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Myo Gyi

Myo Gyi
မျိုးကြီး
Myo Gyi performing with Iron Cross Band
Myo Gyi performing with Iron Cross Band
Background information
Birth nameMyo Min Htay
Born (1976-03-22) 22 March 1976 (age 48)
Rangoon, Burma
GenresHard rock, heavy metal, soft rock
Occupation(s)Singer, music producer
InstrumentGuitar
Years active1993–present
LabelsIron Cross Entertainment

Myo Gyi (Burmese: မျိုးကြီး; born Myo Min Htay on 22 March 1976) is a Burmese rock singer and guitarist. He is the lead vocalist of the popular rock band Iron Cross. Myo Gyi is considered one of the most commercially successful Burmese singers and regarded as the one of "Myanmar's rock icons".[1][2]

Early life and education

Myo Gyi was born on 22 March 1976 in Yangon to parents Tin Maung Htay and his wife Tin Tin Htwe. He was named as Myo Min Htay in his birth certificate. He has a younger brother named Sithu Htay, an engineer. He graduated from Basic Education High School No. 2 Hlaing. He studied zoology at the University of Distance Education, Yangon for three years before attending the final year at Dagon University, where he graduated with a BA in zoology.[3]

Career

He began his music career in 1993 as a lead guitarist in the rock band Ghost Rider. He later joined the rock band Iron Cross, which was founded by Saw Bwe Hmu, a famous guitarist and songwriter. Later Lay Phyu, Ah Nge and Y Wine joined the new aspiring band.

In 1997, he released his solo album "Kyauk-sa Mya". The follow-up album "Lay Byay" (The Wind) in 1998 was a commercial success, gaining him a large following, and planted him as a leading singer in the Burmese music scene.[4][5]

Myo Gyi held his first one-man concert, "Live in Yangon", in 2007. He performed his second one-man concert "Min 90" (Live 90) at the Myanmar Event Park on 7 July 2015.[6][7]

Brand ambassadorships

From 2015 to 2020, he promoted Oppo Myanmar as a product ambassador.[8][9]

Discography

Solo albums

  • Kyauk-sa Mya (1997) (‹See Tfd›ကျောက်စာများ)
  • Lay Byay (1998) (‹See Tfd›လေပြေ)
  • A-khan-na Zon (2000) (‹See Tfd›အခမ်းနားဆုံး)
  • A-pyan Lan (2002) (‹See Tfd›အပြန်လမ်း)
  • Hsant-gyin-bet (2003) (‹See Tfd›ဆန့်ကျင်ဘက်)
  • Neissa Duwa (Nicca Duva) (2006) (‹See Tfd›နိစ္စဓူဝ)
  • Live in Yangon 1 (2008)
  • Live in Yangon 2 (2008)
  • Yu-laik (2010) (‹See Tfd›ယူလိုက်)
  • Pyaung-le-gyin Mya (2015) (‹See Tfd›ပြောင်းလဲခြင်းများ)

Collaborations

  • 95 Myanmar Billboard Top Hits
  • Saw Bwe Hmu Amhattaya (2)
  • Do Ye Chit Thu Mya Ne
  • Yazu Thit
  • LMN
  • Iron Cross Band Unplugged
  • Iron Cross Band Acoustic
  • Iron Cross Band 20th Anniversary
  • Pinle De Ga Myit Mya

TV show

Awards

Personal life

Myo Gyi married to Zin Mar Lwin, also known as Lone Lone Lwin, on 20 May 2000. They have two sons named Lin Thuta Myo and Ant Thukha Myo.[10]

On 14 April 2020, Myo Gyi and his wife tested positive for COVID-19 after attending a church service, amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, which became the first COVID-19 positive public figure in Myanmar.[11]

References

  1. ^ "အွန်လိုင်း TV လုပ်ငန်းကို လေးဖြူနဲ့ အတူ လုပ်နေတဲ့ အဆိုတော် မျိုးကြီး". The Irrawaddy. 31 May 2018.
  2. ^ "A Rocker's Return". The Irrawaddy. 23 September 2008.
  3. ^ "မျိုးကြီးရဲ့ ပြောင်းလဲ ခြင်းများ". Yangon Life (in Burmese). 11 May 2015.
  4. ^ "ပရိသတ်အတွက် စိတ်ကြိုက်ဖြစ်မယ့် သီချင်းတွေ လုပ်နေတဲ့ အဆိုတော် မျိုးကြီး". The Irrawaddy. 1 October 2018.
  5. ^ "အဆိုတော် မျိုးကြီး ရဲ့ ပြောင်းလဲခြင်းများ ဒီဗီဒီ မွေးနေ့တွင် ဖြန့်ချိ". Mizzima. 22 March 2017.
  6. ^ "မျိုးကြီး၏ Live 90 ဖျော်ဖြေပွဲတွင် သီချင်းသစ်အချို့ သီဆိုမည်". 7Day News (in Burmese). 4 July 2015.
  7. ^ "မျိုးကြီးရဲ့ Live 90". Yangon Life (in Burmese).
  8. ^ Thant, Phway Phyu (14 November 2015). "Oppo Neo 7 စမတ်ဖုန်း Product Ambassador ခန့်အပ်ခံရတဲ့ မျိုးကြီး". 7Day News (in Burmese).
  9. ^ "Oppo Neo 7 ၏ သံတမန်အဖြစ်တေးသံရှင်မျိုးကြီးအားခန့်အပ်". www.moi.gov.mm (in Burmese). 15 November 2015.
  10. ^ "Singer myo gyi's wife testimony at Full Gospel Assembly Myanmar". www.fgatulsa.org.
  11. ^ "Myanmar rock icon one of 21 new COVID-19 patients". The Myanmar Times. 14 April 2020. Archived from the original on 22 April 2020. Retrieved 28 March 2023.
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