Wednesday, 15 April 2026

Sindarov the challenger

For the past 18 days, my eyes have been glued to the television and computer monitor, following each round of the FIDE Candidates Tournament 2026 whenever I can. In a way, it was a welcome distraction: a chance to detach, however briefly, from the madness elsewhere in the world, not least the ongoing conflict in the Middle East.

On paper, the tournament looked like a very balanced field. Hikaru NakamuraFabiano Caruana and Anish Giri were all seasoned campaigners, mixed in with the younger lot like Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa and Andrey Esipenko. I thought it might go right down to the wire, but it didn’t quite happen that way. 

From the very beginning, Javokhir Sindarov came out looking like a man in a hurry. No messing about, no tentative starts. He just went straight into his games with real intent. Sharp openings, confident decisions and a willingness to take on complications that the others were a little more cautious about.  After the first few rounds, especially with wins coming early, I already had the feeling that this might be his tournament to lose.

What impressed me was not just that he was winning, but who he was winning against. When he beat Nakamura, that really caught my attention. That was not a cheap point. It was a proper fight, and when Nakamura slipped up, Sindarov was right there to punish it. He followed that up with more strong results, and by then the rest of the field were already playing catch-up.

Photo: Chessbase
Against players like Giri and Caruana, he didn’t overpress. He was quite happy to take a solid result and move on. To me, that showed a certain maturity. In these events, it’s not just about brilliance. It’s also about knowing when to hold back. His seconds had done an exemplary job in guiding him. He also handled the rest of the field well by picking up wins where it mattered and holding steady in the return games against Matthias BluebaumWei Yi, Esipenko and Praggnanandhaa. There were no slip-ups and no unnecessary drama. Just a steady accumulation of points.

By the time we got into the later rounds, the situation was quite clear. He had a lead and more importantly, he looked comfortable with it. There was no sign of nerves, no sense that he was about to collapse under pressure. If anything, it was the others who seemed to be forcing matters a little too much. In the end, he had effectively clinched the tournament with a round to spare. That, more or less, told the whole story. When a Candidates is decided before the last round, it usually means one player has been in control for quite some time. The final round was almost beside the point.

What I liked about his play was the balance. He was aggressive when the position allowed it, but not reckless. He defended well when he had to. And most importantly, he seemed completely unfazed by the occasion. For a tournament of this level, that counted for a lot.

So now there is a new challenger in Sindarov, and he will be up against the defending world champion, Gukesh Dommaraju, for the world title. That should be quite a match. There’s Sindarov who seems quite at home in sharp, tactical positions, and then there’s Gukesh who strikes me as a more controlled, positional player. Two different styles by two young players, and both with a point to prove. I don’t know how the match will turn out as matches are quite different from tournaments. But watching this Candidates, I couldn’t help feel that we are seeing a bit of a shift. The older guard is still there, still very strong, but the younger players are no longer just knocking on the door. They are already inside. And this time, one of them has walked away with the prize.



Pursuit of jade

I didn’t plan this at all, but somehow I ended up spending the past few weeks glued to a 40-episode Chinese series on Netflix. Watching Pursuit of Jade wasn’t preplanned. I was just scrolling, saw the artwork, clicked play… and about 15 minutes later, that was it, hooked already.

The story started simply enough: a butcher girl saved an injured stranger. Turned out he’s a marquis hiding in plain sight in the middle of a war. They married out of convenience, she thought him as just some drifter, and he keeping quiet about who he really was. Naturally, that didn’t last long. He got dragged back to his army, she went after him and before long she was right in the thick of battles and palace scheming. Along the way she even took down a couple of major villains, which I didn’t quite expect at the start. Eventually the truth came out about her husband, and after some lovers' quarrels and make-ups, the two of them ended up fighting side by side to clear their families’ names. The ending tied things up a bit too neatly, but getting there was anything but tidy.

I’ll admit that there were stretches where I hadn’t the faintest idea what was going on. Too many twists, too many court politics, too many side characters popping in and out. But I stuck with it partly because it was a period costume drama and partly because there was enough wuxia-style action to keep things moving. The visuals helped a lot....lush costumes, sweeping scenery, nicely choreographed sword fights. Even when the plot started to wander, the overall mood carried it through.

After finishing, I had a look at what others were saying and it more or less lined up. People liked the early episodes, especially when the romance was still front and centre. The cinematography got plenty of praise. The snowy backdrops and elaborate sets were all very polished. The female lead was a big plus point too, not the usual helpless type but someone who can hold her own. The main gripe was the pacing. Once the palace intrigue took over, things slow down and got a bit confusing. The villains looked impressive enough, but some of them didn’t quite land as characters. So overall, mixed feelings. Some loved it for the romance and performances, others felt the story got tangled and rushed in parts.

For me, it wasn’t about keeping track of every little subplot. More about the feel of it. The look, the action, the emotional pull between two people caught up in something bigger than themselves. It was one of those shows that worked better if I don’t overthink it.

Would I recommend it? If you like period dramas with a fair bit of wuxia thrown in, then yes, why not. Just don’t expect everything to make perfect sense. Better to sit back, go with the flow, and let it play out.


Tuesday, 14 April 2026

More heavy sounds

Several years ago at a garage sale, I came across a CBS compilation that seemed to sit naturally beside a record album I once wrote about, Heavy Sounds. This companion record was titled More Heavy Sounds, issued in 1970. Like its predecessor, it gathered together a selection of powerful tracks from the Columbia/CBS catalogue, and listening to it today feels rather like opening a time capsule of late 1960s rock.

