我的內壢廠區經驗:1985.7-1986.12 Motorola 獨立廠區;1988.5~1995.5 DuPont 內壢工業區
內壢里是老眷區,我沒多少親身經驗,不過,近7年,元智大學、中原大學都有參與她的社區互動。
元智大學的陳冠華,在2014年出版:【走進內壢裡:以合作取代介入的社區藝術行動】;中原大學的,待查。
2016.8
驚! 民眾行走危險邊緣 都因內壢車站太狹窄(宜青)
桃園內壢車站每到上下班尖峰時段,站內總是擠滿了人潮,根據統計,內壢車站平均一天旅客進出站的數量就高達一萬六千多名,更在全國車站排名裡晉升前20名!站內因為空間狹小,所以就連平時進出也只能靠一條樓梯當作唯一出口。就連行動不便或是推著嬰兒車的媽媽,都得在站務人員親自帶領下才能冒險通過鐵軌。
https://www.peopo.org/news/316717
~~~~~~
30年前,我在內壢的Motorola工廠當經理。在附近租屋---我很後會沒聽王老師的話,在附近買間房子--We Are the World 在寒風中傳唱,四周很寂靜,歌聲未冷卻.....告訴我,我們還是一個世界嗎?
'We Are the World' at 30: 12 tales you might not know
Lionel Richie, Kenny Rogers and others reflect on the superstar charity record's legacy.
USATODAY.COM
'We Are the World' at 30: 12 tales you might not know
Brian Mansfield, USA TODAY6:49 p.m. EST January 27, 2015
(Photo: AP file photo)
3526CONNECT 87TWEET 1LINKEDIN 3COMMENTEMAILMORE
The all-star recording session for We Are the World, the biggest charity single of all time, took place 30 years ago Wednesday.
On Jan. 28, 1985, at A&M Recording Studios in Hollywood, following the American Music Awards, more than 40 artists gathered to record a songLionel Richie and Michael Jackson had written to raise awareness of widespread, life-threatening poverty in Africa. Most of that show's winners — including Cyndi Lauper,Hall & Oates, Bruce Springsteen, Huey Lewis, Willie Nelson, Tina Turner, the Pointer Sisters, Kenny Rogers and the Jacksons — participated.
Inspired by the U.K. all-star charity single Do They Know it's Christmas?, released a few months earlier, We Are the World was released March 7, 1985, and went on to sell more than 20 million copies. The more than $75 million raised by non-profit organization USA for Africa helped to fight poverty on the continent. The song also won three Grammy Awards in 1986, including song and record of the year.
"A great song lasts for eternity," says Quincy Jones, who produced the track. "I guarantee you that if you travel anywhere on the planet today and start humming the first few bars of that tune, people will immediately know that song."
Here are 12 things you might not know about the song and the recording session:
Stevie Wonder, not Michael Jackson, originally was supposed to be Richie's co-writer.
"I was really trying to get in touch with Stevie and couldn't do it," Richie says. "Stevie was touring a lot. He was doing a lot of stuff." A phone call with Jones got him and Jackson involved. "I got Michael before I could get Stevie," Richie says. "We said, 'If Stevie calls me back, we'll get him in. In the meantime, I think we can get it done with Michael.' "
Richie and Jackson listened to national anthems to get in the proper frame of mind to write.
"We didn't want a normal-sounding song," Richie says. "We wanted bombastic, the biggest thing you got." Knowing they needed to create something that immediately sounded important and had global appeal, they prepped for their songwriting sessions by listening to national anthems from several countries, including the USA, England, Germany and Russia. "We put all that into a pot in our heads and came up with a rhythm that sounded familiar, like a world anthem. We wanted people to feel like it was a familiar song. Once we got that — show business, man."
The We Are the World recording session caused Richie to forget the American Music Awards.
