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.