Posts Tagged ‘ 后海大鲨鱼

Summer Sonic Update: Final Lineup

Now, I don’t know why I’ve been post­ing about Sum­mer Sonic any more than you do. For some rea­son, Mao put me on the email list about it, so I’ve been get­ting the emails. But I do hon­estly think that it’s a great oppor­tu­nity for those bands going, and another step in the right direc­tion for cul­tural exchange between China and Japan, to take eight Chi­nese bands and put them on stage at Asia’s biggest and most suc­cess­ful music fes­ti­val of the year. With all that said, here is the final lineup, includ­ing Mao Livehouse’s bat­tle of the bands winners:

1. Re-TROS
2. Queen Sea Big Shark
3. Muma & Third Party
4. Perdel
5. The Ghost Spar­dac
6. Crys­tal But­ter­fly
7. Run­Run­Loser
8. Nanwu

And despite the fact I have never heard of Run­Run­Loser, I think this is a solid lineup. There’s a good vari­ety of all the biggest gen­res, and all with great bands rep­re­sent­ing China’s efforts. Of course there are bands I think would be bet­ter, but for a first pass at impress­ing Asia, I think China’s done a good job.

Gig Review: Strawberry Day 3!

For me, this felt like a very trun­cated ver­sion of the Straw­berry Fes­ti­val. Last year, I went all three days and while the ticket lines were a night­mare on day one, I gen­er­ally felt pretty good about it. I think that watch­ing the slow dete­ri­o­ra­tion of all the per­fect prepa­ra­tion that goes into a fes­ti­val area is almost as fun as catch­ing the bands. The flip side of that is that when you turn up on day three where everything’s tram­pled and dirty, you don’t feel like you were a part of mak­ing it that way, and it all just feels… unsanitary.

None of this was helped by the alco­hol ban that I didn’t hear about until I got there. I don’t like get­ting drunk off my face at fes­ti­vals, but I like to have a beer on a hot day in the park, so I really dis­liked the ban. Of course, peo­ple still got their beer, and by the time the sun started set­ting, one of the stalls behind the love stage and some enter­pris­ing ayi man­aged to smug­gle in enough beer for who­ever heard about it.

I’m sure the cheng­guan had their rea­sons for the ban — how­ever unfounded they might be — but I won­der if any­one will ever learn that putting rules like that up at a chaotic fes­ti­val? Isn’t really going to work. I went to a fes­ti­val with camp­grounds in Aus­tralia one year where this group of guys had taped goon sacks to them­selves to smug­gle alco­hol on the grounds. Oth­ers filled sham­poo bot­tles with vodka. And that was just because they were stingy bas­tards; there was alco­hol at the fes­ti­val! Never under­es­ti­mate the population’s cre­ativ­ity when it comes to get­ting alco­hol with their music.

In other things non-music related, I was really unim­pressed with the food choices this time around. I gen­er­ally love fes­ti­val food, and China does it really well, but this time just sucked. There were life­less sand­wiches and spaghetti, the oblig­a­tory chuan’r and rou­ji­amo meat sand­wiches, but even the noo­dle choices were unin­spir­ing. Where’s my quail egg chuan’r??

The com­bi­na­tion of turn­ing up late and hav­ing to explore the grounds didn’t make for the best music-seeing expe­ri­ence, I must admit, but I did get to see some solid favorite acts of mine. First were Life Jour­ney. I went down to the front-ish for a while, but after get­ting burned in the sun and wind, and real­iz­ing that they were going into the bal­lad sec­tion of the show, I moved back. I’m not dig­ging their cur­rent sound as much as I used to; it’s all feel­ing a lit­tle bor­ing to me, so I hope they make some upbeat tracks soon.

Later on was Zhou Yun­peng, the blind folk artist who seems to have cap­tured everyone’s heart. Last year he per­formed at the smaller Love Stage, but this year he was at the main stage, the Straw­berry Stage. The crowd was incred­i­ble, and the dif­fer­ence was clear. Last year, every­one sat in front of the stage qui­etly with some peo­ple in the back stand­ing on the con­crete. This year, the crowd stretched on for ages, every­one stand­ing and singing along. It was inspiring.

I also got to see all of Hang­gai’s per­for­mance, which reminded me just how much I love them. I was with a friend of a friend from Mon­go­lia, and he said they were kitschy and he didn’t like them because they were just revamp­ing old folk tunes and doing noth­ing orig­i­nal. While I think it’s a valid point, that doesn’t negate the fact that Hang­gai rocks. They have an incred­i­ble stage pres­ence and energy that just doesn’t show any­where else. Their recorded tracks might be great, but their live per­for­mance is where it’s at. No won­der they’re tour­ing the world these days.