The album followed the success of the earlier Heavy Sounds compilation and leaned heavily toward the louder, more adventurous side of the label’s roster. Psychedelic rock, gritty blues and the first stirrings of jazz-rock fusion all appear here. In those days, compilation albums like this were a convenient way for listeners to sample artists they might not otherwise have encountered, and the selections on More Heavy Sounds were clearly chosen to showcase the energy and diversity of the Columbia stable around 1969 and 1970.

As with the earlier compilation, the interest of the record lies in the music itself. Each track was drawn from albums that had appeared on the Columbia/CBS label during the previous year or so, and the result is an engaging cross-section of what was happening in rock music at the turn of the decade.

The album opened with Save The Country by Laura Nyro, taken from her 1969 album New York Tendaberry. Nyro’s music always had a unique blend of gospel, pop and soul, and this song captured that mixture beautifully. Her piano drove the arrangement forward while her powerful voice delivered a passionate call for unity and compassion. The song would later be covered by other artists, but Nyro’s original remained the most emotionally compelling.

Next came It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue, performed by The Byrds from their Ballad of Easy Rider album. Originally written by Bob Dylan, the song received a distinctly Byrds-like treatment here. Roger McGuinn’s nasal vocal and the band’s chiming guitars transform Dylan’s stark folk composition into a reflective piece of country-rock. The result felt wistful rather than bitter, almost as if the band were looking back on the turbulent 1960s themselves.

Taj Mahal contributed Six Days On The Road, drawn from the double album Giant Step / De Old Folks at Home. The song had long been known as a classic truck-driving country number, but Taj Mahal gave it a very different flavour. Instead of a straight-forward country approach, he injected a deep blues groove, turning it into a performance that highlighted his ability to move effortlessly between musical traditions.

The next track, Mama Get Down Those Rock And Roll Shoes by NRBQ, comes from the band’s self-titled debut album. NRBQ had a reputation for being unpredictable, blending rockabilly, rhythm and blues, and even hints of jazz into their music. This track captured that energetic spirit, slightly rough around the edges and full of the enthusiasm that characterised many late 1960s rock recordings.

From there the album moved into heavier territory with Pacific Gas & Electric and their track My Woman. Taken from their 1969 album, the song was built around thick guitar riffs and the gritty vocals of Charlie Allen. The band would later become known for more gospel-influenced material, but here they sounded firmly rooted in the hard blues-rock style that flourished in San Francisco during that period.

One of the centre pieces of the compilation is Chicago’s expansive version of I’m A Man. This performance originally appeared on the band’s debut double album Chicago Transit Authority. The group stretches the Spencer Davis Group hit into an extended jam filled with brass riffs, Latin-tinged percussion and a spectacular drum break. Guitarist Terry Kath also delivers some searing passages that remind listeners how formidable Chicago were as a live band in their early days.

Al Kooper followed with Too Busy Thinking About My Baby, from his album You Never Know Who Your Friends Are. Kooper had already established himself as a musician, songwriter and producer, and his interpretation of this Motown number carried his trademark organ sound. The arrangement was lush and polished, blending soul influences with the sophisticated pop-rock production that Kooper excelled at.

No compilation representing the Columbia roster of that era would be complete without Janis Joplin, and she appeared here with Maybe. Taken from her album I Got Dem Ol’ Kozmic Blues Again Mama!, the song shows a more vulnerable side of Joplin. Backed by a strong horn section, she sang with a mixture of pain and longing that made her such a compelling performer. Even among many powerful tracks on the album, this one stood out for its emotional intensity.

The energy ross again with Johnny Winter’s take on Highway 61 Revisited. Winter transformed Dylan’s already surreal song into a blazing blues-rock workout. His slide guitar flashed across the track with astonishing speed and precision, and turned the performance into a showcase for his technical brilliance.

The compilation closed with Treat, an instrumental by Santana from their debut album. Beginning with a jazzy piano introduction, the piece gradually built into a fiery Latin-rock groove. Carlos Santana’s melodic guitar lines wove through the rhythm section’s driving percussion, illustrating the fusion of rock, jazz and Latin influences that would soon make the band internationally famous.

Listening to More Heavy Sounds today, I am reminded of how adventurous the Columbia/CBS catalogue was at the time. The album moved easily from gospel-tinged pop to country-rock, from Chicago’s brass-driven experimentation to Santana’s Latin rhythms. As a compilation, it captured a moment when rock music was expanding in many directions at once.

For collectors and listeners alike, the record remained an enjoyable snapshot of that period: a sampler of artists who, in their different ways, helped define the sound of the late 1960s and the beginning of the 1970s.


Friday, 10 April 2026

Grab, why?

How I would drive to get home
Had to take Grab yesterday from an Icon City food court to get home. Car came fast, like 5 minutes, no issue there. Fare was RM11, time was around 1.30pm. Now normally if I drive myself, I’d just go straight into Chian Heng Kai Road, turn right into Song Ban Kheng, then keluar to Kulim Road. Simple, direct, done. But yesterday, it was a completely different story.

Driver went some weird, roundabout way. Even getting onto Kebun Nenas Road also not direct. He looped around inside Icon City first, which honestly I’d never do. Then from Kebun Nenas, instead of keeping it simple, he turned onto the old north-south trunk road, only then into Kota Permai.

