Brad Ferguson has been at the heart of the emerging underground rock scene in Shanghai for a number of years, working as a producer (though he shies away from that tag), running venues and having been responsible for bringing a number of Beijing based and international acts to play in the city. As such, he's ideally placed to give us a potted history of the development of the scene since his early days documenting gigs as a photographer, right up to the current state of play.
SH24/7: When we first met about a year ago, you told us a little about how things were a few years back and how they’ve changed since you arrived; could you go through that again?
BF: I'm a little fuzzy on dates etc. but I'll give it a go. Most of it happened in bars, so that's probably why it's not too clear. I came here in 2002, and for a long time I didn't realise anything was really going on. I worked for a big company and no one there listened to rock music; at the time I thought JZ Club and Cotton Club were all there was, just jazz and blues and stuff. Eventually my Chinese got good enough and another friend of mine started finding out about some shows, so he told me about a place called the Sus2 Music Factory. It was out in Yangpu or Hongkou, near Fudan University, and it was in an actual factory. You had to walk through actual piles of metal slag and stuff to get to this one little room that was smaller than Yuyintang is now. I saw Loudspeaker and Reflector there, both bands that are still going strong now. That was 2004 or 2005... So I took some pictures of that; at that time I was an amateur photographer. I put the pictures online, sent emails to the people I'd met there, and they started asking me to take more pictures of them, so I met some people who were active in the Yangpu scene.
That was around the time that Live Bar was starting up. Yuyintang was still a travelling thing; they'd done some things at Harleys and they moved around a bit. They did some stuff at Melting Pot 288 on Taikan Lu and some other places. So I went around all these places and got to know some bands. I started translating a lot of what I found on the Chinese internet and putting it up on a website called Shanghai Streets - it doesn't exist any more. I had a database of bands and event listings; there wasn't really a lot going on so I could keep it going in my spare time.
Sometime in 2005 I think, I met a guy who knew another guy who wanted to open a live music club on Xingfu Lu - it became Shuffle, which then became Pirates which then became Anar. He was looking for someone who knew the local scene and knew local bands. He had this idea that he could put on local music with local bands seven nights a week. So he asked me to find loads of local bands, gave me a little bit of money to get them all to come in. We did it for a while and then it got paired down, and paired down until we got to just 2-3 days a week, which was a lot more sustainable. Now you could probably do it, but it was really hard back then; there was never anyone there, like ever! The sound was really bad; they wouldn't hire a sound guy so I had to do it myself, but I'd never done live sound before. I pretended I knew what I was doing but I really didn't have a clue. It was pretty bad but there were a few interesting bands and then we did some bigger events there, got around 300-400 people on a couple of nights.
SH24/7: And these were all Chinese bands?
BF: Yeah, all chinese bands. Then at one point, I guess it was the MIDI festival in 2006, I found out that there were all these foreign bands coming to Beijing. I'd wanted to do something bigger and I thought to do that I'd get a big name Beijing band to come and play. At the time, any band from Beijing could draw a huge crowd in Shanghai; it didn't really matter who they were. At that time I was kinda in competition with Yuyintang - they'd just opened up their venue in Longjia and they were bad mouthing me to other people around town, so I was like, "Fuck you guys, I'm going to do something big!". So I called a friend in Beijing and got in contact with The Subs, paid them a ridiculously small amount of money, but it was all out of my own pocket. The bar wouldn't put up any money, so I made a deal with the bar that I'd take the door money and pay the band, and it turned out that a lot of people liked it and a lot of people came. The bar made a ton of money, I made a little money, the band made a little money and everyone was happy.
SH24/7 - Which were some of the foreign bands you brought down?
BF - When the MIDI festival came around in May the bar owner thought that if we could do that on one weekend why don't we just do an entire week with these foreign bands playing every night. So we spent a lot of money on these foreign bands to come down to Shanghai and play. No one came out to see it; it was during the May holiday and I guess there just wasn't that big of a draw and so the bar lost a ton of money out of it. The only memorable band to come down was The Wombats - they were going to be the next Arctic Monkeys, but then that whole style of music just kind of died out. But they came here and played; they were just kids, they brought their parents down to hear them play! And it was just their parents, me and a couple of friends drinking all the beer in the bar. It was my first experience with a British band and it was a lot of fun.
SH24/7: But you've managed a few other venues too right?
BF: Well, that bar then closed and I took my little savings, quit my job and I took over managing Live Bar. We remodelled, brought in a new sound system, put on some decent shows, got some people in and then we had the biggest show we'd ever had - over 400 people I think, literally standing shoulder to shoulder. It was a charity thing for Roots and Shoots, and the owner of Live Bar came back to Shanghai to see how it was doing, and he saw how many people were in and then said, "I want my bar back", and then he took it back from me!
SH24/7 - The same guy who runs it now?
