Natural Q (自然捲) – C’est La Vie / 魚罐頭 / 30 years old hereafter

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Semaine du 26 août 2008 / Week of August 26th, 2008 Cette chronique hebdomadaire sur la musique indépendante chinoise est diffusée à Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM), les mardis entre 22h30 et 23h30. L’émission complète est disponible sur ce fichier MP3, à partir du lendemain de l’émission. This weekly segment on independent Chinese music is broadcasted every … Continue reading “Natural Q (自然捲) – C’est La Vie / 魚罐頭 / 30 years old hereafter”

自然捲 - C'est La Vie

Semaine du 26 août 2008 / Week of August 26th, 2008

Cette chronique hebdomadaire sur la musique indépendante chinoise est diffusée à Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM), les mardis entre 22h30 et 23h30. L’émission complète est disponible sur ce fichier MP3, à partir du lendemain de l’émission.

This weekly segment on independent Chinese music is broadcasted every Tuesday between 10:30PM and 11:30PM on Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM). The full-length show is available at this MP3 file, starting from the day following the show.

***

1. C’est La Vie
2. 魚罐頭 (canned fish)
3. 30 years old hereafter (live_acoustic)

My friend Jen recently left Montreal and gave me her copy of Natural Q‘s first album “C’est La Vie” that she used to own. It was a big indie hit in Taiwan and Chinese-speaking territories, and is, as it should, out of print. It was the first release by A Good Day Records, now a prominent independent label in Taiwan.

I failed to mention it when I recorded the segment last week, but Natural Q actually released a new album last month.

Natural Q as it was known in 2004 (or 2003, when it started) no longer existed after 2006, when female vocalist Waa and Chico split, with Chico keeping custody of the band’s name, and periodically releasing stuff afterwards. The third song (optional, depending on whether Goo Por Yvonne can fit it all) comes from such album, just called “Recycles”, and from Natural Q’s “solo” period.

I don’t know why they split, anyhow. So enlighten me, if you do know all the gossip.

(Song 魚罐頭, or “canned fish”, is the first song in Natural Q’s still-together second album, C’est La Vie 2.)

Ourselves Beside Me

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Semaine du 19 août 2008 / Week of August 19th, 2008 Cette chronique hebdomadaire sur la musique indépendante chinoise est diffusée à Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM), les mardis entre 22h30 et 23h30. L’émission complète est disponible sur ce fichier MP3, à partir du lendemain de l’émission. This weekly segment on independent Chinese music is broadcasted every … Continue reading “Ourselves Beside Me”

Ourselves Beside Me's Li Yangfan

Semaine du 19 août 2008 / Week of August 19th, 2008

Cette chronique hebdomadaire sur la musique indépendante chinoise est diffusée à Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM), les mardis entre 22h30 et 23h30. L’émission complète est disponible sur ce fichier MP3, à partir du lendemain de l’émission.

This weekly segment on independent Chinese music is broadcasted every Tuesday between 10:30PM and 11:30PM on Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM). The full-length show is available at this MP3 file, starting from the day following the show.

***

Malheureusement, je déménage cette semaine, et mon nouveau service d’Internet (Bell Internet Total, pour ne pas le nommer), après un retard / erreur de livraison, ne pourra être activé avant peut-être de trois à six jours. Au moins, j’ai le dial-up (oui oui, j’ai un modem téléphone dans mon portable), alors je peux au moins vous écrire quelques mots sur Ourselves Beside Me, faute de pouvoir téléverser leur chansons…

Well, the songs that were played tonight were from a recording made by a friend’s friend’s friend (who are Chinese currently or formerly living in Beijing). Apparently, the CBC had a piece on rock music, specifically on the D-22. Despite being a relatively new band, Ourselves Beside Me (sic) are regulars at the live house in the northwestern district of universities (walking distance from Tsinghua and Beida, the two most prestigious Chinese universities). OBM started around the end of 2007, and I think that this recording was made during a show at the D-22 (or the Mao?) in the Spring.