How Grab drove me home
I thought okay, maybe that’s it. Nope, there was more nonsense after that. Grab map suddenly send him into Alma instead of just going straight like a normal person would. Then instead of turning into Taman Desa Palma, he masuk one small narrow kampung-style road where two cars also need to slow down and squeeze past each other, and came into my area from the back. Ended up travelling extra like 2km for nothing.

So now I’m thinking… why did Grab route like that? Why not just take the obvious, shorter way? Feels a bit suspicious. Like purposely make the trip longer so can justify the RM11 fare when it could’ve been cheaper if just went direct?

#Grab



Tuesday, 7 April 2026

A time of remembrance

Cheng Beng (清明) is over for us this year. We finished it last week, spread over two visits. The first was on Monday at Sungai Lembu on the mainland, the second on Friday on the island. The mainland trip was for my father-in-law, who died four years ago. That Nirvana site, I must say, is very well kept. Clean, orderly, almost too neat in a way. There were attendants arranging tables, making sure everything was in place. Very convenient.

A few days later we went to the older graves, my two sets of grandparents at Batu Lanchang and Wat Pimbang On. These are out in the open, exposed to sun and rain, so timing mattered a lot. There was a time we used to leave at six in the morning, reaching Batu Lanchang around 6.45am, the cemetery cloaked in darkness but other people were already out and about to perform their own Cheng Beng obligations. In the past decade we eased that a bit, leaving at 6.30am and arriving around 7.15am, just as the sun nudged above the trees. This year we went even later. Left the house at seven, got there about 7.45am. The morning helped us out: a bit overcast, so the heat didn’t come down too hard.

From Batu Lanchang we crossed over to Wat Pimbang On, a Siamese cemetery that looked more chaotic and less organised. Somehow, I felt that many people have already abandoned the place. Untidy and unkempt with overgrown grass, vegetation all around. Even under the canopy of trees, we could feel the day catching up with us. The sun's rays were cutting through the humidity. After that, our final stop was the Triple Wisdom Temple, where we paid respects to the memorial tablets of my parents and aunt. A quieter ending, it was indoors but no less meaningful.

I remember as a child in the late 1950s or early 1960s, when we were still living at Seang Tek Road, Cheng Beng meant booking a trishaw pedlar from down the road to take my grandmother, my mother and me to the Batu Gantong cemetery. At six o’clock sharp, the trishaw would arrive and wait for us. Then came the slow, unhurried ride through York Road and Batu Gantong Road. Along the way we passed huge angsana trees, their small yellow flowers falling constantly around us and carpeting the road. After all these years, I can still remember the cool morning breeze and that feeling of calm and serenity.

Every year going through this Cheng Beng process, I find myself thinking about the alternate name people like to use, Tomb-Sweeping Day. It’s not wrong, but it never quite right either. Yes, we clear the lallang, clean the headstones and tidy up the place. That part is visible and easy to describe. But there's more to Cheng Beng because the sweeping is only incidental. It’s just something that needs to be done before anything else can happen. To call the whole day by that one act feels like missing the point. It turns something that has taken shape over centuries into a simple task, almost like a chore to be checked off.

Cheng Beng itself means “clear and bright”. It began as a marker in the yearly Chinese lunisolar cycle. As far back as the Zhōu Dynasty 周朝 (1046–256 BC), people were already observing the seasons through solar terms, paying attention to the small changes in light, air, growth and renewal. Cheng Beng marked the time when the sky cleared, the air sharpened and the earth began to stir again after the stillness of winter. It wasn’t a festival in the beginning, just a moment in nature.

But alongside that, there was always this deep-rooted practice of remembering those who came before. In the Zhōu world, burial grounds were under official care. Remembering wasn’t optional, it was part of maintaining continuity. By the Warring States period 戰國時代 (475–221 BC), these practices had been adopted by ordinary families. People began visiting graves, bringing offerings, acknowledging that their lives were part of something longer, something that didn’t begin or end with them. By the time of the Táng Dynasty 唐朝 (618–907 AD), with Confucian values firmly in place, filial piety became something the state actively encouraged. Cheng Beng became the natural time for these acts of remembrance.

So when we reduce it to “tomb sweeping”, something feels out of place. The clearing of grass and the washing of stone are just preparations. What's more important are the quieter moments that come after. The offer of food and fruits, the lighting of the joss sticks, calling the names of the forefathers, standing there for a while without saying much but having a quiet conversation with them in the mind, then the burning of paper offerings before leaving. Every time, it feels like we are continuing a process that has always been there.

There’s no festivity in it, and I don’t think there is meant to be. Just a kind of stillness, even when the sun is already up and the day is getting warm. Families gathering, not out of obligation alone but because something in the rhythm of the year brings them back. And in that space, between the living and the remembered, the connection doesn’t feel distant at all.


Sunday, 5 April 2026

Blue-eyed soul

I didn’t buy Blue-Eyed Soul because I was chasing disco. I bought it because it looked like something that didn’t quite belong. Most of my mid-1970s records leant one way or another: pop, folk, rock, soul. This one sat slightly apart. The name itself was curiously Asian: The Biddu Orchestra.

Behind it was Biddu Appaiah, who had come to England in the late 1960s and spent years trying to make something happen. His turning point came in 1974 with Kung Fu Fighting, recorded by Carl Douglas. It was meant to be a B-side of a 45 but it turned out be a hit instead. With Bruce Lee ruling the screens, Kung Fu Fighting ruled the airwaves. Biddu had arrived.

