Archive for the 'Music' Category

can we get someone like him? The Paul Potts story in China

I recently received an email from a young Chinese friend who mentioned being inspired by amateur Welsh opera singer Paul Potts, who won a British idol singing contest last summer.   I’d never heard of Potts, but a quick Baidu search turned up a wealth of Paul Potts videos on Baidu video and elsewhere.  Apparently the story of the nerdly amateur with a heart captured the imaginations of the British and American press as well as the Chinese (it can’t have hurt that he sells mobile phones!).  Here’s an excerpt from a blog post written by a Canadian Eastern European blogger:

with his hobbit-like pudgy figure, his crooked front teeth and his
misty-eyed sadness, he personifies everyman. His talent is not
propelled by surgically-altered, photoshop-ed good looks; his stories
of low self-esteem and being bullied in school ring true to all of us
who have been there. As a true underdog, he is one of us; he represents
the millions of average looking people who go about their mundane days,
secretly harbouring talents that they do not believe would ever take
them anywhere.

Everyone loves an underdog, but as with many things from abroad that show up in China, the Paul Potts story lingers on in Virtual China as a cultural reference for Chinese netizens to explore their feelings about their own country.  In this case, some of what the story is about is the horror of China’s popular "idol" TV talent contests and some distrust of how "open" a television show can really be in China today.  As my friend wrote, "many Chinese expressed their recognition for Paul Potts and meanwhile disappointment toward similar Chinese shows, declaring that Paul can never make it the same way in China."  Some online comments:

这才是选秀的真谛,中国的选秀,拼的都是背景和后台。

Now this is the real essence of a talent show.  China’s talent shows are all based on background and what goes on behind the scenes.

中国的选秀是国情决定的,出不了这样的人。

China’s talent shows are determined by our national conditions. Someone like this could never emerge from them.

…人家选修选出来的是paul potts,我们选出的是李雨春,多大的差距啊…要是英国人看我们选出的李愚蠢,只会觉得我们中国人的审美观和兴取向都有问题

…They elect Paul Potts, and we elect Li Yuchun, what a difference!…If British people saw our Li Yuchun the only thing they’d think is that we Chinese have problems with our aesthetic standards and orientation.

对!这才是平民选秀,因为这不是在中国。。。

Yes!  THIS is what you call selection by the people.  Because this is not taking place in China…

有谁认为国内的选秀节目能比上这个“胖子”??? 我认为国内所有选秀节目的冠军加起来也不如他
不仅仅是震撼人心  更重要的是他的那种精神 那种坚持不懈的精神……  、Paul Potts    厉害!!!!

Who thinks that our Chinese contestants could compete against this "fatty"??? In my opinion, all the Chinese idol shows’ contestants all put together aren’t as good as him, not only in terms of sheer impact, but even more importantly it’s his spirit, that never give up spirit.  Long live Paul Potts!!!

Featured artist: Mayming

Featured art!

Mayming (= Semay Wu and Seaming To, two British-born Chinese musicians) collaborated with Michael England (who did the visuals) on "a short movie to a virtual film festival presented by Toshiba in Second Life":

Michaelengland13
Michaelengland14

Michael describes these as stills from an improvisational audio piece: "…I treated it as
a game almost, with each of the artists entrapping each other with
spells. At each stage as they ascend to various levels, the characters
face spirits or witch versions of each other, hypnotising themes
through music, trapping them in prison balls, et cetera. The piece
submitted is the trailer for a live composite performance piece that
we’ve been applying for funding for. Hopefully, it will be a
large-scale, live cinematic piece."

Via PingMag’s feature on Michael England.

You can also check out mayming’s MySpace page for two sample soundscapes.

taking karaoke online: singing cute songs in China

If you like Chinese teens singing online, or if you just want to see what a lot of young women seem to be using the Internet for in China, you’ll want to check out Mingming1986’s YouTube channel. It makes sense, of course, given the Chinese love for karaoke. 

