amazing news.. PFMB is a trend setting anthem..

ARR rocks and rules!

On 3/18/07, Gopal Srinivasan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

  Full time music professionals, the band played 13 songs from different
genres - be it rock and
roll, R and B or country music. They also sang Indian music composer A.R.
Rahman's 'Pray for me
brother'.

'We came down to India three weeks before this visit and picked up A.R.
Rahman's music CD. The
song 'Pray for me brother' struck a chord in us and we felt that this
might help us connect to
the audience here,' said Major Daniel Price, the commander of the band.

-----------------------------------

Full article:

Delhi dances to US Air Force band's tunes
From correspondents in Delhi, India, 04:33 PM IST

When they came on the stage, armed with guitars and dressed in smart
uniforms, the audience sat
quietly, not quite sure what to expect. But the US Air Force band's
performance here ensured
that Delhites had a rollicking time by belting out popular Bollywood
number 'Rock and Roll
Soniye'.

The seven-member band called Pacific Trends won over the hearts of
audiences at the American
Center here Thursday evening with their perfect 'rock star' slides across
stage. They even
managed to pull a few music enthusiasts on stage to join them in the
popular Hindi movie number
from 'Kabhi Alvida Naa Kehna'. Many left their seats and jived right on
the aisles!

In India to take part in the Indian Air Force's (IAF) platinum jubilee
celebrations, the band
is one of six air force bands from across the world that will give a
musical treat to mark the
occasion.

Full time music professionals, the band played 13 songs from different
genres - be it rock and
roll, R and B or country music. They also sang Indian music composer A.R.
Rahman's 'Pray for me
brother'.

'We came down to India three weeks before this visit and picked up A.R.
Rahman's music CD. The
song 'Pray for me brother' struck a chord in us and we felt that this
might help us connect to
the audience here,' said Major Daniel Price, the commander of the band.

And their songs surely did connect, especially the Bollywood one.

'It's fantastic! Initially I doubted whether they would be able to pull it
off well, but they
sang the number with confidence ... and they seemed to enjoy as much as we
did,' remarked
Ankit, a student who attended the show.

With an aim to promote the air force, connect with the people and boost
the morale of soldiers
fighting on foreign soil or on their own, the air force band of any
country is basically a
group of professional musicians.

Having performed at Kolkata and Chennai before coming to Delhi, the
vocalist and the only woman
band member of Pacific Trends, Staff Sergeant Felita A. Rowe said: 'We
simply loved the
response of the Indian audience. That's the magic of music, it cuts across
barriers. Being able
to feed my family and do something I am passionate about, which is
singing, under the
protective umbrella of the air force, is a dream come true for me.'

Pacific Trends, which is 60-years-old, will perform at the Indian
Institute of Technology (IIT)
in the capital Friday before taking part in the IAF's weekend
celebrations.

http://www.indiaenews.com/art-culture/20070316/43387.htm

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