When I played my copy of Blue-Eyed Soul, what I noticed was how clean the sound was.  The rhythm was steady, The strings didn’t swirl wildly; they arrive on cue. The brass didn’t compete; it supported the music. It felt assembled rather than jammed.

Summer of ’42, drawn from Michel Legrand’s film theme, could easily have tipped into novelty. Instead it was an elegant arrangement. Aranjuez Mon Amour, adapted from Joaquín Rodrigo, was something similar. Biddu took something formal and gave it a pulse without turning it into parody. Even Exodus followed that same path. He took a melody people already knew and let it move.

The title track, Blue Eyed Soul, summed up the mood. It wasn’t gritty soul in the American sense. It was smoother and more polished, more British. And that’s what this record really was: a producer’s idea of how disco should be. The Orchestra wasn’t a touring band. It was top-tier musicians brought together to realise one man’s arrangements. The producer as the central figure who shaped the sound, deciding the tone, setting the pace.

Which perhaps explains why the record felt different even then. It wasn’t chasing the disco wave. It was constructing its own version of it.

Addendum: In fact, Biddu was quietly helping to shape the early sound of British disco even before the genre fully exploded in the United States. After the success of Kung Fu Fighting with Carl Douglas, he developed a studio style built on tight arrangements, polished strings and disciplined rhythm sections, using top session musicians rather than a touring band. The emphasis was on precision rather than improvisation, with the producer firmly directing the sound. In that sense, records like Blue-Eyed Soul reflected an early shift toward the modern idea of the producer as the central creative force behind the music.


Side 1: Blue-eyed soul, Black magic man, Aranjuez mon amour, Joy-ice, Northern dancer
Side 2: Summer of 42, Couldn't we be friends (song for Su), Exodus, You don't stand a chance if you can't dance



Thursday, 2 April 2026

Panguni Uthiram festival

On my way to a hospital appointment yesterday morning, I was caught in a heavy traffic congestion that stretched almost a mile long. At first, I thought that there was an accident up ahead but when I rounded a corner, I realised it wasn't. It was an Indian religious festival taking place, every year around this time in Bukit Mertajam

Along the road to the hospital, cars were moving bumper-to-bumper, going past temporary stalls and altars. Eventually, I passed by the Shri Maha Mangalanayagi Amman Devasthanam, crowded with devotees mainly wearing yellow. My curiosity was piqued. What an opportunity it would be to visit. But that would have to wait until my appointment was over. 

Leaving the hospital at about 11.15am, I crossed the road only to be stopped in my tracks by the temple chariot being pushed and pulled to the main road. What luck, the procession was about to begin. Only then did I begin to appreciate what I had just stumbled into.

This temple goes way back to 1893. More than a hundred years old, it started off tucked inside a Tamil school, the old Ramanathan Tamil School. In those days, the deity was known as Sungurumbai Mariamman. Over time, as the school moved out, the community grew and the temple grew with it, eventually becoming what it is today, a full-fledged devasthanam. This was quite typical of how early Indian settlers in Malaya did things. They started small, built what they could and slowly over the years, those little shrines became proper temples.

Today, the temple stands along Jalan Kulim, not far from the hospital, with its towering gopuram and all the usual South Indian architectural features. And of course, that chariot I spoke of. Big, imposing, intricately carved, and I was standing just feet away. People say it is one of the largest in this part of the region and seeing it up close, I have no reason to doubt that.

The festival itself, which I had unknowingly walked into, was the Panguni Uthiram, the main event of the year for this temple. Everything had built up to this day. Early in the morning, special prayers would have been conducted. The goddess, Mangalanayagi Amman, would have been dressed in silk sarees, adorned with gold jewellery and fresh flower garlands. By the time I arrived, all that had already been done and the focus had shifted outside.

The chariot was brought out slowly to the road. The deity placed within, and then the long pull began. Devotees took hold of the ropes, inched the whole structure forward along a fixed route through town. Wasn't a fast affair, the procession could take the whole day accompanied by the steady beat of drums and the wail of the nadaswaram.

Along the route, people lined both sides of the road. Makeshift stalls were everywhere, a bit like a moving carnival except that underneath it all, there was a deep sense of devotion. I could see it in the faces of those carrying milk pots on their heads, fulfilling their vows. Others carried the kavadi, walking barefoot under the hot sun. These are personal acts of devotion, fulfilling promises made and now being honoured.

What struck me most was how the whole town seemed to adjust itself around the procession. Traffic slowed to a crawl, people waited patiently, nobody really complaining. Everyone knew what was happening. This wasn’t an interruption. It was part of life here.

The first thing I noticed on entering the temple was the dwajasthambam standing tall in front of the main sanctum that housed the Goddess Mangalanayagi Amman. But since the statue had been taken out for the procession, only the priests remained. Devotees continued lining up to pray before the sanctum, and the priests kept passing containers of cow’s milk inside. At the side of the sanctum, the emptied milk flowed out through an opening in the wall. 

In the multi-purpose hall next to the temple, free food was being served. I was curious to see what was on offer and suddenly, an empty plate was thrust into my hand. A holy man urged me to join the queue, and I came away with a plate of Indian vegetarian rice that never tasted more delicious.

All these sights, sounds, smells and tastes at the temple. To think that I had almost dismissed them as just another traffic jam.