OBM is characterized as a “post-punk revival band”. It does have a really classic sound. One band member was with Hang on the Box, but it sounds nothing like them. It’s more low-key than HotB – very good music to pass out on a couch with a couple of beer bottles under your belt.

I went to the D-22 as well, in mid-April, when OBM opened for Vancouver-based You Say Party! We Say Die! I recorded the whole show with my portable voice recorder. The quality isn’t great, but the recording of OBM’s performance is still up on this previous post. I’ll put up the songs if home Internet will finally arrive.

Sulumi – 10 Billion Times / Trembling Stars / Your Lips

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Semaine du 12 août 2008 / Week of August 12th, 2008 Cette chronique hebdomadaire sur la musique indépendante chinoise est diffusée à Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM), les mardis entre 22h30 et 23h30. L’émission complète est disponible sur ce fichier MP3, à partir du lendemain de l’émission. This weekly segment on independent Chinese music is broadcasted every … Continue reading “Sulumi – 10 Billion Times / Trembling Stars / Your Lips”

Sulumi

Semaine du 12 août 2008 / Week of August 12th, 2008

Cette chronique hebdomadaire sur la musique indépendante chinoise est diffusée à Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM), les mardis entre 22h30 et 23h30. L’émission complète est disponible sur ce fichier MP3, à partir du lendemain de l’émission.

This weekly segment on independent Chinese music is broadcasted every Tuesday between 10:30PM and 11:30PM on Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM). The full-length show is available at this MP3 file, starting from the day following the show.

***

1. Trembling Stars (see artist website)
2. 10,000,000,000 Times, remixed by USK (see artist website)
3. Your Lips

It’s the Beijing Olympics, so I’ll be playing another artist from the Chinese capital. After presenting a number of rock bands, here is something different. Sun Dawei is better known as Sulumi, a chiptune artist living in Beijing. Chiptune, quésséssa? It’s basically the music of 8-bit, of Gameboy, the NES, and the rest of the so-called Third generation video consoles. In fact, Sulumi’s music often sounds like the soundtrack of your favourite Gameboy game…

I particularly like its very energetic songs. It’s perfect for a high-octane programming drive. I tried finding his latest album, “what has happened to me in this world”, but couldn’t find any place online selling it (there must be, because he’s one of the major names in Chinese electronic music circulating within my networks). Its first song, which I am playing tonight, is very good. Unfortunately, you can’t even pirate his CD, if you are desperate. One thing you can do is buy his 2006 album Stereo Chocolate on iTunes. (I really should’ve looked for it in Beijing…)

What I managed to buy in Hong Kong was his collab with Japanese chiptune artist USK, called “As Vivid As Your Lips”. The last song, Your Lips, is from it. It’s a slow saucy song, that feels like a French-kissing session.

Sulumi started Shanshui Records, a record label, which recently organized a tour with Chinese and Japanese electronica artists across East Asia in May and June 2008. It stopped at Videotage in Hong Kong, a venue/art space that was run by Ashley Wong, the next after next guest on Regarde les Chinois (I am moving this week, so don’t expect the next for until later next week…).

Rocking it in the Chinese capital

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Beijing band Guai Li at D-22 Ceci est une traduction d’un texte que j’ai écrit pour le blogue de Bande à part, publié le 8 août 2008. — Last April, I was in East Asia to attend a rock music festival in Kenting, Taiwan, and then made a stop in Hong Kong, where I discovered … Continue reading “Rocking it in the Chinese capital”

Guai Li
Beijing band Guai Li at D-22

Ceci est une traduction d’un texte que j’ai écrit pour le blogue de Bande à part, publié le 8 août 2008.

Last April, I was in East Asia to attend a rock music festival in Kenting, Taiwan, and then made a stop in Hong Kong, where I discovered small record stores.