Maybe it was just sleep deprivation — after all, the session began at 9 p.m. and lasted 12 hours — but Richie claims to have no memory of hosting that night'sAmerican Music Awards ceremony and winning five awards, including favorite pop/rock male artist. "I walked through that door, and I forgot I had done that," he says. "The group of people in that room was so mind-changing. There's Bob Dylan,Billy Joel — give me a freaking break. I had never in my life experienced anything like that."
It may have been a massive gathering of celebrities, but few other people knew the session was taking place.
Many of the singers arrived in limousines, having just come from the awards show, but not everybody showed up in style. "I think Bruce Springsteen parked his truck in the parking lot of the Rite-Aid or a grocery store that used to be across the street," Richie says. "He parked over there and walked in. He didn't know you could come through the gate." The logistics of such a session would be exponentially more difficult in the era of cellphone cameras and social media. "Today, you couldn't keep that a secret," Richie says. "You'd have to have a full-on runway, and everybody would have to check their phones."
Most of the singers had never heard the song before walking into the studio.
"We did not have MP3s," Richie says. "We had cassettes back then. We had to send it to you, so most of them had not heard the song." After all, Richie and Jackson had just barely finished the song in time for the initial tracking session held a week previous at Kenny Rogers' studio. Even Rogers hadn't heard it: "We didn't know what we were going to sing until that night," he says. Hall & Oates' John Oates, who sang in the backing choir, says, "It had the anthemic quality and the simplicity of melody that made pulling off a giant ensemble like that very easy to do. And it was a room full of amazing singers, so that wasn't exactly a problem."
The choir roster had its roots in Donna Summer's State of Independence.
The choir for Summer's 1982 hit, which Jones produced, included Jackson, Richie, Wonder, James Ingram, Kenny Loggins and Dionne Warwick, all of whom also appeared on We Are the World. "I was on familiar ground," Jones says. "If I hadn't worked individually with over half of these singers before, there was no way I would've signed on."
As one of the song's writers, Richie got dibs on his solo line.
"Quincy said, 'Now, Lionel, where would you like to come in?' " Richie recalls. "I said, 'Are you kidding me? I'm coming in first, so I can get out of the way!' " According to Richie, the session's secret hero was Jones' vocal arranger, Tom Bähler. Before the session, he had listened to the recorded output of each of the soloists, determined their vocal ranges, then identified which melodic phrases best suited their registers. "The parts they assigned fit the vocalists really well," Rogers says. "I couldn't have done the stuff that was done at the end that Steve Perry did. They were incredibly well-laid-out."
When Ray Charles spoke, everybody listened.
"Ray Charles, being who he was, commanded a certain deference and respect from everyone, even though he didn't assert himself in any weird way," Oates says. "He was just standing in the middle, doing his part. Lionel, Michael and Quincy were running the show. It was their song, their production, and everyone was very respectful, trying to make it happen. There were moments when people — and I will not name names because it's not worth it — in the chorus started to put their producers' hats on. They started to say, 'What if we did this?' and 'What if we did that?' Coming up with ideas. It was obvious it was a complicated thing to pull off in general, and having too many cooks in the stew would be a giant catastrophe. Ray, every once in a while, would just pipe up: 'C'mon. Hey. Let's go. Listen to Michael. Let's get this thing done.' He was there to sing, and he sensed that it could go south very quickly. He commanded a lot of respect, and I thought that was very cool."
Bob Dylan was nervous about singing his solo.
In a one-hour behind-the-scenes documentary produced to coincide with the release of We Are the World, there's a surreal scene in which Stevie Wonder sits at the studio piano, imitating Bob Dylan to Bob Dylan to help him get the phrasing for his "There's a choice we're making" solo phrase. "Dylan turned to me and Stevie and said, 'How do you want me to sound?' Richie recalls. "We were all kind of doing it, and we wanted to make sure we didn't insult anybody." Oates, who stood directly behind Dylan while the chorus was recording, remembers him being anxious about singing his solo. "He's not a melodic guy, and it was a very specific melody," Oates says. "I think he felt uncomfortable singing that particular melody, and he worked around it in his own way."
