Daily Archives: January 26, 2009

2009 Year of the Ox Stamps

The U.S. Postal Service dedicated the Celebrating Lunar New Year: Year of the Ox commemorative 12-stamp souvenir sheet today as the second in its 12-year Celebrating Lunar New Year series. The ceremony took place in New York City at the Fashion Institute of Technology, where Chinese-American stamp artist Kam Mak serves as an associate professor of illustration. All 60 million 42-cent First-Class stamps are available nationwide.

Art director Ethel Kessler of Bethesda, MD, worked on the new series with Mak, who now lives in Brooklyn. They focused on some of the common ways the Lunar New Year Holiday is celebrated. To commemorate the Year of the Ox (Jan. 26, 2009 – Feb. 13, 2010), they chose a lion head of a type often worn at parades and other festivities. Dancers wear such heads, often made of papier-mâché and bamboo, as they perform for delighted crowds. Kam’s 16″ x 9.5″ stamp illustration was originally created using oil paints on a fiberboard panel.

The Postal Service introduced its previous Lunar New Year stamps series in 1992 was designed and illustrated by Clarence Lee of Honolulu, HI. Mak, under Kessler’s direction, is creating the second series that continues through 2019 with stamps for the years of the Tiger, Rabbit, Dragon, Snake, Horse, Ram, Monkey, Rooster, Dog and Boar.

Year of the Ox Stamps

Justin Yu and Wilson Tang from the404 podcast

At CES 2009, channelAPA.com met up with Justin Yu and Wilson Tang. (The404 gave a shoutout to us after CES.) We asked them how they got together for CNET’s the404 podcast. Check out the video below. The other member of the404, Jeff Bakalar, is pretty cool too. We had a good chat about the404. After listening to these guy for awhile, these guys should have a morning radio show together.

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Justin Yu and Wilson Tang from the404 podcast

Rin on the Rox gets a shoutout on the Ellen Degeneres Show

Filipino American duo “Rin on the Rox” got a shoutout on the Ellen Degeneres Show recently. The name “Rin on the Rox” comes from the two singers names Erin and Roxanne. (Erin is Filipino, while Roxanne is half Filipino and White.) The pair added videos on YouTube to get their singing career off the ground. With national attention on Ellen and over 1 million channel views on their YouTube channel, they are making big strides toward their goal. Together these ladies sing songs from top music artists like Leona Lewis, Rihanna, Beyonce, Alicia Keys, and more. We hope “Rin on the Rox” find success in 2009. Like it, Love it, Hate it, Whatever… JUST ENJOY IT!!!

UPDATE: Rin on the Rox performs on the Ellen Degeneres Show

Add “Rin on the Rox” as your MySpace Friend.

Rin on the Rox gets a shoutout on Ellen Degeneres Show

Beyonce “If I Were A Boy” – Rin on the Rox (They almost have 2 million views on this video)

The Hsu-nami

We heard about the group “The Hsu-nami” a few weeks ago. Since today is the Lunar New Year, we thought you might get s kick out of listening to this group. Listening to The Hsu-nami reminded us of a much edgier 12 Girls Band playing modern music with classical Chinese instruments. Nice play on the word tsunami too!

The Hsu-nami has been featured on MTV Iggy, mtv2 and mtvU. Also their song “Rising of the Sun” played at the Beijing Olympic Basketball Arena representing the China National Basketball Team’s Entrance Theme. That’s cool!! If you like to vibe of their music, their second anticipated album “The Four Noble Truths” will be released on March 24th.

Add The Hsu-nami as your MySpace friend.

The Hsu-nami – Rising of the Sun (Music Video)

The Hsu-nami – The Godfather Theme

More about The Hsu-nami

The Hsu-nami is a Progressive Rock instrumental band from New Jersey, United States. With a front Chinese instrument the Er-Hu (Chinese Violin). “The Hsu-nami” named after founder Jack Hsu, is known for virtuoso melodic Erhu, heavy guitar riffs and tasteful guitar solos in their music to add to the “progressive Asian soundscape” effect.

The first Erhu Prog Rock Group in the world. Their music features a high level of musicianship that fusion metal, psychedelic, prog rock to funk, incorporating the use of an amplified Erhu, a two-string bowed instrument that is often used in Chinese classical music and folk ensembles, takes the place of lead vocals.

From the band’s intense raw live shows, the music will stand the test of time because of it’s culture values and the highly unique sound. You just got to hear to believe it.

Just like the multi-platinum artist Vanessa Mae (the first ever violinist that fuse classical traditional violin with modern/rock/pop music.) Hsu-nami is the first ever Chinese Erhu focused band that fuses different style depth of the modern rock music.

Imagine the music of “12 girls band” from China (12 piece Chinese traditional orchestra playing modern/acoustic/pop music). But… adds the heavy Metallica, GNR influence guitars riffs and a lot more badass solos and breakdowns and makes you want to just rock out and head bang.