During the same trip, I also spent two weeks in Beijing. My musical adventures started off quite ironically, as my hosts, an American-Chinese and a Briton, took me to see a concert fronted by You Say Party! We Say Die!, a party punk band from Vancouver, that happened to be touring China at the time!

The venue was called the D-22 and is located in the area close to Beijing University, where its founder, a Newyorker, also teaches finance. We were probably a crowd of a hundred-something people, half of which were foreigners, and the other half, presumably locals, on that Friday night, to fill the D-22, a bar just slightly larger than a closet (at most 10m of width).

Steven O'Shea of YSP!WSD!
Steven O’Shea of YSP!WSD!

YSPWSD, who played on the previous evening at the Mao Live, a venue located at the heart of Beijing, told me their amazement in front of this overcrowded, ever-changing megalopolis, and the fun they had performing in it. “Crowds are very receptive here! We didn’t have to prompt them to mosh: they took care of it for us!”, said Stephen O’Shea of YSP!WSD! before the show.

The opening show only started after 10:30PM, and the main act only came to stage after midnight. The local bands opening for YSP!WSD! were Candy Monster, Guai Li (see top photo), and Ourselves Beside Me (sic). Judging from the exodus of Chinese spectators from the front of the stage, after Ourselves Beside Me’s performance, we quickly took note that they were probably more well-known to locals.

After some research, I realized that one of its members, bassist Yangfan (see photo), was once a member of Hang On The Box, an all-girl punk band, and one of the most well-known to ever come out of China. Separated since their last album, in Fall 2007, which Yangfan already wasn’t part of, HotB was one of the bands followed in the documentary Beijing Bubbles. The German production also introduced us to other well-known bands of Beijing founded between 1996 and 2001, such as Joyside, New Pants, Sha Zi and T9.

Zuoxiao Zuzhou - Tiananmen
Poster of Beijinger Zuoxiao Zuzhou / 左小祖咒‘s 2001 album (左小祖咒在地安门), Overseas version. Seen at the Sugar Jar, for 100RMB.

The scene’s history cannot be told without mentioning Cui Jian, the one dubbed the godfather of Beijing rock. Cui, whose songs were once chanted by the students of Tian’anmen Square in 1989, fled to the mountains of Yunnan, in the country’s Southwest, slightly after the events of June 4th, like many other rockers at the time. Since then, he has been rehabilitated, and now gives concerts in sold-out stadiums around the world, like in San Jose, California, in early May. Tang Dynasty and Black Panther are other well-known names from this period of the 1990s. Other bands in the meanwhile, like Brain Failure, regularly toured Europe and the USA.

Local bands touring around the world: not too rare (when will they decide to make a stop in Montreal?). Lee Clow, an American expatriate, who lived in Beijing for 8 years, explains that the rule is that if they are popular in the West, generally, they would be in only one country! “Joyside, it’s in Germany, and Brain Failure, good for them, it’s in the US!” Clow has himself been part of a band called End of the World, practically the only ska band in Beijing, because of longevity.

In the last days of my stay in Beijing, we talked about the most important music festival in the country, the Midi Music Festival, named after Beijing’s contemporary music school being reported. Usually held around the May 1st public holiday since 1997, in Haidian park, in the universities district, “Midi” gets between 40,000 and 80,000 spectators each year. But this year, as it was the case in 2003 (because of SARS) and in 2004, police asked the organizers to delay their event until the October 1st national day.

Rockland 摇篮 music store @ Houhai, Beijing
Rockland 摇篮 music store and its owner, Xiao Zhan, in Houhai since 2004.

Before leaving Beijing, I went wild at local music shops. More accessible from the city’s centre, there’s the Rockland, established in 2004 in Houhai, a lake around which were built bars and restaurants for tourists and young rich people.