Mingming86 is a Hong Kong video collector who specializes in webcam karaoke by Chinese young women, mostly with enormous eyes and girlish voices.  She has over 3,000 subscribers and has uploaded almost 800 videos. Mingming86 also has some video collages of still photos of similar looking girls set to music, and a random smattering of humorous videos from the mainland and Japan.  It looks like she’s pulling these off of random Chinese websites, since she has a note that says: If you see yourself in any of these, let me know and I’ll delete it immediately!  Here’s a typical one titled Chinese girl [Hebei girl - Kungfu (with eyes that pull you in)]:

Mingming86 has hundreds of these things, with girls identified sometimes by name and mostly by region.  Here’s a "Gansu girl."

chinese/english youth street culture mag

My colleague Jason Tester found this on CoolHunting.com: it’s called Rack Magazine.  It appears to be going for a young male audience and has a half-dressed woman kneeling down and…looking into an open oven (an oven! very "chinese street")…on the homepage.  Adidas is a prominent advertiser, but aside from that there’s no sign of who’s behind it.  Clearly I’m not the demographic they’re aiming for, but what’s with the different English opening pitch and the Chinese opening pitch? Here’s the English:

WANT TO KNOW WHAT’S COOKING IN ASIA?/THEN OPEN YOUR EYES AND FEAST ON RACK/ FOR THE LATEST IN STREET CULTURE, FASHION,/ CULTURE, DESIGN, MUSIC, GRAFFITI, AND GENERAL MAYHEM/BILINGUAL/HOT/FITS RIGHT INTO YOUR BACK POCKET SO YOU CAN/EASILY TAKE IT HOME AND STARE AT IT FOR AS/LONG AS YOU WANT…/EVERYTHING A RACK SHOULD BE…/ASIA.THE WORLD.THE RACK

And here’s the Chinese, translated:

RACK IS A CHINESE-ENGLISH BILINGUAL MAGAZINE COVERING GLOBAL STREET CULTURE, WITH AN EMPHASIS ON ASIAN-INFLUENCED YOUTH CULTURE. RACK IS THE ONLY MAGAZINE THAT CAN FIT IN YOUR JEANS’ BACK POCKET OR IN AN LV BAG. SURVEYS HAVE SHOWN THAT ANY OBJECT THAT FITS IN A POCKET IS A GOOD THING. CHINESE BROTHERS SHOULD PAY SPECIAL ATTENTION, YOUR HANDS ARE TO BE USED FOR CARRYING YOUR GIRLFRIEND’S LV BAG.

huh? If it’s all about chinese men, what’s with the focus on the LV bag?

The first issue features a piece on a new kind of street funk from the Brazilian favelas (it will be interesting to see what the "asian influence" is); an interview with fashion photographer Klaus Thymann; an article on V-Nutz, a Shanghai hiphop producer; and the guy below, a TCM doctor who walks around all day with pearl-decorated needles in his face. 

Rack

“music for buying dark landscapes”: The Contractors

Contractors

Check out one of Beijing/San Francisco artist Rania Ho’s relatively new projects: The Contractors.  The group makes music, videos, photos, concerts, and apparently can even lead a mean art tour (see their latest video). Their MySpace page is not to be missed.

We are inspired by other superstar building contractors, high-ranking
government officials, housing bureau officials, land management
officials, special interest lobbyists, investment bankers, venture
capitalists, media moguls, real estate investors, internationally
renown architects, construction crews, welders, plumbers, electricians,
bricklayers, cement mixers, stone cutters, various migrant workers.

Our aim is to rule them all.

Chinese electronica

Check out Shanshui Records website, where you can find MP3s, news about shows, photos, and buy CDs in RMB, USD, CAD and AUD.  Elyse Ribbons at City Weekend calls Shanshui "the mainland’s sole refuge for geeky, mathbop electronica artists since its inception four years ago."

Shanshui

one more Chinese beatboxing video

One more short post on Chinese beatboxing. I think this is one of the guys who drives the bbox.cn.com site, seeing as how he spits the URL at the end of this video.  Reading the comments on Youtube is interesting as well–seeing how a young Korean Chinese in Changchun can actually reach people all over the world, via a webcam in what looks like their living room, with his older brother in the background trying to read and then finally smoking a cigarette.

Chinese beatboxing: you’ve got to see and hear

The Shanghaiist posted on this a few months ago already, but I just came across these Chinese beatboxing videos and had to explore further.   

Shanghaiist describes the clip:

So a certain Liu Feng, a multi-talented video editor from Beijing working at W+K Shanghai, traveled up to northern China over CNY to discover the secret behind a popular web video featuring a Chinese beat-boxing virtuoso.

What he found is hinted at in the trailer above. Yanji, a city of
just over 400,000 people located near the border to North Korea, is a
virtual breeding ground for fledgling Chinese beat-boxers. Taking
elements from popular Korean, Chinese and American culture, Yanji’s
b-boys and b-girls are carving out a style all their own.