The participants autographed the first page of the sheet music for the song 'We Are the World,' written by Michael Jackson and Lionel Richie. The song was designed to raise awareness and funds for a worldwide hunger relief program, and its international success led the way for the Live Aid concerts later that year. (Photo: Hulton Archive, Getty Images)
Kenny Rogers wanted to get everybody's autograph.
"Once we sang it all the way through and realized how well-thought-out it was, we realized it was something special," Rogers says. "So I took a sheet of music from the session and started getting people to sign it. Once I started, Diana Ross started, then everybody was running around trying to get everybody. It's framed on the wall of my house in Atlanta." Oates, who also got an autographed chart, echoes Rogers almost word for word: "I have it framed in my studio in Colorado. When people come in and see it, they freak. I made sure I got everybody. I even got Ray Charles and Stevie Wonder to sign it. For once, I had the presence of mind to do something like that, and it's one of my most treasured possessions." Jones' signed sheet music hangs in his den: "It always makes me smile when I look at it and start reading those names."
That "Check your egos at the door" sign turned out not to be necessary.
That's what Jones says. "Here you had 46 of the biggest recording stars in the entire world in one room, to help people in a far-off place who were in desperate need," he says. "I don't think that night, that experience, will ever truly be duplicated again. I know and believe in the power of music to bring people together for the betterment of mankind, and there may be no better example of this than the collective that was We Are the World."
USA for Africa is still around.
Thirty years after We Are the World, USA for Africa still works on behalf of communities in Africa. Recent initiatives have addressed climate-change issues, arts campaigns and the shipment of medical supplies to Liberia and Sierra Leone to combat the spread of ebola. Royalties from We Are the World continue to be the organization's primary source of funding. "We still earn, but certainly not the kind of money we earned 25 years ago," says executive director Marcia Thomas, who joined the non-profit in 1986 to work on Hands Across America, another USA for Africa initiative. "Our biggest support in terms of where We Are the World is bought most frequently is not in the U.S. but other parts of the world, primarily Japan and Asia."
We Are the World soloists, in order of appearance:
Lionel Richie
Stevie Wonder
Paul Simon
Kenny Rogers
James Ingram
Tina Turner
Billy Joel
Michael Jackson
Diana Ross
Dionne Warwick
Willie Nelson
Al Jarreau
Bruce Springsteen
Kenny Loggins
Steve Perry
Daryl Hall
Huey Lewis
Cyndi Lauper
Kim Carnes
Bob Dylan
Ray Charles
These people sang in the chorus: Dan Aykroyd, Harry Belafonte, Lindsey Buckingham, Mario Cipollina, Johnny Colla, Sheila E., Bob Geldof, Bill Gibson, Chris Hayes, Sean Hopper, Jackie Jackson, La Toya Jackson, Marlon Jackson, Randy Jackson, Tito Jackson, Waylon Jennings, Bette Midler, John Oates, Jeffrey Osborne,Anita Pointer, June Pointer, Ruth Pointer and Smokey Robinson.
"One of the only things regrettable about this whole 30-year anniversary is that Michael's not here to share his part of it," Richie says. "There was a lot of craziness happening with us and a lot of silliness. I'm just sorry he's not here to share it."
2007.9.13 a love affair with industrial sites
工場
這幾周 都有機會快車經過"台北-苗栗"鐵道旁的建築物和景觀似乎還不至於"看到"工廠蕭條 (據說苗栗很慘 玻璃場關門 八百戶受創...)
尤其是近十來年新竹附近興起的工廠大樓 簡直有些不可思議
上周 特別注意竹北的飛利浦舊址 由於人去廠空至少6-7年 據說地皮約賣了近200億 不過請日本公司處理土地污染 現在簡直可以用"鬼預"形容
20幾年前我知道東京-橫濱等的石化產業都威脅到"名園"
現在應該更糟糕 不過種總是有人在歌誦"工廠文明"
看不見的問題呢
6年前讀村上的"日出國工場記" 相當有意思
我走過台大景觀系的水池之群錦魚
一生中最美的回憶在內壢某工場
它從60年代歷經 Timex/Motorola/日月光等公司.....