I bought a number of safe bets, like Joyside’s latest, and also the current new hot property Carsick Cars‘ (they were in Time Magazine’s July 17th, 2008 edition) only album. Both were published by the Maybe Mars label. I also picked up an electro compilation, and an album from a folk rock signer named Wan Xiaoli of independant Modern Sky. You might also this type of good self-made albums circulating at 100 copies.

One of the best-known independent record stores in town is the Sugar Jar, located in the 798 art zone, old military warehouses recycled as an art and design zone.

Sugar Jar
Jewel case wall at the Sugar Jar.

Aside from selling CDs, tiny Sugar Jar may also be fitted as a performance room. That’s where Joshua Frank, a McGill student who spends the rest of his year in Beijing, and the experimental rock band Hot & Cold that he completes with his brother, occasionally plays. His brother also happens to be in a band with Carsick Cars’ Shouwang, frequently lauded as China’s new guitar icon.

On the electronic music scene, the name that circulated in conversations and promotional posters was Sulumi (real name Sun Dawei), a chiptune musician. Shanshui, the label that he started, just organized an Asian tour with other Chinese and Japanese artists. Among recommendations in this genre, there was an interesting electronic mix of Yi ethnic minority music.

好听 / 嘘
Pleasant to the ear / Lies!

After throwing all these names at you, what can you do to discover more Chinese indie music? The first thing to do is to look at a Chinese site called Neocha (in English: New-Tea), or listen to its Next web radio.

798
Random graffiti at 798 – the only place in Beijing you will see graffitis!

Brain Failure – Coming Down To Beijing / Call The Police

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Semaine du 5 août 2008 / Week of August 5th, 2008 Cette chronique hebdomadaire sur la musique indépendante chinoise est diffusée à Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM), les mardis entre 22h30 et 23h30. L’émission complète est disponible sur ce fichier MP3, à partir du lendemain de l’émission. This weekly segment on independent Chinese music is broadcasted every … Continue reading “Brain Failure – Coming Down To Beijing / Call The Police”

Brain Failure - Coming Down To Beijing

Semaine du 5 août 2008 / Week of August 5th, 2008

Cette chronique hebdomadaire sur la musique indépendante chinoise est diffusée à Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM), les mardis entre 22h30 et 23h30. L’émission complète est disponible sur ce fichier MP3, à partir du lendemain de l’émission.

This weekly segment on independent Chinese music is broadcasted every Tuesday between 10:30PM and 11:30PM on Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM). The full-length show is available at this MP3 file, starting from the day following the show.

***

1. Coming Down To Beijing
2. Call The Police

Maybe I chose these songs because they were sung in English, or maybe because it was the Olympics starting next week… But no, it’s only because they happened to be on my playlist. I am not naturally a fan of loud punk bands, not in English, or French or Chinese. Occasionally, I’ll hear something punky that I like, or be recommended a band, like this week’s Brain Failure, perhaps one of the best-known bands to come out of Beijing (they toured the US and Europe).

So, the first song, Come Down To Beijing, which is what the world is going to do on Friday. Secondly, Call The Police, because it is a really good energetic song.

(In fact, if you decide to listen to my segment on the radio, you might find, if you comprehend Cantonese, that I don’t say any of that, just because.)

We hope that the first song topic will happen smoothly, and that they won’t need to get to the second (ha-ha).

(Oh yeah, there is also this song called KTV on the same 2007-released album – with Modern Sky. On the album’s sleeve, the lyrics say “He ask me won’t you get some push for me”, whereas on the web – and what you can parse from the song – it’s “He ask me won’t you get some pussy for me”. Identically, someone changed “Won’t you suck my dick in the KTV” for “Won’t you see my daddy in the KTV”…)

Nylas – Stop Shining / Love For Free

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Semaine du 29 juillet 2008 / Week of July 29th, 2008 Cette chronique hebdomadaire sur la musique indépendante chinoise est diffusée à Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM), les mardis entre 22h30 et 23h30. L’émission complète est disponible sur ce fichier MP3, à partir du lendemain de l’émission. This weekly segment on independent Chinese music is broadcasted every … Continue reading “Nylas – Stop Shining / Love For Free”

Nylas / There you are ...my dear Uncle K

Semaine du 29 juillet 2008 / Week of July 29th, 2008

Cette chronique hebdomadaire sur la musique indépendante chinoise est diffusée à Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM), les mardis entre 22h30 et 23h30. L’émission complète est disponible sur ce fichier MP3, à partir du lendemain de l’émission.

