Research and Other Investigations from China

2010 Iron Mic Freestyle Battle Finals: Xinjiang Rises Up

Youngsters step up to the mic at the Iron Mic freestyle battle competition at Yugong Yishan in Beijing

The finals for the China Iron Mic freestyle battle competition took place to a packed house at Yugong Yishan this weekend. Winners of three preliminary rounds in Beijing, Guangzhou and Wuhan faced off with MC Majun/马俊 from Xinjiang who earned his slot in the final four through a knockout tournament earlier in the evening. Iron Mic is the oldest and most recognized freestyle battle competition in the country. Some of the greatest MCs in China have battled on stage seeking its crown including MC Webber who won the first three in a row and now oversees the proceedings. This year the man to beat was the Beijing hometown favorite MC Dawei/大卫. I documented his skills in a previous post covering the Beijing preliminary round. He is only sixteen years old, and his rhyming is precocious to say the least. However, the man of the hour turned out to be MC Majun. In one evening he battled his way through a host of characters from all over China with his machine-gun-like flow to clinch a coveted spot in the semifinals where he tore apart MC JV from Wuhan. Before facing off with MC Dawei in the finals the entire place went crazy, and despite MC Dawei’s home field advantage, MC Majun won the crowd over and had them chanting Xinjiang when he spit his final verse.

Ma Jun captures the 2010 Iron Mic freestyle battle crownMa Jun captures the 2010 Iron Mic freestyle battle crown

Young bucks form all over China step up to the Iron Mic freestyle battle finals at Yugong Yishan in BeijingYoung bucks form all over China step up to the Iron Mic freestyle battle finals at Yugong Yishan in BeijingYoung bucks form all over China step up to the Iron Mic freestyle battle finals at Yugong Yishan in Beijing

Young bucks form all over China step up to the Iron Mic freestyle battle finals at Yugong Yishan in BeijingYoung bucks form all over China step up to the Iron Mic freestyle battle finals at Yugong Yishan in BeijingYoung bucks form all over China step up to the Iron Mic freestyle battle finals at Yugong Yishan in Beijing

New York Times: China Music Festival Explosion

New York Times clipping for In China Music Festivals, Hip Rock and the State's Blessing

I should have blogged about this last month, but I only just received a PDF of the New York Times print version of my work on the explosion of music festivals across China. Such an article was a long time coming and received the usual criticisms aimed at mainstream media coverage of the alternative music scene in China from industry watchers such as China Music Radar and Beijing Daze. Obviously it was too short to cover all the historical and social nuances bound up with proliferation of music festivals across China. Unfortunately the New York Times rarely publishes extended think pieces that such a subject deserves. I actually read a longer version of Andrew Jacob’s first draft which was much better, but the editors decided to cut it down as they are wont to do in this day and age – apparently they feel readers can’t last more than a thousand words in a row. Still, I was really happy with the article and thought Andrew did a quality job trying to introduce the China music festival scene to the rest of the world with his insightful descriptions and awesome quotes. My favorite came from Zhang Fan of MIDI fame, “The government used to see rock fans as something akin to a devastating flood or an invasion of savage beasts, now we’re all part of the nation’s quest for a harmonious society.” Some of the other issues Andrew addresses such as the paradox of having government-backed festivals filled with subversive bands as well as the rising commercialism of the entire alternative music scene also needed to be laid out. Yang Haisong, of P.K. 14 fame, really nailed it on the head with his closing comment, “The government used to see us as dangerous, now they see us as a market.” I feel an approach employed by the Chinese state where they try to appropriate cultural scenes rather than empower them through censorship is becoming the norm. It is happening in the contemporary art scene in Beijing’s 798 art district and more and more with bands taking on corporate sponsorships and other branding opportunities. When the artists and musicians are making more money, they have less to complain about and more at risk by creating controversial or outspoken material. It is a savvy step forward by the Chinese state and goes hand in hand with their other attempts to spin media rather than quash it. The Beijing Daze post gets into this quite a bit as well. Still, no matter what, I am a huge fan of the spread of music festivals in China. The only thing that is needed right now is quality production and more bands. The same performers can’t keep recycling through the festivals. A large injection of new musical blood is needed. Hopefully there are more diamonds in the rough amongst all the second-tier cities around China who are just opening up their ears to the latest sounds coming out of Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Wuhan. Otherwise there are still too many reports of badly planned festivals with no toilets and crappy sound systems. Check out these critiques by Helen Feng, Pity the Cool, and Beijing Today. Hopefully we are just experiencing the birthing pains of the China music festival circuit. Also check out this great extended piece on the first musical festival in Nanjing and an extended interview with Scarlett Li, the brains behind the Zebra Festival movement. Unfortunately there is no online slideshow in addition to the video I produced for the New York Times website, so I attached my favorite shots to this post.

Security guards patrol the camping area at the 2010 Zhenjiang MIDI FestivalSecurity guards watch the crowd at the 2010 Zhenjiang MIDI FestivalThe lead singer of Misandao flicks off the crowd at the 2010 Zhenjiang MIDI Festival

Concertgoers like to make statements through fashion at the 2010 Zhenjiang MIDI FestivalThe crowd roars for Miserable Faith at the 2010 Zhenjiang MIDI FestivalConcertgoers burn a Japanese flag while singing the Chinese national anthem at the 2010 Zhenjiang MIDI Festival

Wang Xiaokun performs at the 2010 Hangzhou Zebra FestivalThe drummer for Hedgehog strikes out the beat with her drumsticks at the 2010 Modern Sky Festival in BeijingA concertgoer takes a nap at the 2010 Modern Sky Festival in Beijing