Wednesday, 1 April 2026

Grandparents

This story touches on the darker side of life and death. It may come across as a little sad, even depressing. For a long time, I hesitated over whether I should write anything at all about the passing of the people on my side of the family who were closest to me. I refer to my two sets of grandparents, my parents and a paternal aunt who stayed with me right to the very end of her life. But then I thought, I had already touched on my paternal grandfather before, how he died and how his remains were taken to the funeral parlour. That was my very first personal brush with death in the family. I was nine years old, and the unpleasant experience terrified me. Having gone that far, perhaps I should write about the others too.

Let me recap what I wrote last August 2025. My paternal grandfather (Quah Teik Beng) died in the wee hours of 10 December 1963 at the age of 66. Someone came round to Seang Tek Road to wake my father. By the time we arrived, his body was already cold. Later, a man from the coffin shop came to take the body to the Toi Shan Convalescent Home in Hutton Lane for the funeral preparations. Despite the name, the ground floor of this "convalescent home" was entirely a funeral parlour, divided into cubicles. Lighting was poor. At night, after the rituals, only a dim bulb lit the corridor. Shadows were cast on the walls, and if a candle was still burning, the shadows would dance. The dead, covered only with blankets, lay on wooden planks waiting for their coffins. As a young boy, I found the whole atmosphere terrifying.

One ritual involved wiping my grandfather’s darkened face and symbolically feeding him rice, placing a few grains on his lips for his final journey. That moment, staring into his lifeless face, has stayed with me to this day.

During the funeral, we had to wear black, topped with the mua sah, the rough hemp mourning cloth. My father wore a matching headgear made from the same coarse material. All of this was meant to show outwardly the depth of grief, that the mourner no longer cared for comfort or appearance. After the funeral, we were required to mourn for three years: wearing black for the first year, black-and-white for the second, then white-and-blue for the third. No celebrations were allowed. No angpow during Chinese New Year. Rigid rules, but that was the way things were done then.

Less than three years later, on 11 February 1966, my maternal grandfather (Oh Joo Siew) passed away, 68 years old. Although we had not completed the mourning period for my paternal grandfather, my parents and I had to quickly tnooi ang, literally meaning return to red, before going back into mourning again.

Of the two, my maternal grandfather was my favourite. He doted on me and much later, on my young cousin Irene. In the evenings, he would take me to a nearby Indian sundry shop. I was happy with the simplest things: sweets, crackers, biscuits. In return, I became very attached to him. So when he died, I was devastated. Just the day before his death, he was carrying his one- or two-year-old granddaughter happily in his arms. He could no longer walk while carrying her, having suffered from a mild stroke the year before. And that was the last time he ever held Irene.

At about five in the morning, my grandmother woke the family to say he was not responding to her call. We rushed downstairs to see him laying still on the bed. I shook him, beseeching him to call me, but all we heard was a gurgling sound from his throat. That was all. A massive stroke had taken him. Soon after, my mother’s sister arrived. She fell to her knees and crawled into the house, wailing that she would never see him again. That set my mother off again, though she had already been crying earlier.

Since he died at home, the wake was held in the house. The living room furniture was cleared, pictures removed, altars and mirrored surfaces covered with red paper. His body was placed on a narrow bed behind makeshift curtains. The curtains were drawn but if I climbed the stairs behind the living room to go upstairs, I could still look down at my grandfather's body. The coffin came the next day, and then there were the Taoist rites. My mother and aunt took turns kneeling beside the curtains, burning joss paper piece by piece, their mourning interrupted by fresh wails whenever relatives came. I was supposed to kneel and receive them as they entered, such was the custom.

As my grandfather hadn't any son, there was nobody in the immediate family to wear the mua sah during the funeral. Instead one of his nephews in Penang, his elder brother's son, stepped in to wear this rough hemp clothing and also carry the tong huan or paper lantern. For the year-long mourning period, we were wearing only black-and-white, which was comparatively a more relaxed requirement than my earlier experience.  

Soon after, my paternal grandmother (Lim Poh Choo) and aunt moved in with us at Seang Tek Road. She was already unwell and my father wanted her nearby. For a time, both my grandmothers lived under the same roof, a rather unusual arrangement.

But my paternal grandmother’s condition worsened. She tried all sorts of treatments, including an enema to unblock her bowels, but it only left her weaker than before. By early 1967, just before Chinese New Year, it was clear she would not last. On the night she died at the age of 62, on the sixth of February, my maternal grandmother decided to go stay with her other daughter to avoid the inevitable, but it was too late. Just as she reached the door, my mother’s wails drifted down from upstairs. She was trapped, and had to remain in the house through the funeral process.

Because it was so close to Chinese New Year, few relatives came and we couldn't fault anyone for that. It was a quiet affair except for the obligatory wails by my mother and paternal aunt. The funeral took place on the eve of the Chinese New Year and that night, as neighbours lit firecrackers and celebrated, our doorway had no red cloth and our lantern remained unlit. My father and I sat on the five-foot way and watched in silence.

This time, we completed the mourning period of one year. After that came the tnooi ang ritual. A cleansing bath, followed by the sin tok or pouring scented water and seven-coloured flowers over the head before changing into red clothes.

In the mid-1970s, we moved to Lorong Zoo Tiga in Ayer Itam. I can’t recall the exact year, maybe 1974 or 1975. The landlord of the row of four Seang Tek Road houses wanted them back. All the tenants resisted but eventually, we had to leave. We moved in with my maternal grandmother’s sister. Space was tight. My parents, aunt, sister Judy and I crammed into one room, while my grandmother (Tan Kim Lean) shared another with her sister's daughter.