This weekly segment on independent Chinese music is broadcasted every Tuesday between 10:30PM and 11:30PM on Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM). The full-length show is available at this MP3 file, starting from the day following the show.

***

1. Love For Free
2. Stop Shining

Two songs that I instantly liked. I am not too quite sure why – perhaps because it’s cute, and it might sound like something that I like here in the West. It’s really simple indie pop music. Stop Shining is some really really cute love song: “Stop shining, I wanna go out and get some fun / Stop shining, I wanna bite you and get some fun”. I paid attention to the lyrics for the first time when I was on my the city bus taking me to the Hong Kong International Airport, that was in turn going to take me home, and thought, gee, couldn’t life be just that simple??

“Love for free”, it’s in Chinese, and I don’t get all the lyrics. I lent the CD containing this song out to one of my friends (maybe it’s _you_?), and can’t quite remember who it was. It’s a compilation called “Grassland Music” (草地音樂同學會), apparently a one or two-time music festival in a small town in Ilan county, on the more rural East coast of Taiwan. And again, if not the lyrics, the title indicates that it’s about innocent innocent love. Twee suckers will enjoy, if not the rhymes, at least the melody.

Ketchup: Hot Shower / I Know

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Semaine du 22 juillet 2008 / Week of July 22th, 2008 Cette chronique hebdomadaire sur la musique indépendante chinoise est diffusée à Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM), les mardis entre 22h30 et 23h30. L’émission complète est disponible sur ce fichier MP3, à partir du lendemain de l’émission. This weekly segment on independent Chinese music is broadcasted every … Continue reading “Ketchup: Hot Shower / I Know”

Ketchup

Semaine du 22 juillet 2008 / Week of July 22th, 2008

Cette chronique hebdomadaire sur la musique indépendante chinoise est diffusée à Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM), les mardis entre 22h30 et 23h30. L’émission complète est disponible sur ce fichier MP3, à partir du lendemain de l’émission.

This weekly segment on independent Chinese music is broadcasted every Tuesday between 10:30PM and 11:30PM on Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM). The full-length show is available at this MP3 file, starting from the day following the show.

***

1. Hot Shower
2. I Know

Two songs for this week’s show. The band (a one-member band) is Ketchup (website), and consists of a guy named Ken Tsoi. Information was kinda scarce on Ketchup (or on Hong Kong indie acts), and I first heard about him on a collab between him, The Pancakes and Chet Lam.

Ketchup’s music is mellow, pleasant, also sung in English. The first song to be presented is Hot Shower, because, wtf, a song on hot showers? It’s from Ketchup’s 2005 album, In Love Again (see picture). The other song was from that collab, called Freeplay.

Wonfu 旺福 – Lady’s Night

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Semaine du 15 juillet 2008 / Week of July 15th, 2008 Cette chronique hebdomadaire sur la musique indépendante chinoise est diffusée à Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM), les mardis entre 22h30 et 23h30. L’émission complète est disponible sur ce fichier MP3, à partir du lendemain de l’émission. This weekly segment on independent Chinese music is broadcasted every … Continue reading “Wonfu 旺福 – Lady’s Night”

旺福 / 青春舞曲

Semaine du 15 juillet 2008 / Week of July 15th, 2008

Cette chronique hebdomadaire sur la musique indépendante chinoise est diffusée à Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM), les mardis entre 22h30 et 23h30. L’émission complète est disponible sur ce fichier MP3, à partir du lendemain de l’émission.