For some, a love affair with industrial sites
09/13/2007
BY HIKARI MARUYAMA, THE ASAHI SHIMBUN
CHIBA--Yasuo Kitada finds "nothing romantic" in the familiar view of industrial complexes, so it came as a shock to hear that many others do.
"As I see it every day, the scenery is nothing romantic, is it?" says Kitada, 52, a senior official of Idemitsu Kosan Co.'s Chiba Refinery in Ichihara, Chiba Prefecture.
Recently he discovered, to his amazement, that a growing number of people find the harsh urban setting "thrilling."
His refinery, along with neighborhood steel and other plants, is part of a new tour attraction for those interested not in what goes on inside, but how the facilities look outside.
Such people find irresistible charm in the jagged townscape--the drab factories with their tangle of pipes and forest of stacks. They also admire the way they appear under lights at night.
In short, they have fallen in "love" with factories, or their scenery.
Illustrator Tetsu Ishii is one.
As he gazes down over a petrochemical complex on Tokyo Bay from the 125-meter Chiba Port Tower, Ishii cannot hide his admiration.
"Some may call it an ugly view, but nothing is more thrilling to us who love it," says Ishii, 40, as he takes a picture with his SLR camera.
This spring, Ishii had a collection of his factory photos published by Tokyo Shoseki Co., with text by writer Ken Oyama.
Its title is "Kojo Moe" (In love with factories), the word moe coming from a recent faddish term meaning a deep, at times inexplicable, attachment to something--manga and anime, for example.
Ishii's love for factory-scape started more than 20 years ago when he saw a factory in a science-fiction film as a high school student.
He was instantly inspired, and has since visited one industrial area after another, from Keiyo (Tokyo-Chiba) and Keihin (Tokyo-Yokohama) to Hanshin (Osaka-Kobe) and Setouchi.
"I was moved by the fact that these factories supported our life," Ishii says. "I see functional beauty in them and feel a sense of awe at those huge structures."
Ishii writes about his love of the plants in his blog. An editor with Tokyo Shoseki who read it suggested he publish a book on the subject.
The editor did not expect it to sell. "I thought it was just a hobby for a few people. I wasn't even sure that the book idea would get in-house approval," said the editor, who expected it would sell 10,000 copies at best.
The book, which features photos and tips on how to appreciate factories, had run to 30,000 copies by mid-August.
"Many buyers happen to pick it up from a shelf and decide to buy it on the spot," said an official at a Maruzen bookstore.
In fact, Ishii's love of factories is shared by thousands, and possibly many more.
On the Internet, social networking service Mixi, "Kojo, Konbinato ni Moeru Kai" (club of those in love with factories and industrial complexes) has more than 8,000 members.
Some stay at a hotel just to enjoy a view of factories silhouetted against the night sky, and some take their girlfriends or boyfriends on factory tours.
The Chiba prefectural government jumped on the "factory love" bandwagon.
Its Tourism Division organized a trial one-night, two-day tour of industrial sights in the prefecture this fall. It also created model courses to attract the attention of tourist agencies.
"It may be time we should change from routine tours to ones that show (factory) facilities themselves," said Shigeru Uchida, a senior official in charge of tourism development.
What awakened the prefecture to its untapped tourism resource was a forum in April for corporate, administrative and university officials.
The theme was "Enjoying the night view of factories from a ship."
Satoshi Hachima, 37, an assistant professor of view design at Chiba University, told the participants that many people have increasingly come to enjoy views of factories themselves.
A prefectural official who was listening decided it could add a new angle to industrial tourism.
"By re-appreciating the scenery, we can regard industrial areas as part of a local culture," Hachima says.
Moves like this surprise people like Kitada, who is on the other side of the divide.
Even though he can find nothing thrilling in such views, now so familiar to him, Kitada welcomes the move.
