Get you up to speed: Loud music from parade floats damages antiques at Chaiyaphum museum in Thailand
Music from the Bai Sri Boon parade led to ‘severe damage’ to exhibitions at the Chaiyaphum Ancient Textile Museum on April 22, according to owner Dr Komkrich Ritkhachorn. Display cases were shaken and several antiques were shattered due to the loud noise from approximately 100 parade trucks equipped with giant loudspeakers.
Dr Komkrich Ritkhachorn, owner of the Chaiyaphum Ancient Textile Museum, reported that the Bai Sri Boon parade on April 22 caused ‘severe damage’ to exhibits due to music from approximately 100 parade trucks with loudspeakers. Local and provincial judges inspected the museum to assess the damage on April 24, as researchers from the National Museum Cardiff noted that day-to-day noise can adversely affect museum displays.
Local and provincial judges visited the Chaiyaphum Ancient Textile Museum on April 24 to inspect the damage caused by the parade. Dr Komkrich Ritkhachorn expressed concerns that continued loud celebrations could undermine the meaning of the religious ceremony.
Music blasted from parade trucks so loud it shatters ancient museum artefacts | News World
Music blasted from parade floats shattered several antiques in a museum in Chaiyaphum, northeastern Thailand.
Chaiyaphum Ancient Textile Museum owner Dr Komkrich Ritkhachorn said Bai Sri Boon caused ‘severe damage’ to the exhibitions on April 22.
Dr Ritkhachorn said in a since-deleted Facebook post that as parade-goers passed Chai Prasit Road, the music was so loud it shook display cases.
The cultural researcher blamed the some 100 parade trucks equipped with giant loudspeakers, locally known as rod hae, for the damage.
Photographs showed shattered pottery scattered on the museum floor, with some display pedestals nearly empty.
Dr Ritkhachorn said: ‘Was it worth it to turn this place into the city of rod hae when it causes trouble for people?
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The music, blasted from parade floats and trucks, rattled the museum (Picture: Facebook)

Several artefacts shattered after falling off their pedestals and stands (Picture: Facebook)

Some of the objects were teetering off the edge by the time the floats drove past (Picture: Facebook)
‘I have no objection to the parade. But can organisers reduce the noise level so that it will not cause any damage?’
The 10km-long procession featured more than 150 floats, some more than two metres tall, according to local news outlet Matichon.
The days-long celebration in the Muang district honours Chao Pho Phaya Lae, a Lao immigrant who died fighting in the late 19th century.
Dr Ritkhachorn told the Tourism and Environment News Agency that he has no issue with the Bai Sri Boon parade.
‘If the competition continues based on who is louder and who creates the most impact, ultimately, it’s not just the artefacts in the museum that will be destroyed, but the meaning of the religious ceremony itself,’ he said.
‘What started as an event of faith will gradually become something that local people become weary of and apprehensive about.’

The museum founder said the annual parade should not be banned (Picture: Facebook)
Local and provincial judges visited the museum on April 24 to inspect the damage, Dr Ritkhachorn added.
As many museums have prepared for the worst, like earthquakes and heavy construction, day-to-day noise isn’t one of them, researchers say.
The study by the National Museum Cardiff found that the museum’s own displays were being slowly rattled around by visitors shuffling around or gigs down the road.
Objects may slowly ‘wander’ around because vibrations slowly erode them – an ancient Egyptian statue was caught in 2013 spinning around in its case for several days in Manchester Museum in New Hampshire.
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