Born in the US, 24-year-old Mam says she hopes her music will reach even more people in the homeland of her parents.
The local band from San Jose, Calif., plays original music as well as a cover of the 1960s hit, “Sva Roam Monkiss.”
Mam plays guitar and sings. Her Cambodian-American cousin, Helena Hong, 31, plays bass. Mam says her songs reach two generations of Cambodians and have prompted discussions between the generations about their similarities.
Mam writes and sings original songs that have proven popular with young Cambodian-Americans in search of a voice.
Mam says she hopes her music will reach
more people on this Cambodian tour, but she never expected to find so
many fans here already.
“I thought Cambodians didn’t know who we were, but now that we’re in Cambodia,
we already have fans here,” Mam said between shows in Siem Reap
recently. “They came to the stage and asked us questions. And there
were journalists asking us a lot of questions. So I’m very excited, and
I feel like a rock star.”
The Nov. 22 Diamond Bridge tragedy led
her to write a song dedicated to the victims, called “Diamonds.” The
slow ballad, in Khmer and English, compares the victims of the tragedy
to diamonds that will shine forever.
Fans and new listeners can hear Laura Mam and The Like Me’s on Saturday night at 6 pm in a free concert at Phnom Penh’s Diamond Island. It will be the last show the band has in Cambodia. At least for now.
Source: VOA Khmer
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