Preecha Chanapai

Musical artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Preecha Chanapai, more widely known by his stage name, Lek Carabao (Thai: ปรีชา ชนะภัย, เล็ก คาราบาว), is a Thai musician and singer. Chanapai is a member of Carabao, a famous and popular Thai rock band and Phleng phuea chiwit, a Thai protest song band.

Born
Preecha Chanapai

(1955-04-18) April 18, 1955 (age 70)
Othernames
  • Lek
  • Lek Carabao
Occupations
  • Singer-songwriter
  • musician
  • audio engineer
Yearsactive1970s–present
Quick facts Born, Other names ...
Preecha Chanapai
ปรีชา ชนะภัย
Lek Carabao on stage 2022, Carabao's 40-years anniversary tour in The Green Mango Club, Ko Samui
Born
Preecha Chanapai

(1955-04-18) April 18, 1955 (age 70)
Other names
  • Lek
  • Lek Carabao
Occupations
  • Singer-songwriter
  • musician
  • audio engineer
Years active1970s–present
AwardsSeason Awards (1989)
(Best Solo Male Artist, Best Album)
Musical career
Genres
Instruments
Label
WebsiteOfficial website
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Biography and career

Chanapai (nicknamed: Lek; เล็ก) was born in Bangkok on April 18, 1955. He had a deep appreciation for all kinds of musical instruments, even traditional ones like the saw u or the guzheng. But the guitar was his true passion; he loved its sound more than anything else. At the age of 14, he began teaching himself how to play the guitar. With no formal instruction, he looked up to world-class musicians like Carlos Santana and Eric Clapton as his role models.[citation needed]

Chanpai studied at the Uthenthawai School of Mechanics (now Rajamangala University of Technology Tawan-ok: Uthenthawai Campus), where he met Yuenyong Opakul (Aed Carabao), who was one to two years his senior. They have been friends ever since.[citation needed]

Chanpai began playing music as a guitarist while still a university student, performing in various pubs and bars, some of which were off-limits to minors. To get in, he had to wear a wig to disguise himself. He earned a monthly salary of 3,000 baht, which was considered quite high for that time.[citation needed]

After graduating, he became a professional musician. He made his name as the guitarist for The President, a highly popular disco band in the 1970s. Among fellow musicians, he was widely known for his remarkably precise and polished guitar playing.[1]

Chanpai joined Carabao in the second album release in 1982, Pae Khaai Khuat (แป๊ะขายขวด; lit: "The Old Bottle Collector") from the persuasion of Aed Carabao as the guitarist and singer since then.

In 2003, Chanapai starred in the Fan Chan (แฟนฉัน; lit: my girl) as the father of the female lead role character, who has a career as a barber. This film is the most popular and the highest-grossing movie of the year in Thailand.[2][3]

In regards to his personal life, Chanpai married and had two sons nicknames Tod and Fab. He pinned a guitar pick on the right fingernail forever with glue. In addition to being a musician, Chanpai also produced a Carabao-branded acoustic guitar. More recently[when?], he has adopted a pescetarian diet, not eating any meat except fish. He likes to collect bottles of shampoo and liquid soap of various hotels he stays in while on the road.[3][relevant?]

Chanapai is also the inspirational and favorite musician of another Thai famous musician, Pongsit Kamphee.[4][5]

Experience during the October 14 Uprising

Chanpai recalled that although he wasn't deeply involved in politics like his friend Yuenyong Opakul, he had personally witnessed one of the most significant and violent moments in Thailand's modern history, the October 14, 1973 uprising.

At the time, Chanapai was only 16 years old and a student at Uthenthawai School of Mechanics, participating solely as an observer. During the protest, one of his female classmates threw a rock at the soldiers, escalating the situation. The clashes became violent and were reported live on television. His father, who was already ill and resting at home, saw the news and was so worried about him that he went into shock and lost consciousness.[citation needed]

When he returned home and found out, Chanapai and his brother-in-law tried to rush his father to the Siriraj Hospital. But no taxi would accept them. Desperate, he had to block traffic, nearly hijacking a taxi, to finally get one to take them.

Even at the hospital, the violence continued. Soldiers came searching for protesters, most of whom were university students. One doctor helped him avoid arrest by handing him a lab coat to disguise himself.

That same day, his father died shortly after being admitted to the hospital. That night, overwhelmed by grief and exhaustion, he cried for his father's death before falling asleep alongside the other medical students, only to be haunted by dreams of his father's passing throughout the night.

The next day, he walked barefoot back home, passing the ruined streets of Ratchadamnoen Avenue and the Democracy Monument, scars left behind by the protest's violent suppression.

This experience left a profound impact on him, marking his transition into full adulthood and ultimately inspiring his path into phleng phuea chiwit.[1]

This episode of his life was later portrayed in the 2013 film, Young Bao The Movie.[1] His character was represented by Arak "Pe Slur" Amornsupasiri.[6]

See also

References

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