It was there that she passed away on 16 August 1980, aged 79. She had long suffered from weak lungs. On that day, her breathing finally failed and she collapsed on the bed in my mother's arms. I remember that on the first night of the wake, there was a power failure. The house was in darkness, lit only by a pair of candles at my grandmother's feet. Immediately my mind raced back to that funeral parlour in Hutton Lane in 1963 when shadows danced on the wall. When the lights came back, I felt a huge sense of relief. By the time of her passing, mourning customs in Penang were already beginning to shift. Some of the older, more rigid practices were being relaxed. For instance, the wearing of black-and-white was shortened to about 100 days, a more practical arrangement for modern times.

There is one small incident I should mention. There is a Taoist belief that the soul lingers until the seventh day, not fully aware that it has departed the physical shell. The living cannot see it, but there may be signs of its presence. On the fifth day after her passing, two days after the funeral, most of the family had gone out. Only my sister, my paternal aunt and I were at home. My sister, as usual, started talking her light-hearted nonsense, even making jokes about our grandmother. Suddenly, from the back of the house, there was a loud crash of pots and pans falling to the floor. We froze. Then my sister started crying. Was it coincidence? Or was our departed grandmother cross about the jokes and wanted to show her displeasure? We shall never know for sure. 

I think I’ve gone on long enough for now. There are still more to say, but perhaps I’ll leave those for another time when I feel ready to return to this topic.

NOTE: This story is part of my reminiscence series which I've been adding to my blog once in a while. The series is meant to document things I remember about my younger and childhood days; my important memories, which may be pretty mundane to other people, to pass down to my son and daughter. Life as it used to be in the 1950s to 1970s, perhaps into the 1990s. But let's see how it goes...

#seangtekroad



Tuesday, 31 March 2026

Oh, what a Carry On

The very first Carry On film I saw at the cinema was Carry On Doctor and from that moment on I was hooked on every Carry On film that ever screened in Penang. That continued until I temporarily moved to Kuala Lumpur in 1973 for my studies. Even then I believe I might have caught one or two Carry On films there as well, but I honestly don't remember much about them now. A lot of those memories came rushing back recently when I received this album, Oh! What a Carry On, from Anwar Fazal.

Come to think of it, the humour in those films reminds me a little of the Bawdy Songs and Backroom Ballads record by Oscar Bran,d which I mentioned a fortnight ago. Brand may not have been British, but many of the songs he collected and recorded came from the same old Anglo folk tradition of cheeky double meanings and playful innuendo, something the Carry On films turned into an art form on the cinema screen.

Oh! What a Carry On is a rather interesting little compilation that was released in June 1971. It brought together novelty songs and pop recordings by several stars from the Carry On movies. What made it unusual was that none of these songs were actually recorded for the films themselves. Most of them were singles released during the 1950s and 60s, later gathered together by the record company to ride on the huge popularity of the Carry On gang.

The LP contains 12 tracks. Side A opened with Be My Girl by Jim Dale, which was a genuine hit in Britain back in 1957, reaching number two on the charts. That was followed by You Need Feet by the towering Bernard Bresslaw. Barbara Windsor contributed On Mother Kelly’s Doorstep, while Frankie Howerd appeared with It’s Alright With Me. The real comic highlight of the side was Kenneth Williams performing as Rambling Syd Rumpo in Green Grow My Nadgers Oh! before the side closed with Spring Song by Joan Sims.

Side B continued the fun with The Ugly Duckling sung by Kenneth Connor. Jim Dale returned again with Piccadilly LineDora Bryan offered a cheeky rendition of Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend. Frankie Howerd popped up again with Song and Dance Man while Joan Sims sang another number titled Men. The album closed with another Rambling Syd Rumpo performance by Kenneth Williams called The Ballad of the Woggler’s Moulie.

The Rambling Syd Rumpo tracks are probably the most famous items here. The character actually came from the BBC radio programme Round the Horne which ran between 1965 and 1968. The writers came up with a clever trick to get past the BBC censors. They filled the lyrics with nonsense words that sounded extremely rude but technically meant nothing at all. Words like nadgers, moulies and cordwangle had audiences roaring with laughter while the censors could not really object because those words did not exist in any dictionary.

Another fascinating aspect of this album is the early career of Jim Dale. Long before he became a familiar face in the Carry On films, he was actually a teenage pop star produced by George Martin at Parlophone, years before Martin discovered The Beatles. Be My Girl, which appeared on this LP, was one of Dale’s biggest hits. Ironically he never enjoyed the life of a pop idol and preferred comedy, which eventually led him straight into the Carry On series. Much later he reinvented himself again as the narrator of the hugely popular Harry Potter audiobooks, performing more than a hundred different character voices.

Even the sleeve artwork is worth mentioning. The cover illustration was done by Tom Chantrell, the artist responsible for many of the colourful Carry On film posters that once decorated cinema lobbies.

Today, the record feels like a small time capsule from the golden age of British comedy. And for me personally, thanks to Anwar Fazal’s thoughtful gift, it also brings back memories of those days in Penang when a new Carry On film arriving at the cinema was always guaranteed to fill the hall with laughter.