We capped off the evening with a brief look-in at the Queen Sea Big Shark per­for­mance, which was as much flash­ing lights and bright red cos­tumed as you’d expect it to be. They’re play­ing to such huge audi­ences at these fes­ti­vals, it never ceases to amaze me that they can play smaller venues with­out a hitch.

Unfor­tu­nately, I didn’t get to see a lot of the minor acts, but I did enjoy the inclu­sion of the Tai­wan stage. When I sat down on the grass near it to eat lunch, I didn’t know what stage it was (by day three, almost all the flags were taken down from hav­ing been ripped by the wind), but as soon as the young woman on stage started singing, I knew that it was the Tai­wan stage. Nobody makes adorable indie pop quite like the Taiwanese.

On the whole, I would def­i­nitely say that I enjoyed myself. There were some draw­backs, atmos­pher­i­cally, but the music was still good, as was the com­pany, so we made the best of it. And some­times, just hav­ing some­one to bitch with about not hav­ing any beer is just as enter­tain­ing as shar­ing a beer with them.

Modern Sky Bands vs The World

Mod­ern Sky just sent out a spec­tac­u­lar EDM about their bands’ upcom­ing trips over­seas, so I thought I would pass on the news. While this blog is about bands play­ing in Bei­jing, I sup­port get­ting more Chi­nese music out to the rest of the world, and the fol­low­ing Mod­ern Sky groups are really tak­ing on the world.

First of all, they men­tioned the Re-TROS/Gang of Four tour in Aus­tralia, which has been reported on in for­eign media such as Faster Louder (a favorite site of mine back in Aus­tralia), The Vine, and The Dwarf. And if you have a VPN, you can also check out a pod­cast inter­view with FBi’s Radi­ant (this page also con­tains a pod­cast with my ex-boyfriend’s band, creep­ily enough). They got some great write-ups, and as much as Re-TROS is not my thing, I’m really happy for them and for what it means for Chi­nese bands to follow.

Next, they announce that Queen Sea Big Shark will be head­ing to SXSW this year! They will be per­form­ing four times, at the IODA, Mike Galaxy/Band, Bill­board Mag­a­zine and Rolling Stone Show­cases. Con­verse is foot­ing their bill. Their new promo pic­ture is amaz­ing and I can’t wait to hear the recep­tion they get out of Texas.

Then, some­thing we also already knew, that New Pants will be play­ing at Coachella this year. They’ll be head­ing up against some big names like The Strokes, Kanye West, Duran Duran, PJ Har­vey, and much more. I’ll be inter­ested to see reviews of this one. The EDM also men­tioned that there will be New York gigs announced soon, so I’ll keep my eyes open for that.

Last but not least, they revealed that Hedge­hog will be going on tour in the US with Xiu Xiu in Sep­tem­ber. This isn’t sur­pris­ing, as Xiu Xiu has been friends of Mod­ern Sky fes­ti­vals for ages. Hedge­hog has been over to the States before, so it will be inter­est­ing to see if they get a sim­i­larly warm wel­come this time.

Modern Sky Festival: Day One

Before I get stuck into the review of the bands I saw at this year’s Mod­ern Sky, I’d just like to say that, across the board this was a far bet­ter effort than last year. Even though Chaoyang Park was much closer to me per­son­ally, and despite the fact — or per­haps because of it — that Mod­ern Sky has put on more fes­ti­vals this year that I’m sur­prised any­one on their staff can still stand let alone set up stages and stalls, this one went off with­out a hitch. The hor­ren­dous lin­ing up issues that we expe­ri­enced at Straw­berry ear­lier this year weren’t present at all, either, and though they’d run out of sched­ule book­lets to hand out on the third day, every­thing else seemed to work out just fine. There was beer, good weather, and great atmos­phere — what more could you ask for?

Well, here’s what I got:

Read more

Strawberry Festival Highlights!

Photo from 草央♥ on Douban

Straw­berry Fes­ti­val was, quite sim­ply, an amaz­ingly good time. There are things I would change but there are more things I wouldn’t, and cou­pled with the good luck of the first warm sunny days we have had in this city since, oh, Sep­tem­ber last year, it made for one of the best music fes­ti­val expe­ri­ences of my life. And I don’t say that lightly.

But of course, a three-day fes­ti­val is far too long to sum up, so here I’ll give you the high­lights from each day, fol­lowed at the end by some things to remem­ber. If I missed any­thing, or if any atten­dees read­ing have a dif­fer­ent opin­ion, I encour­age every­one to com­ment! Fes­ti­vals are large places, and every­one expe­ri­ences the same days dif­fer­ently, so please! Com­ment away.

So with­out fur­ther ado… a Read More link. (Because this got way too long.)
Read more

Year of the Tiger: Who to Watch

Being a gig goer in Bei­jing for Chi­nese New Year has been a bit of a sad affair. For the week lead­ing up to and the week of the new year hol­i­days, there was lit­tle play­ing and noth­ing inspir­ing. The only thing that the hol­i­day has been good for is pre­dic­tions in the expat media of bands to watch in the upcom­ing lunar year — com­plete with “Eye of the Tiger” puns.

