Taipei's Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall is once again the oddball choice of venue for a one-off heavy-rock gig this weekend, when ex-Mr Big guitarist Paul Gilbert and Racer X hit the stage of the prestigious concert hall with their hybrid brand of 1980s-fashioned heavy rock.
While the founding father of the Republic of China would no doubt be aghast at the thought of tight pants, rock anthems and gaunt heroin-chic, Gilbert and his racers are probably one of the more respectable of the rock ensembles to hit the good doctor's stage in recent years.
US alternative rockers, Weezer nearly had their performance cut short after audience members formed a mosh-pit and began to slam dance. And while ex-Guns `n' Roses guitarist Slash refrained from bringing live snakes on stage, the eccentric English guitarist's band did have the hall's security team running for cover when large numbers of the predominately teenage audience rushed the stage in order to catch a close-up glimpse of their idol.
PHOTO: COURTESY OF EXPRESS UNITED INTERNATIONAL
Having never achieved the same worldwide acclaim as its more raucous long-haired cousins, however, it is doubtful that Racer X will induce such rampant behavior. While the guitar-toting Gilbert has become relatively well known, Racer X remains remains less than a household name.
Even with its embarrassingly kitsch trademark heavy-rock style tight pants, long hair and emaciated look, the band failed to catch the attention of a vast number of rock fans in its mid-1980s heyday.
Originally formed in 1985 and disbanded in 1988, the four-piece Los Angeles-based high-speed rock outfit got back together two years ago.
Heavily reliant on Gilbert's precision guitar work -- a style that was later dubbed "shred" guitar -- rather than on vocalist, Jeff Martin's Rob Halford-esque screeching vocals or the rhythm section's fast and furious barrage of overdrive for innovation, the band's 1986 debut, Street Lethal, was not a huge success.
The band's follow up, 1987's Second Heat, while not achieving platinum status, fared slightly better, making a dent in the US and Japanese heavy-rock charts and scratching the surface of the UK heavy-rock charts, the material on Second Heat was less reliant on Halford's Judas Priest for inspiration and instead centered more around Gilbert's by now popularized "shred" guitar style of playing.
While the group's peers -- bands such as Motley Crew, Damn Yankees and Poison -- took their firebrand style of guitar-driven heavy rock to stadiums around the globe, Racer X remained relative unknowns outside of the US and Japan.
The lack of worldwide attention led Gilbert to opt out of Racer X in 1988, only to resurface a year later as the lead guitarist with ex-David Lee Roth band member, Billy Sheehan's Mr Big.
Although a heavy-rock guitar hero to many an angst and acne-riddled teenager, Gilbert was to achieve seminal world acclaim with a tune far removed from his trademark slash-and-burn brand of Jimmy Hendrix-influenced shrieking rock.
Reaching No. 1 in the Billboard music charts in 1992 with the acoustic ballad, To Be with You, a track taken from Mr Big's sophomore album, 1991's Lean Onto It, was, and still is, Gilbert's only major chart success.
Parting-company with Mr Big in 1996, Gilbert set out to pursue a solo career. Even after seven albums, however -- the most recent of which, Raw Blues Power, is set to hit record store shelves sometime this month -- Gilbert has failed to replicate the success he enjoyed with heavy rockers, Mr Big.
Following the release of his sixth solo album, Alligator Farm in 2000, Gilbert teamed up with vocalist Martin once again and the pair brushed the dust off their garish 1980s garb and set about transplanting Racer X into the 21st century.
Releasing its first album since the mid-1980s in 2000 -- Technical Difficulties -- the regenerated Racer X, with the original line up of John Alderete on bass, Scott Travis on drums, Jeff Martin on vocals and Gilbert on guitar, failed to impress rock fans and the record flopped.
The story proved an entirely different affair last year, however. After over a decade of on-off obscurity, Racer X hit the big time when its Superheroes album and the band's new look created quite a stir on the heavy rock circuit.
Decked out in faux Mad Max attire and with odd nicknames such as "The X-Tinguisher," the new-look Racer X has severed all connections with its Judas Priest-esque sound of old. The band now blends Gilbert's "shredding," which is now on par with that of Yngwie Malmsteen, with some intense percussion by drummer, Travis and bassist Alderete. Even Martin has ditched his annoying screaming and no longer sounds as if his pants were three sizes too small.
May 26 to June 1 When the Qing Dynasty first took control over many parts of Taiwan in 1684, it roughly continued the Kingdom of Tungning’s administrative borders (see below), setting up one prefecture and three counties. The actual area of control covered today’s Chiayi, Tainan and Kaohsiung. The administrative center was in Taiwan Prefecture, in today’s Tainan. But as Han settlement expanded and due to rebellions and other international incidents, the administrative units became more complex. By the time Taiwan became a province of the Qing in 1887, there were three prefectures, eleven counties, three subprefectures and one directly-administered prefecture, with
It’s an enormous dome of colorful glass, something between the Sistine Chapel and a Marc Chagall fresco. And yet, it’s just a subway station. Formosa Boulevard is the heart of Kaohsiung’s mass transit system. In metro terms, it’s modest: the only transfer station in a network with just two lines. But it’s a landmark nonetheless: a civic space that serves as much more than a point of transit. On a hot Sunday, the corridors and vast halls are filled with a market selling everything from second-hand clothes to toys and house decorations. It’s just one of the many events the station hosts,
Through art and storytelling, La Benida Hui empowers children to become environmental heroes, using everything from SpongeBob to microorganisms to reimagine their relationship with nature. “I tell the students that they have superpowers. It needs to be emphasized that their choices can make a difference,” says Hui, an environmental artist and education specialist. For her second year as Badou Elementary’s artist in residence, Hui leads creative lessons on environmental protection, where students reflect on their relationship with nature and transform beach waste into artworks. Standing in lush green hills overlooking the ocean with land extending into the intertidal zone, the school in Keelung
Taiwan Power Co (Taipower, 台電) and the New Taipei City Government in May last year agreed to allow the activation of a spent fuel storage facility for the Jinshan Nuclear Power Plant in Shihmen District (石門). The deal ended eleven years of legal wrangling. According to the Taipower announcement, the city government engaged in repeated delays, failing to approve water and soil conservation plans. Taipower said at the time that plans for another dry storage facility for the Guosheng Nuclear Power Plant in New Taipei City’s Wanli District (萬里) remained stuck in legal limbo. Later that year an agreement was reached