"I think it best if more young people appreciate views of petrochemical complexes in their hometown and choose to work here," he says.(IHT/Asahi: September 13,2007)
CHIBA--Yasuo Kitada finds "nothing romantic" in the familiar view of industrial complexes, so it came as a shock to hear that many others do.
Tetsu Ishii at a petrochemical factory in Ichihara, Chiba Prefecture Hikari Maruyama/ The Asahi Shimbun |
"As I see it every day, the scenery is nothing romantic, is it?" says Kitada, 52, a senior official of Idemitsu Kosan Co.'s Chiba Refinery in Ichihara, Chiba Prefecture.
Recently he discovered, to his amazement, that a growing number of people find the harsh urban setting "thrilling."
His refinery, along with neighborhood steel and other plants, is part of a new tour attraction for those interested not in what goes on inside, but how the facilities look outside.
Such people find irresistible charm in the jagged townscape--the drab factories with their tangle of pipes and forest of stacks. They also admire the way they appear under lights at night.
In short, they have fallen in "love" with factories, or their scenery.
Illustrator Tetsu Ishii is one.
As he gazes down over a petrochemical complex on Tokyo Bay from the 125-meter Chiba Port Tower, Ishii cannot hide his admiration.
"Some may call it an ugly view, but nothing is more thrilling to us who love it," says Ishii, 40, as he takes a picture with his SLR camera.
This spring, Ishii had a collection of his factory photos published by Tokyo Shoseki Co., with text by writer Ken Oyama.
Its title is "Kojo Moe" (In love with factories), the word moe coming from a recent faddish term meaning a deep, at times inexplicable, attachment to something--manga and anime, for example.
Ishii's love for factory-scape started more than 20 years ago when he saw a factory in a science-fiction film as a high school student.
He was instantly inspired, and has since visited one industrial area after another, from Keiyo (Tokyo-Chiba) and Keihin (Tokyo-Yokohama) to Hanshin (Osaka-Kobe) and Setouchi.
"I was moved by the fact that these factories supported our life," Ishii says. "I see functional beauty in them and feel a sense of awe at those huge structures."
Ishii writes about his love of the plants in his blog. An editor with Tokyo Shoseki who read it suggested he publish a book on the subject.
The editor did not expect it to sell. "I thought it was just a hobby for a few people. I wasn't even sure that the book idea would get in-house approval," said the editor, who expected it would sell 10,000 copies at best.
The book, which features photos and tips on how to appreciate factories, had run to 30,000 copies by mid-August.
"Many buyers happen to pick it up from a shelf and decide to buy it on the spot," said an official at a Maruzen bookstore.
In fact, Ishii's love of factories is shared by thousands, and possibly many more.
On the Internet, social networking service Mixi, "Kojo, Konbinato ni Moeru Kai" (club of those in love with factories and industrial complexes) has more than 8,000 members.
Some stay at a hotel just to enjoy a view of factories silhouetted against the night sky, and some take their girlfriends or boyfriends on factory tours.
The Chiba prefectural government jumped on the "factory love" bandwagon.
Its Tourism Division organized a trial one-night, two-day tour of industrial sights in the prefecture this fall. It also created model courses to attract the attention of tourist agencies.
"It may be time we should change from routine tours to ones that show (factory) facilities themselves," said Shigeru Uchida, a senior official in charge of tourism development.
What awakened the prefecture to its untapped tourism resource was a forum in April for corporate, administrative and university officials.
The theme was "Enjoying the night view of factories from a ship."
Satoshi Hachima, 37, an assistant professor of view design at Chiba University, told the participants that many people have increasingly come to enjoy views of factories themselves.
A prefectural official who was listening decided it could add a new angle to industrial tourism.
"By re-appreciating the scenery, we can regard industrial areas as part of a local culture," Hachima says.
Moves like this surprise people like Kitada, who is on the other side of the divide.
Even though he can find nothing thrilling in such views, now so familiar to him, Kitada welcomes the move.
"I think it best if more young people appreciate views of petrochemical complexes in their hometown and choose to work here," he says.(IHT/Asahi: September 13,2007)
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