BF - I'm not sure, I've not been back since then to be honest. We had a falling out and it was pretty bad, but I spun some publicity out of it which was OK. I then went off and worked at a few other places, 4 Live for a while and then I hooked up with the Windows people. They had a bar that wasn't performing very well, they wanted to do a live music place, so I gave them a real plan and they gave me a real budget and we made it work. The bands were getting paid, people were coming, the bar was doing well and making money and everything was going good. We outgrew the venue within the first few months and then they got this new space which became Windows Underground - it was bigger and a cooler, but the rent was a lot higher so I had a higher bar to reach. We reached it, but a lot of the older Windows crowd didn't really like live music. I would have shows going on, say PK14 playing at Windows - great band, great live, everyone was into it - and I'd be at the mixing desk and somebody would come up to me and say, "Hey when's this band getting off the stage? I want to listen to some hip hop"! Those people complained enough that the owner thought she was losing her core cliental and she decided she didn't want to do that anymore, so I left.
I then had a long period of not doing anything with venues and then I went to Yuyintang, and for the past few months I've been there. Now I'm back doing independent stuff again. Somewhere along the way I met my wife and her first band; they were the first band I recorded with, I did their demo. I also did something for Boys Climbing Ropes and then Duck Fight Goose's EP too.
SH24/7: So how did the first recording with that band come about?
BF: For the same reason I started to manage clubs and events - I just felt there was a hole, a place where I could fit in and do something better than what was already being done. At the time there wasn't really anywhere to record a demo in Shanghai; I happened to have to have equipment because I was running a bar and I was interested in sound equipment. So I bought some stuff, put the band up on the stage and just recorded them and tried to make it sound good. That was the first band, they were called Ferris Wheel, back in early 2006. That didn't even come out, the band broke up during the recording process which apparently seems to happen a lot! So I had this recording equipment sitting around and then I decided to record some more, recording my wife's next band - they were kinda low-fi, with girl singer on the keyboard, synth-poppy stuff, almost early Crystal Castles sort of stuff. I recorded that, and someone come and shoot a documentary video of it and then it became a big thing. Then Boys Climbing Ropes, who had been friends of mine for a while, asked me if I would record their EP ('Except for the Darkness') too, so I did that one, and then immediately after that one my wife's next new band, Duck Fight Goose, wanted a recording, so I did that too.
SH24/7: And we know you build equipment too - amps, pedals right?
BF: Building equipment - that came about because at the time you couldn't get some of the cooler effects pedals and other stuff, certainly none of the European or US hand made stuff. So I figured I could buy a bunch of electronics in Shanghai and I could put something together myself and make something that my friends would like. I was just doing it as a hobby really. Somewhere along there another guy who was based in Beijing at the time found me through some online forum postings and asked me if I wanted to design effects for his brand. I did that for a little while - it was called 'Tone Rider'. We made a series of four different effects pedals for sale - they may still be for sale! He kind of ran off so I'm not sure.
SH24/7: When you first started recording, were you recording on separate equipment with a desk or did you always start straight on the computer?
BF: Straight on the computer, using Logic. In fact, I bought the very first macbook as soon as it came out in Hongkong specifically to record that first band.
SH24/7: And has your way of working changed much since then?
BF: It hasn't changed at all really, the process hasn't changed anyway. There are some better places to go now, there are some sound proof rooms, there are vocal booths, but even now almost everything anyone is doing - certainly in Shanghai anyway - is recorded straight into a mac using Logic or Cubase or something similar.
SH24/7: Did you record the drums on the first recording?
BF: Yeah, that's the first thing I did and that's why I didn't record them on any of the later ones! It was the hardest thing to do; I had to use every microphone that the bar had and some of my own mics too, and I still couldn't get it to sound very good. Then when Hard Queen recorded they hooked up with some DJ / Producer wannabe guy, he'd been DJing at Logo, he had a lot of money and was interested in doing stuff, so he just went out and bought a load of equipment but he didn't know how to use it. So he took the band to a studio and tried to get real live drums recorded on all this equipment that he didn't know how to use and it came out sounding like shit. And the band got really frustrated. So I said, "Why don't we just go somewhere that has electronic drums?". We did, it and it turned out pretty good - the electronic drums actually worked quite well with their style.
SH24/7: Did you think same would apply to the Boys Climbing Ropes EP?
BF: With Boys Climbing Ropes, it was more of a trade-off. For the ‘Except for the Darkness’ EP, the only way that we could get it done for free was to play electronic drums in my apartment, that's why we did it. It didn't really fit with their style of music though so that's why for the next one, ‘Summer and Winter Warfare’, we recorded it live at Yuyintang, just had them up on stage, the stage they've played on a hundred times. It was a lot more comfortable and you got a lot more of the dynamics out of it.
SH24/7: Did it take a long time to get it sounding how you all wanted it?
BF: What took a long time to get right was the recording process. They had actually come to me in April or May of that year and said they wanted to record a new EP and they wanted to record it in a studio - they were doing it at JuJu's studio. But it didn't work; they couldn't get it right, everybody playing separately just doesn't work for them. So we had to put that on the shelf for a while and when everyone came back from the summer break we decided to do it at Yuyintang, and it took one day. The mixing took a little bit longer but part of that was me being lazy and busy!
