Cambodia. Artists began blending American rhythms and instruments with
their own traditional music, giving birth to a hybrid that had Khmer society
reeling and rocking, some with joy, others with shocked disbelief. This was the
music that inspired Dengue Fever. ?We all discovered Cambodian music on our
own, before starting the band,? Ethan Holtzman says. ?I traveled
throughout South East Asia in ?97, I heard the classic Cambodian music rock
music of the ?60s and ?70s and it stayed with me, particularly tunes like Ros
Serey Sothea?s ?New Year?s Eve?, which we did on the first album. When my
brother Zac moved back to LA, he brought along a bunch of Cambodian music he?d
gotten at Aquarius Records in San Francisco. So instead of starting another rock
band, we got together with [drummer] Paul [Smith] and started playing our
favorite Cambodian covers.? Bass player Senon Williams, a long time friend
of Zac?s, had also visited Cambodia and fallen under the spell of Cambodian
music, so he was a natural fit. Then they needed a singer.
?We went looking for a singer in Long Beach, which has the biggest population
of Cambodian people outside of Phnom Penh,? Ethan recalled. "We invited
several girls down to audition, including Ch?hom Nimol, and when Nimol showed
up, everyone else left.? The moment Nimol cut loose, it was easy to see why
the other singers were intimidated. Her vocal prowess and charisma was palpable,
and the band knew it had found their singer. Nimol wasn?t so sure. She was a
star back home and was making a respectable living singing at Cambodian weddings
in the US. Her English wasn?t good and she wasn?t sure the band knew what it was
doing. Their original repertoire was songs she considered classic rock, but when
Matt Dillon hired them for ?City of Ghosts? she knew that Dengue Fever had a
chance to build a few musical and cultural bridges. |