The lead singer of AK-47 gets the crowd riled up at the 2010 Zhenjiang MIDI FestivalThe lead singer of Demerit provokes the crowd into creating a giant muddy mosh pit at the 2010 Zhenjiang MIDI FestivalA kid inspects one of a series of sculptures of metallic musicians at the 2010 Hangzhou Zebra Festival

Concertgoers drink up at the Jägermeister tent at the 2010 Modern Sky Festival in BeijingConcertgoers relax in front of the main stage at the 2010 Modern Sky Festival in BeijingNew Pants perform their song "Sex, Drugs, Internet" in robot costumes at the 2010 Modern Sky Festival in Beijing

Queen Sea Big Shark / 后海大鲨鱼 Releases Wave

Fu Han of Queen Sea Big Shark gets freaky under the black lights during the release of The Future Wave in Beijing

Queen Sea Big Shark / 后海大鲨鱼 released their sophomore album, Wave, to a packed house at Yugong Yishan on the eve of All Hallow’s Eve. The eternally modish band keeps a permanent place in my heart with lead singer Fu Han’s unisuit-cladded-gyrating-stage-presence and lead guitarist Cao Pu’s hard-driving-surf-rock-riffs. Although I might not be the biggest fan of all their dips into electronica, if they are having a good night and hooked into a proper sound system, they will blow the roof off any club in Beijing. Their new album certainly represents a turn into the realm of synthed dance, but you can find their original rock core in tunes like “Back 2 the Future” and “Loop of the Sun”. For now Queen Sea Big Shark continues to move beyond their dive bar roots by headlining major festivals around China and accepting sponsorships from the likes of Converse. Modern Sky have constructed big plans for the band, and they will hopefully help lead a wave of previously underground bands to a larger domestic audience.

Fu Han of Queen Sea Big Shark gets crazy under the black lights during the release of The Future Wave in BeijingFu Han of Queen Sea Big Shark gets crazy under the black lights during the release of The Future Wave in Beijing

Gum Bleed Releases Revolutionary EP: No War But Class War

Gum Bleed rocks out D-22 for the release of their new EP

Gum Bleed just released a new EP, No War But Class War, on October 15. The evening also celebrated their fifth year anniversary as a band. Gum Bleed are, “the youngest and most revolutionary street punx in People’s Republic of China,” according to their website. The lead singer rocks a hardcore, deep-throated growl as he expounds on the problems of the working class and the socioeconomic excesses of a now globalized China. It’s hard to discern what he is singing on stage, but the lyrics are incendiary to say the least. I don’t usually see punk bands openly publicize such lyrical discontent to this extent. On the website they also post separate links to a host of both international (Myspace, iTunes, YouTube) and domestic (Douban, Youku, Renren) media sites – very savvy. Buy some of their badass t-shirts which are also on sale. Here is to another five years of fighting the system. Onward and upward with Gum Bleed!

“Civilization Crime”

Whoa.. Oh..Whoa Civilization crime
Whoa.. Oh..Whoa Civilization crime

We was born in hate and dark
With this modern slavery
Bank and law has bleed white us
Hey what’s the hell, what’s going on

99 for new colony capital
Get paid 1 from the TNC
World free market brings us endless debt
Hey what’s the hell, what’s going on

Welcome to the brilliant world factory
Full of grandeur industrial parks and top airports
Working class pay the liabilities for the whole country
But die in private property social security system

Globalization imperialism , Civilization crime
Corporatocracy failed us, Civilization crime

Hey! look at the country’s GNP
Hey! why you still in terror n’ disease
Hey! wake up the jobless and tear up the reins
Hey that’s the future, keep going on

Globalization imperialism , Civilization crime
Corporatocracy failed us, Civilization crime

“Economy is Fake Anyway”

Struggle turns to market, Politic’s a business
People on high level said: “That’s not enough!”

Covered by the money, Covered by the profit
Greedy meat eater said: “That’s the human nature!”

Cheaper than the machines, Cheaper than the live stocks
We were betrayed by nation but: “Enough is enough!”

Used to be no words, Used to be no faces
We were zero but: “We won’t be silence!”

We won’t calculate anyway
We won’t produce anyway
We won’t buy you anything
We won’t sell you anything

Expose the truth

Cynicism
Egoism
Deferential to yield
Enough for us

We won’t buy you
We won’t sell you
We won’t buy you
We won’t sell you

Snow, lead guitarist for Gum Bleed, gives the stoic lookSnow, lead guitarist for Gum Bleed, gives the pyscho look

Play: Gum Bleed – No War But Class War

Play: Gum Bleed – Liberation Day

Kill Club China Tour 2010: Chiptune Descends on Beijing

Gameboys lay in wait for musical composition during the China Kill Club Tour

The Kill Club China Tour 2010 rolled through Beijing earlier this month and served up an exquisite night of chiptune dance music. Headlined by Sulumi, China’s preeminent electronic artist who also founded Shanshui Records, the tour knocked up six cities around China and featured an international cast of button punchers including USK and Covox. For those of you not in the know, chiptune musicians utilize synthesized sounds created by low-fi sound chips (usually 8-bit) from outdated computers or video game consoles. With special software loaded on cartridges, songs can even be composed live using handheld devices such as the Gameboy. The sound textures and melodies generated produce a unique tone that resonates deeply with anyone who was raised on early terminals such as Atari video game consoles or Commodore personal computers. I am a big fan and even attended the first Blip Festival in New York City back in 2006 which Sulumi also performed at in 2008. Check out the video below for live performances from Sulumi (China), Usk (Japan), and Covox (Sweden).

USK mains the consoles during the Kill Club China Tour 2010The crowd gets into Covox during the Kill Club China Tour 2010

A dancer thrashes about during Sulumi's performance during the Kill Club China Tour 2010Covox mains the consoles during the Kill Club China Tour 2010