The most inter­est­ing of all the expat arti­cles was, how­ever, the one in Time Out, which took the opin­ions of lots of peo­ple in the indus­try — from venue man­agers to record label exec­u­tives to music school founders. Though these opin­ions were, of course, slightly biased towards the label’s artists or the venue’s pro­moted bands, both Pet Con­spir­acy and Nanwu got nods from peo­ple out­side of their inter­ested parties.

Inter­est­ing news also fil­tered through this arti­cle. Jiang Nanyan from 13 Months Records reported that one of my favorite groups, Shan Ren, are get­ting an image revamp this year, while Shen Lihui from Mod­ern Sky con­firmed that top bands New Pants, Queen Sea Big Shark, and Re-TROS are releas­ing new albums “soon”. Shen Lihui also noted electro-pop group Big­ger Bang, also pop­u­lar with the Time Out pun­ters, and I have to say that given Mod­ern Sky’s track record, I will def­i­nitely be keep­ing an eye out for them.

Here are the upcom­ing gigs for these bands:

Big­ger Bang! play­ing with Free The Birds (Ziyo) and Chas­ing Star, March 8 at Yugong Yis­han.
Pet Con­spir­acy play­ing March 26 at Yugong Yis­han.

Shan Ren and Nanwu have no upcom­ing gigs, but we should be hear­ing from them soon if Jiang Nanyan is right.

ETA: You can now read the arti­cle online for your­self here. Check it out! (Thanks, Jennifer!)

Links: Articles, News, and More

Just shar­ing a few links, because I’ve got too many stored up and not enough time to go into any depth about most of them.

1. rock ‘n roll crosstalk & the revival of a uniquely chi­nese art form from Neocha EDGE
This is a great look at not only the fusion move­ment in mod­ern Chi­nese music, and the fan­tas­tic band Nancheng Brother, but also a brief his­tor­i­cal overview of one of China’s most inter­est­ing enter­tain­ment tra­di­tions — the crosstalk. If you’ve ever been in a taxi and heard a strange radio­play with two men talk­ing rapid-fire, and your taxi dri­ver starts to laugh, it’s most likely a cross-talk piece. The his­tory of that, and how Nancheng Brother winds it into their musi­cal reper­toire, makes for an inter­est­ing piece.

2. Anar­chy in the PRC from foreignpolicy.com
For­eign Pol­icy mag­a­zine is not where you’d look first for an arti­cle about Chi­nese punk music. But if you’re up for a refresher course, and ogling a few of Matthew Neiderhauser’s bril­liant D-22 shots, the cap­tions on these few pack a def­i­nite punch. It reminds you what it means to be liv­ing in a city with a real, liv­ing, and impor­tant punk scene.

3. sing for china: some reflec­tions from china music radar
An inter­est­ing look at last year’s Mod­ern Sky tour of the United States. The part I found most fas­ci­nat­ing was the fact that these groups — courted and touted by one of the largest Chi­nese indie music labels — never really had any expe­ri­ence trav­el­ling with their own equip­ment. In stark con­trast to every­thing I per­son­ally ever grew up know­ing about rock and roll — the story of the long road, the tour bus, the drag­ging equip­ment, com­plete with 1970’s haze à la Almost Famous — it seems that the Chi­nese groups were miss­ing an inte­gral part of their upbring­ing. But who can blame them?

4. queen sea big shark + con­verse = “let’s play” mv (heads up from Neocha EDGE)
Check out Queen Sea Big Shark’s new mv (music video) for their song “Let’s Play” here. The inter­est­ing thing about this video — and, indeed, the song — is that you expe­ri­ence it for the first time and it’s def­i­nitely got the marks of a QSBS song, and the style of the video is very them. How­ever, a large por­tion of the lyrics, ideas for the video, and even some extras in the video are crowd-sourced from Con­verse. Mak­ing this song, and this video, not just a prod­uct of QSBS, but some­thing much more indica­tive of their audience.

5. asia’s neglected music con­sumers from china music radar
This is a repost of a really inter­est­ing arti­cle from Typepad-blocked MIDEMNET about “Music Apartheid”, which describes the ostra­ciz­ing of the Asian music con­sumer mar­ket. Basi­cally, it talks about how legal online out­lets (like iTunes Music Store and Ama­zon MP3 down­loads) aren’t really help­ing bat­tle online piracy and offline boot­leg­ging of music by restrict­ing out­side (and largely Asian) pur­chas­ing of dig­i­tal music. It’s an inter­est­ing and in-depth read for any­one, even gen­er­ally con­cerned with DRM and new media policy.