Want more? Here’s an excellent selection of Chinese beatboxing videos from Vietnamese video search engine Baamboo.com, including more from the Yanji performers.  And if you don’t mind navigating in Chinese, check out bbox.cn.com, a Chinese beatboxing site and the online home of the Chinese Bbox Association (is it really an official association?!).  There you can find a BBS forum with posts such as "My new work," but it won’t let you download anything unless you register.  Once you do, however, you can immediately access at least .wav audio files that are oddly, wonderfully intimate, such as this original piece by fannesmjj which I think should be called If Your Mother Only Knew.  From (I’m guessing) some Chinese teenager, with really good English, directly to your ears:

Download 76156968.wav

Download 75591457.wav

Wikipedia nods to kouji 口技 in its definition of beatboxing.  Kouji is a form of indigenous Chinese vocal percussion performing art, but is not related to the current hiphop style. It’s more like old vaudeville vocal performances that tell a story, for instance, of a car crash or a train leaving the station, as in this clip:

A search for 口技 on Google video turns up more beatboxing than traditional kouji, so at least some Chinese are linking the terms.

Even Supergirl Li Yuchun beatboxes in this clip from one of her concerts.

Finally, you must see "Beatboxing in China Tee shop," where a foreign guy beatboxes for his Chinese friends as they drink tea in Xi’an.  I’ll have to try that the next time I’m invited to sing for Chinese friends. 

supporting Jay Chou: fans and leaks

Jay_chou_2

From the blog of mainland Chinese blogger Flypig, this September 1 post and its comments describe some of the context around an instance of downloading pirated music — in this case, the anticipated "Still Fantasy" 《依然范特西》from Jay Chou 周杰伦, one of Asia’s most popular singers.  The album was released three days earlier than scheduled after the album was leaked online: 

Flypig wrote on 9/1/06 (rough translation):

I saw this news item on Yam: "Jay Chou’s New Album Leaked–Early Release Across Asia" 2006-9-01. Because of leaking, Jay Chou’s new album "Still Fantasy," originally scheduled for release on September 8, will now be released across Asia on September 5.  Alfa Music record label CEO, Yang Junrong, expressed his dismay at such disloyal acts within the industry and promised to resort to the law.  Disloyal workers at a mainland Chinese record production facility stole master copies of the album for their own profit, and sold them to disreputable, illegal websites, with the result that the songs had already appeared online before the album had been released."

Practically in tears of excitement, I went to eMule and did a search.  Found a whole pile of .rar files. If you’ve installed eMule, click on this link [hyperlinked in original blog post] to download it.

My favorite song is "Listen to Mama" 《听妈妈的话》. If anyone has the lyrics, please share them!

Of course I’ll [also] buy the official version. There are so few singers these days who can still write and sing.

Link: Faraway《千里之外》: MV 1 minute version, 4 minute version, 7 minute version

Of interest: as soon as the news of a leak gets out, fans are all over it, even if they plan to buy the official version in a store. Comments to Flypig’s post included those who also prefer the real thing:

First have a listen.  I already pre-ordered it a long time ago anyway.  It’s still more comfortable listening to a CD…

and someone who suspects the pirated version might not be authentic after all: After listening to this album I feel it’s got to be a spoof.  Not all of the songs are even from the new album.  We’ll have to wait until it comes out to know the truth.

ScYui’s blog followed up with this: 

Last night I saw that Jay Chou’s new album "Still Fantasy" was available online to download, and three of the songs even had the lyrics.  I wasn’t surprised — the same thing happened last year with his "November’s Chopin" album.  They said it was going to be released at the same time around the world, and then a few days beforehand it appeared online for downloading.  It’s not that Chou is looking out for us mainland fans, rather the source appears to be the mainland factory that was pressing the CDs….

After losing my CD player I haven’t bought any more CDs. I haven’t listened to any fewer songs, just get them naturally from the Internet. But you have to support Chou’s new album, so I ordered a copy from Joyo, even had it shipped by air. If you support him too, buy a copy

Note: eMule is a P2P file sharing client.

Uighur dance party video

Muhtar_video

Check out one of the most popular musicians in northwestern China’s Xinjiang province: Murat Muhtar.  Thanks to Michael Manning on his blog The Opposite End of China, who has digitized and uploaded two of Muhtar’s videos. One selection is a typical music video of two beautiful people dancing together against a picturesque background.  In the second, my favorite, you get to see normal-looking people of all ages having a good time dancing to music they love. Manning describes it as:

the Uyghur afternoon dance party in the countryside. In this type of
video, I imagine the artists invites his friends, family, and neighbors
out to a nice shaded spot amongst fruit trees, where dancing and music
ensue. The whole event is videotaped and later edited for use on a VCD.

(via ESWN)