This weekly segment on independent Chinese music is broadcasted every Tuesday between 10:30PM and 11:30PM on Radio Centre-Ville (102.3FM). The full-length show is available at this MP3 file, starting from the day following the show.

***

Wonfu – Lady’s Night

This week, we’re having Wonfu, a band from Taiwan that does in the pseudo-60s, upbeat country-ish (at times) music. They’re fun, and it definitely shows in their music. The song that I will be presenting this week is called “Lady’s Night” (sic).

Carsick Cars: Zhongnanhai 中南海

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Semaine du 7 juillet 2008 / Week of July 7th, 2008 Zhongnanhai 中南海, by Carsick Cars. On tonight’s show (from 22:30), I am presenting a song from Beijing band Carsick Cars. Whoever I hung out with, locals or expats, the name of this band would always come up in conversations. They are apparently appreciated the … Continue reading “Carsick Cars: Zhongnanhai 中南海”

Carsick Cars (eponymous)

Semaine du 7 juillet 2008 / Week of July 7th, 2008

Zhongnanhai 中南海, by Carsick Cars.

On tonight’s show (from 22:30), I am presenting a song from Beijing band Carsick Cars. Whoever I hung out with, locals or expats, the name of this band would always come up in conversations. They are apparently appreciated the most by foreigners, for whatever reason. Are dubbed the Sonic Youth of China (having toured with them in the past).

Zhongnanhai (中南海) is perhaps their most well-known song. Fans throw cigarettes on stage whenever this song is performed live in a show. It primarily refers to a Chinese brand of cigarettes called the same thing, as sung in the song (“Who the hell smoked my Zhongnanhai”), and if you bend it, may refer to the place where Chinese leaders live (sort of their equivalent of the White House). Literally, Zhongnanhai means “Middle South Sea”, which is in fact a lake in Central Beijing, just 200m south-west of the Forbidden City.

My Little Airport: 浪漫九龍塘 + when the party is over, i miss my dear pornstar

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Alors, mon segment musical a été diffusé à Radio Centre-Ville ce soir. Ça sera disponible à chaque semaine sur ce fichier MP3, à partir du lendemain de l’émission (mardi, de 22h30 à 23h30). Je suis vers la 40e minute cette semaine. So, my musical segment was broadcasted tonight. Il will be available every week over … Continue reading “My Little Airport: 浪漫九龍塘 + when the party is over, i miss my dear pornstar”

my little airport / lyfe music - 為你含情

Alors, mon segment musical a été diffusé à Radio Centre-Ville ce soir. Ça sera disponible à chaque semaine sur ce fichier MP3, à partir du lendemain de l’émission (mardi, de 22h30 à 23h30). Je suis vers la 40e minute cette semaine.

So, my musical segment was broadcasted tonight. Il will be available every week over at this MP3 file, starting from the day following the show (Tuesdays, 10:30 to 11:30PM). I’m at the 40th minute this week.

Semaine du 1er juillet 2008 / Week of July 1st, 2008

1. 浪漫九龍塘, by My Little Airport
2. when the party is over, i miss my dear pornstar, by My Little Airport

First song translates as “Romance in Kowloon Tong”, and the second is a reference to the name of Beijing post-punk band Snapline‘s latest album, “Party is over, pornostar”. P of My Little Airport subtly does conversation to Li Qing, the girl bassist of Snapline. Although both songs are sung partly or completely in English, My Little Airport are the first so-called independent band that I’ve ever noticed, when I saw and bought their album in Hong Kong, on a trip three years ago. They are a personal favourites that I could not not play in an introductory segment.

One can definitely characterize MLA as hailing from twee pop on synthesizers. They are part of every pan-Chinese compilation we’ve ever bought, so we do assume that they’re pretty big (in certain circles) over there!

These songs are available free of charge on MLA’s website. They are both featured in MLA’s latest album/collab with Hong Kong independent music icon Chet Lam 林一峰.