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Moved To New Office!

January 24th, 2012 | By

Tiny Toones will bid farewell to its beautiful Stop Bokor Centre, including the grafittied walls and outdoor dance floor, as it heads approximately seven minutes east to its new home in Chba Ampov. With more class rooms, an indoor dance floor to combat monsoons and a brand new office space, Tiny Toones prepares for 2012.

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Photos above of Tiny Toones staff and volunteers emptying out the old Stop Bokor Centre.

Photos below painting the wall outside our new Centre with our logo.

About Tiny Toones

January 23rd, 2012 | By

Tiny Toones Troupe Returns From Australia

January 18th, 2012 | By

Tiny Toones performance troupe is back from Australia. Jan 8th-18th 2012; Eight dancers (Homie, Fresh, Diamond, Slick, Flex, Tra, Kha, and Tou), three rappers (Beaver, Vouch and Ya), plus founder KK and Management Advisor Romi spent ten days in Melbourne, enduring its famous crazy weather from feeling freezing cold, to spending hot days on the beach.

The Tiny Toones crew choreographed a 90 minute performance under the guidance of KK showcasing their true lives of  growing up on the streets of Cambodia in a post-Khmer Rouge era. Tiny Toones performed five evening FULL HOUSE shows at Chapel off Chapel theatre in Prahran, as well as two matinees and held a dinner fundraiser at Bopha Devi Cambodian restaurant. The crowds were warm and enthusiastic and each show ended with everyone up on their feet.

Tiny Toones at Chapel off Chapel

Tiny Toones dancers workshopped and battled with Bboy Nasa (Australia) and crew and Bboy Katsu (Japan). All footage is up on youtube and linked to our website.

Tiny Toones rappers workshopped with Elf Transporter (rapper) and Monkey Marc (music producer), freestyling and rapping to some funky beats. Footage up on youtube and linked to our website.

Media madness began as Tiny Toones hit Melbourne with a bang. We were interviewed on television by Dylan Lewis on Channel 10 (The Panel) and the Australia Network channel, on radio with ABC Radio Australia and ABC Khmer radio and had a write up in The Age.

In our down time we went to the Zoo to finally see some kangaroos, went in small 4-person aeroplanes over the city of Melbourne and walked the red carpet at a movie premier.

At the Melbourne ZooSt Kilda beach

Thank you to all those who helped put on the show and to those who attended and supported us!

 

Please go to the photos and video section for more.

Phnom Penh Post 21/10/2011

December 1st, 2011 | By

Khmer hip hop kids to go down under
Chris Yates
Friday, 21 October 2011

A group of Khmer hip hop dancers, singers and rappers from local NGO Tiny Toones is hoping to travel to Australia next year and meet up with Aussie retail outlet and music label Obese Records.

Dancers Homie, Fresh, Flex, Kha, Slick, Tou, Diamond and Tra and singers/rappers Beaver, Ya and Vouch are aiming to go with Tiny Toones founder KK for a series of gigs and workshops, in a donor-funded tour.

Tiny Toones is a school for a small group of underprivileged youth in Phnom Penh, but it doesn’t have a typical curriculum.

Sure, they have English and Khmer language lessons, as well as maths and computers, but Tiny Toones also gives kids a chance to study hip hop, through classes in music, art and dance.

Tiny Toones started when founder KK (number 23 on CNN’s People To Watch list) was deported from the United States.

KK was born in a Thai refugee camp and grew up in the US. After returning to Cambodia he used his skills in counselling and drug rehabilitation to help children. But when the kids found out that he was quite well known in the US as a breakdancer, it didn’t take long for them to wear down his reluctance and get him to show them some moves.

General manager Romi Grossberg picks up the story. “Eventually he gave in,” she said. “Then he started having a bunch of about eight kids showing up at his house, dancing every night after work. The word just spread and it got bigger and bigger until he moved into a bigger place, and then in 2007 he got funding to allow it to move out of his house and into an actual centre. His dream was to help the kids with life skills and education, rather than just the dance aspect.”

There is no shortage of people in Australia who are just as keen to see this dream come to fruition. Tirren Staaf is the owner of Obese Records in Australia, a retail outlet and record label that has released music by Australia’s most prominent hip hop artists, including Hilltop Hoods, M-Phazes, and Bliss N Eso. Staaf recently visited Cambodia as a tourist, and immediately fell in love with the country.

He is excited about the possibility of showing the students the Australian hip hop culture, and is well aware of the positive impacts it can have on young people. “We’ve been organising workshops with kids of various backgrounds for years,” he said.

“In prisons, housing commission flats, in regional areas – people involved with Obese would have done hundreds if not thousands of workshops over the last ten years.”

Tirren says he has been in love with hip hop since he was about eight years old, so he can relate to how big an impact it can have on young people. “Hip hop is there as a tool to express yourself,” he said.

“Especially as a kid it gives you an opportunity to better yourself, learn new skills, to build self confidence and self esteem. It’s a very powerful medium.”

http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2011102152284/Lifestyle/khmer-hip-hop-kids-to-go-down-under.html