Sunday, 29 March 2026

Cataract routine

It’s been almost two weeks since the cataract operation on my left eye. I’ve already gone back twice for follow-up sessions with the surgeon and, according to him, everything is progressing well. So far, I haven’t experienced any of the warning signs he mentioned earlier, no pain, no discharge, nothing out of the ordinary, so that in itself is already something to be thankful for. There’s one more follow-up scheduled towards the end of next month, just to make sure everything continues on track.

So how do I feel with this artificial lens sitting inside the eye? From the very first day, the difference was quite striking. Vision suddenly became very bright and very clear. Almost too clear, if that makes sense. The best way I can describe it is with the Penang Hokkien expression, Cheng Beng. It's the same term used for this time of the year when we Chinese make our way to the cemeteries to spring clean the graves of our ancestors and especially, to remember and fulfil our duties to those that came before us. Cheng and Beng, clear and bright. That same sense of clarity in the air, as if everything has been washed clean. That’s exactly how things look now. Colours appear more vivid, whites look whiter and there’s a certain crispness to everything that I don’t remember having for quite some time.

But of course, it’s not all perfectly balanced yet. The left eye is now long-sighted, while the right eye is still short-sighted. So when I look at something, the left eye sees it sharp and clear, while the right eye comes in slightly behind, blurred and struggling to catch up. It’s a strange sensation, like the two eyes are not quite in agreement with each other. At times I find myself unconsciously favouring the left eye, letting it take the lead.

I suppose this is part of the adjustment period. The brain probably needs time to sort things out and decide how to combine the two different images into something workable. For now, I just carry on as usual, reading, moving about, letting the eyes and the mind slowly get used to this new arrangement. How long that will take, I really don’t know. But at least for now, things are heading in the right direction, and that’s good enough for me. 

Of course, there are all the little routines that now come with it. Whenever I’m outdoors in the daytime, I have to wear sunglasses. “Protect your eyes from the ultraviolet light,” the surgeon warned. For how long, I asked. “As long as necessary,” he said. I suppose that means quite indefinitely.

At night, I have to put on an eye shield before going to bed. It’s quite a ritual, sticking it on with surgical tape. For afternoon naps, it’s much simpler, just the sunglasses will do. Both are really there to stop me from accidentally touching or rubbing the eye when I’m not fully aware of what I’m doing.

Then there are the eye drops. Three different types, several times a day. And this, not counting my glaucoma eyedrops too! By now I’ve more or less settled into the routine. Life goes on. I’ve even resumed driving, although with the difference in vision between the two eyes, I do have to be more careful and alert. Night driving I’ve not attempted yet, leaving that to my wife for the time being.

On the hygiene side, showering is not a problem, although I’ve avoided shampooing my hair these past two weeks. Instead, I give the scalp a good wipe with a damp cloth. Surprisingly refreshing. The eyelid too gets a daily clean with damp cotton puffs, just to remove any accumulated dirt. But that’s as far as I go when it comes to getting water near the eye.

As for food, the surgeon more or less dismissed any need for restrictions. But my wife, after listening to various well-meaning friends, has taken a different view. So for now, anything involving prawns, shrimp, hehbee or belachan is off the menu. Pantang for three weeks, she decided. Thus, no Hokkien mee, no char koay teowShe is the "She Who Must Be Obeyed", as the character Rumpole in Rumpole of the Bailey would say of his wife. Woe is me.

As a postscript, perhaps I should say that inevitably, in the longer term, I shall need another operation on the right eye to balance up my vision. That is something for another day. For now, I’ll just let things settle and take it as it comes.

#chengbeng



Thursday, 26 March 2026

Butterworth's PPC complex

A few days ago, I made a passing reference to the Penang Port Commission Complex (PPC Complex) in Butterworth when writing about the 1988 ferry terminal tragedy. I used to pass through that building regularly on my way to work from about 1980 to 2000. Not quite every day, but often enough. Slightly more than 20 years of ferry commuting. So yes, I knew the place quite well. Here’s what I remember.

Not many people think about it now, but the old PPC Complex didn’t just fade away quietly. It went out in a blaze, literally. On 20 May 2001, at about five o'clock in the morning, a fire broke out in the building which most people simply called the Butterworth bus terminal. The fire started on the upper floors where the Parkson Ria Department Store and Tops were located. It was a major one which took the firefighters nearly 12 hours to bring it fully under control, only around five in the evening.

By then the damage was severe. The top floor, including parts of the roof, was badly gutted. The rest of the building was no longer usable. Not long after that, the whole structure was demolished. Today, Penang Sentral stands on the same spot.

The building itself went back to the mid-1970s. It was completed in 1976 at a cost of about RM3.5 million, which in those days was not small money. It was considered quite modern then. The ground floor housed a 24-bay bus terminal, along with a police post, ticket counters and taxi stands. And once you came down the staircases, taxi drivers and bus touts would be calling out, each trying to pull you towards their taxis or ticket counters.

The first floor was where the small retail shops and food stalls were located. That was where people hung around, especially in the 1980s and 1990s. Nothing fanciful here. Just everyday things, cheap food and a place to wait for connecting buses. Up on the top floor was the shopping area. Emporium Holdings was one of the early tenants before Parkson Ria came in later. At one time there was even a small cinema.

