Jump to content

Yone Lay

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 103.25.240.127 (talk) at 19:43, 12 October 2023. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Yone Lay
ယုန်လေးဘောမ ဘောမယုန်လေး
Yone Lay in 2019
Born
Aung Phone Kyaw

(1985-09-23) 23 September 1985 (age 39)
EducationUniversity of Yangon
Occupation(s)Singer-songwriter, actor, director
Musical career
GenresRap, hip hop
InstrumentsVocals
Years active2001–present

Yone Lay (Burmese: ယုန်လေး; lit.'little rabbit', born Aung Phone Kyaw on 23 September 1985) is a Burmese singer, actor and director.[1] He has achieved fame as a singer and actor.[2][3] In August 2020, he was highly criticized after releasing a music video depicting the assassination of Myanmar's de facto leader and State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi.[4]

Early life

Yone Lay was born on 23 September 1985 in Yangon, Myanmar, to father Swe Tint and his wife Khin Saw Mu, a former teacher.[3]

Career

Yone Lay began his music career in 2001 as a singer in the underground music industry and sang his own songs. In 2005, he joined a native underground hip hop crew, TARGET, and released a number of songs and mix-tapes, collaborating with TARGET's members. He participated in the group albums Min A Twat 1 (For You 1) in 2005 and Min A Twat 2 (For You 2) in 2006. One of the songs from the Min A Twat 2 album, "A Chit A Twat Kan Ma Kaung Khae Thu", a duet with L Seng Zi which gained him nationwide recognition, has been one of the all-time hits in his career. In 2008, he released a solo album, Like Khae Top. His second solo album, Eain Ma Paing Yin Gawli Ma Lok Nae, was released in 2010 and produced some huge hits. Many music industry records have followed since then.[3][5]

Controversy

On 4 August 2020, Yone Lay released a music video titled "The Land of Ours (Time to Unite Myanmar)" which lasted over 13 minutes. It was first posted on the Facebook pages Taythanthar and Original Gangster. Within a few minutes, people from across the country – including singers, actors and politicians – were criticizing the video because it depicted the assassination of Myanmar's State Counsellor, Aung San Suu Kyi. Near the end of video, army officers are seen bursting into a meeting to assassinate Aung San Suu Kyi, until Senior General Min Aung Hlaing comes to the rescue.[6]

The video was directed and produced by Yone Lay. Famous singers like Htoo El Lynn, Chan Chan, Moe Moe, Poe Mi, Yarwana and over 20 others contributed to the song. Chan Chan explained that they did not know that their work and contributions will be used in such a way. Yone Lay was criticised for aligning himself with the military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party, with suggestions that the video was even funded by the former government.[6]

Aye Kywe, acting director-general of the Information and Public Relations Department, said the Ministry of Information would investigate to see whether production of the video violated the regulations of the ministry or the Myanmar Motion Picture Organization, as well as the COVID-19 guidelines issued by the Ministry of Health and Sports.[4]

For his video creation, Myanmar Motion Picture Organization ordered Yone Lay to pause artistic movements for one year in August 2020.[7]

Filmography

  • Ko Tha Mine Ko Yay Kya Thu Myar (2012)
  • Lu Gyan Ta Yout Yae Diary (2018)[8]
  • Original Gangster 2 (2017)[9]
  • Special 9 (2018)[10]
  • Beware, It's Dangerous (2019)[11]
  • Ko Tha Mine Ko Yay Kya Thu Myar 2 (2019)[12]

Discography

Solo albums

  • Like Khae Top (2008)
  • Eain Ma Paing Yin Gawli Ma Lok Nae (2010)

Group albums

  • Min A Twat 1 (2005)
  • Min A Twat 2 (2006)

References

  1. ^ "Hip-hop that should be stopped". The Myanmar Times. 15 December 2013.
  2. ^ "ထူးအယ်လင်း၊ ယုန်လေးတို့သီဆိုထားသည့် Original Gangster Sout Paww 3 ရုပ်ရှင်ဇာတ်ဝင်တေး (ရုပ်သံ)". Democratic Voice of Burma. 31 January 2020.
  3. ^ a b c "ငယ်ဘဝလေးအကြောင်း ရင်ဖွင့်လာတဲ့ ယုန်လေး". Myanmarload (in Burmese). 6 February 2018.
  4. ^ a b "Myanmar Ministry to Probe Whether Pro-Army Video Was Shot in Violation of COVID-19 Ban". The Irrawaddy. 6 August 2020.
  5. ^ "အက်ရှင်နဲ့ ခပ်ကြမ်းကြမ်းကားတွေ ဖန်တီးချင်တဲ့ အဆိုတော် ယုန်လေး". The Irrawaddy. 10 September 2018.
    - "သရုပ်ဆောင်ယုန်လေးနှင့်တွေ့ဆုံခြင်း". The Standard Time Daily (in Burmese). 9 September 2018.
    - "အက်ရှင်ထက် အချစ်ခန်းရိုက်ရတာ အခြေအနေဆိုးပါတယ်ဆိုတဲ့ ယုန်လေး". Kumudra (in Burmese). 14 August 2018.
  6. ^ a b "Music video with controversial message gets slammed by netizens". The Myanmar Times. 6 August 2020.
  7. ^ "ကျပ်သိန်း ၇၀၀၀ ယူ ရိုက်ကူးသည်ဆိုမှု ယုန်လေး လာရောက်ဖြေရှင်း". The Myanmar Times (in Burmese). 7 August 2020.
    - Nyan, Zwel (8 August 2020). "ယုန်လေးကို ရိုက်ကူးခွင့်တစ်နှစ်ပိတ်ပင်". 7Day News (in Burmese).
  8. ^ "Lu Gyan Ta Yout Yae Diary". Myanmore. 24 August 2018.
  9. ^ "Original Gangster 2". Myanmore. 7 July 2017.
  10. ^ Aung, Nyan Lynn (20 September 2018). "Laughter completely engulfs the sound of gunfire in 'Special 9'". The Myanmar Times.
  11. ^ "Beware, It's Dangerous". Myanmore. 26 June 2019.
  12. ^ MediaGroup, AsianFame (8 January 2018). "ကိုယ့်သမိုင်း ကိုယ်ရေးကြသူများ – ၂ အတွက် ရင်အေးခဲ့ရပြီဖြစ်တဲ့ ယုန်လေး". Popular News Journal (in Burmese).