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The music of Thailand includes a wide array of distinct genres, both traditional and modern.. Traditional Thai musical instruments are varied and reflect ancient influence from far afield – including the klong thap and khim (Persian origin), the chakhe (Indian origin), the klong chin (Chinese origin), and the klong khaek (Indonesian origin).
The circular dance style is claimed as a traditional dance in the four countries of the region where it is often part of traditional festivities, popular celebrations and modern parties. In addition to the dominant Khmer , Lao , Malay and Thai cultures , romvong is also common among many other groups indigenous to Southeast Asia.
Lam saravane [1] (Lao: ລຳສາລະວັນ, Thai: ลำสาละวัน) is a popular folksong originally from the southern province of Saravane Province of Laos, [2] but popular throughout the Lao-speaking world, including the Isan region of Thailand, [3] but it is also regarded as a traditional folksong and dance of Khmer culture.
Christina Aguilar (Thai: คริสติน่า อากีล่าร์) (born 31 October 1966) is a Thai singer known as the Thai Queen of Dance. [1] Her debut album Ninja was certified platinum for 1 million copies sold – a first for a Thai female singer. [2]
Timethai's debut single, "No More", featuring Tomo and his unique hip-hop dancing style, was released in December 2011. The music video "No More" [3] reached more than 10,000,000 views on YouTube within just 5 months [4] and have been discussed nationwide.
Some of his notable records were, "Phleng Wattanatum" ("Culture song"), "Phleng Faai" ("Cotton song"), and "Phleng Saang Thai" ("Building Thailand song"). [3] In 1944 the Romvong dance was introduced by the Phibun government's Fine Arts Department when it issued ten "Ramvong Matrathan" ("standard circle dances") to compete against Western dance ...
Mor lam means 'expert song', or 'expert singer', referring to the music or artist respectively. Other romanisations used include mor lum , maw lam , maw lum , moh lam , mhor lum , and molum . In Laos, the music is known simply as lam (ລຳ); mor lam (ໝໍລຳ) refers to the singer.
T-Wind [3] (Thai Wind) is a term used to describe the phenomenon of Thai pop culture internationally. It is a term created in reference to the Korean Wave.In the 21st century, Thailand has been exporting many kinds of cultural products overseas, especially in Southeast Asia, [4] such as lakhon (television drama), movies and BL series from GMMTV – GDH and lukkwad-pop (Thai teen pop).