This Parkson Ria outlet, in particular, was one of the places on the mainland to shop in the 1990s. I remember once being there with the whole family when my son, probably three or four years old at the time, decided to play hide and seek among the clothes racks. One moment he was there, the next moment he was gone. With all those unverified stories going around then about children being abducted, we were alarmed and started searching frantically, calling out his name. He remained quiet and then suddenly, out he popped from between the racks, grinning away. For that little stunt, his reward was a quick smack on his bottom.

The PPC Complex wasn’t just a building. For many people it was part of daily life. Students passed through it on their way to school. Workers used it every day, taking buses and ferries across to the island. On the odd occasion, I would be there too, waiting for a bus back to Seberang Jaya when my car wasn’t available. It was also a convenient meeting point, the sort of place where people would say, “wait for me at the bus terminal,” and everyone knew exactly where that meant. And then there were those who went there to lepak, simply not knowing what to do with their time. People lingering, watching the world go by, making the place feel alive. And the occasional students playing truant, trying to blend into the crowd, though not always successfully.

The complex was linked to the Butterworth railway station by a long covered overhead walkway, maybe a hundred or two hundred metres. Somewhere along that stretch, a branch veered off to the ferry terminal. That was where foot passengers bought their tickets, passed through the turnstile and waited for the next ferry. I remember always having a book with me, thanks to my British Council Library membership. Waiting time was reading time, whether in the terminal or on the ferry itself. And it was that very ferry terminal that collapsed in 1988.

After the fire and demolition, the area went quiet. Buses and taxis were forced to operate from somewhere else close enough. Then, years later, something new rose in its place. Penang Sentral, opened at the end of 2018. Clean, modern, efficient. Everything the old complex was not.

But for those of us who remember, the old PPC Complex was never just a bus terminal. It was a meeting point, a waiting place, part of the rhythm of daily life. A bit chaotic, a bit worn, but very much alive in its time. Now, like so many things in Butterworth, it lives on only in memory.

#penangportcommission #ppc #butterworth 


Tuesday, 24 March 2026

David Cassidy

It's almost nine years since David Cassidy passed away. Looking back now, it’s hard to explain just how big he was in the early 1970s. These days we throw the term “teen idol” around rather casually, but in Cassidy’s case it really meant something. For a few short years he seemed to be everywhere: television, radio, record racks in the shops and the bedroom walls of teenagers all over the world. Even here in Penang you couldn’t miss him.

Cassidy first burst into the public consciousness through the musical sitcom The Partridge Family, which began airing in 1970. He played Keith Partridge, the son in a family band that travelled around performing. The show itself was light entertainment, but the music took on a life of its own. When the single I Think I Love You came out, it became a massive international hit. It was heard everywhere, from record shops along Campbell Street to radios playing in coffee shops.

But anyone searching for I Think I Love You on a Partridge Family album might have been slightly puzzled. The song first appeared in 1970 as a seven-inch 45 rpm single issued under The Partridge Family name, with David Cassidy on lead vocal, and it quickly became a huge international hit. That was the format most people knew it from at the time. In later years, however, collectors sometimes encountered the track again on compilations such as David Cassidy’s Greatest Hits rather than on albums credited to The Partridge Family. Back in those days, if you wandered into, for instance, Wing Hing Records on Campbell Street and asked for the song, chances were the proprietor would simply point you to whichever record that happened to have it in stock.

The recording itself also had an interesting backstory. Despite the television image of a family band, most of the studio recording was actually done by seasoned Los Angeles session musicians. Cassidy sang the lead vocal, but the backing band was part of the famous circle of studio players often associated with the so-called “Wrecking Crew.” The result was a perfectly crafted slice of early 1970s pop that went on to sell millions of copies around the world.

Of course, once the television fame took hold, the record companies wasted no time building a solo career around him. Albums like Cherish and Rock Me Baby began appearing in the early 1970s. Even people who didn’t follow The Partridge Family probably knew at least one or two of his songs. By the mid-1970s he was reportedly one of the highest-paid entertainers in the world. 

But fame built on teenage hysteria rarely lasts forever. By 1975 the signs were already there that the wave was beginning to crest, at least in the United States. Musical tastes were changing, and the industry was moving on to other styles and new faces. Cassidy was still hugely popular internationally, but the days of absolute teen idol domination were starting to fade.

It was around this time that Bell Records released David Cassidy’s Greatest Hits. It was the usual record company strategy to gather up the familiar hits and sell them again while the name was still hot. But the album also ended up acting as a kind of summary of Cassidy’s first phase as a pop star. The songs on it came mostly from the years when he ruled the teen market: the Partridge Family period, the early solo records and the hits that had fuelled those screaming concerts. Soon after that, Cassidy moved to RCA Records and began trying to reshape his image. 

When I listen to those early hits today, it’s easy to remember why he made such an impact. For a few years in the early 1970s, David Cassidy was one of those rare pop figures whose appeal crossed borders and cultures. His records travelled easily around the world, and even in a place like Penang his songs found their way into record collections and transistor radios.

That’s what makes Greatest Hits interesting now. It isn’t just a compilation album. It’s a reminder of a particular moment in pop history when a television actor with a good voice and a lot of charm briefly became the centre of a worldwide musical craze. For those of us who remember those days, hearing those songs again also brings back a time when a simple pop tune drifting out of a radio could travel halfway across the world and still find its way into a Penang coffee shop.


Side 1: Cherish, Doesn't somebody want to be wanted, Daydreamer, Please please me, Could it be forever, If I didn't care
Side 2: How can I be sure, I think I love you, Rock me baby, I am a clown, I'll meet you halfway