SH24/7: Were the songs that made it on to the EP ones that were started at JuJu (studio)?
BF: They had two new songs by the time we recorded. We recorded five songs but we only put three of them on the EP. 'The Knitting Song' and 'Grow Up Stop Fucking Around' were both new songs. I suspect if they were going to do a full album they'd record all the tracks again.
Boys Climbing Ropes - The Knitting Song
SH24/7: And would you do the recording in Yuyintang again?
BF: I don't even know if they want me to do the album; they might be able to get some big shot producer to come in and do it!
SH24/7: Is it hard to record and produce for your friends? Is it hard to tell them what direction they should go in?
BF: That's kind of why I hesitate to call myself a producer and don't really like it when others label me as a producer, because I see a producer as someone who tells a band what direction they should go in, who says, "You should put a bridge in here before that last chorus" or, "You should change these chords around". I don't do any of that; I tried to do that with the first band I worked with and it got very bad - some members of the band were receptive to it, some members weren't. And... I don't blame myself completely for breaking up the band but I feel like I was a big part of it!
For somebody like Boys Climbing Ropes, my main selling point is that I'll try and make them sound like they sound live. That's my goal - they're a live band, all the bands in Shanghai are live bands - they all play these songs first and then they record them after the fact. Producing an album is something different; it's something that takes months of studio time, the band working together, working with the producer to make it sound the way they want it to sound.
SH24/7: When you work with the bands do they often look to you for input?
BF: It depends on the band. I've only worked with five bands, they're all different. A band like Boys Climbing Ropes, it's obvious if you listen to what they've recorded in the past their first album was recorded by another producer who had some ideas about what he wanted it to sound like. For the second EP, the one I did, I had some of my own ideas about what I wanted it to sound like and they trusted me with that part, but for the most part I wanted it to sound like they do live, and when it didn't a lot of people were disappointed. The main negative comment that I got about that album is it doesn't have the power or the dynamics that people get from their live show. So for the most recent one it's recorded just like they would play it live - only the vocals were over-dubbed, I didn't add any digital effects or do anything else to it. The guitar is exactly what it sounds like on stage at Yuyintang. I think it came out sounding a lot more natural and suited to their style.
SH24/7: What about working with Duck Fight Goose?
BF: For a band like Duck Fight Goose, you can sit down with them and produce an album. That's what they did. I wasn't involved in the production process of the new full-length album but that's what they did. They recorded a lot of stuff, they recorded twenty-something different guitar tracks, a dozen keyboard tracks for each song. Then they went through and picked out which tracks from which instrument they liked and put it all together and sculpted it into Han Han's idea of what he wanted the song to sound like. They may be the only band currently that know what they sound like, the live thing is the closest approximation that they can get and they try and go all the way on the album and make each track exactly what they want it to sound like.
Duck Fight Goose - Glass Walls
SH24/7: Was the decision for you not to be involved in production of their new album a decision that you all came to together?
BF: Well, Han Han wanted someone else to produce it. He wanted someone who had more album production experience and he had a couple of choices; in the end he went with a guy, Donkey, who's worked with Top Floor Circus, he did the Muscle Snog album, I also think he did a Xiao He album too. So he's quite involved in the scene, but he's one of those people you almost never see at gigs - he's always in the studio recording, a really professional guy. Han Han thought he'd get the sound he wanted by going with him and it kind of worked out well because he has his own studio, uses his own equipment and Han Han could go and sit next to him as he did everything.
SH24/7: Being the manager of Duck Fight Goose, do you have much input on decisions like that? Say, the decision to go with a particular producer?
BF: No, the only way I'm their manager is that I do the stuff that Han Han doesn't want to do! I get to ask people for money! I get to reply to the really weird emails that we get from all over the place, that's what I do. I don't tell the band what to do, they tell me what they want me to do.
SH24/7: Han Han strikes me as someone who completely knows what direction he wants the band to go in, is that true?
BF: I can't think off the top of my head of anything that I'd like to brag about that I personally had input into. I kind of sit back for the ride; maybe after a show I'll tell them what parts were good and what parts were not so good. If they play a bad show I'll tell them, but I don't try to change the structure of songs or the direction of their music. The most I might do is suggest a different song order for the setlist for the show, but no real input.
SH24/7: Within the band, how much input do the individual members have?
BF: For the overall direction of the band, that's down to Han Han. As far as the songs go and how they are composed, the other members have a lot of input. Han Han comes in with an idea - he may have recorded a simple demo track using synthesisers or guitars etc - he has maybe a thirty second clip of how he wants the next song to sound like and then they all work together to build a song around it. It's definitely collaborative.
SH24/7: You're often referred to as an influential person in the development of the Shanghai scene - what do you think you've contributed?
BF: Everyone who knows me knows that I'm not the kind of person who goes around trying to build myself up, I'm not self-promotional at all, I hate it when I see other people in the scene being really self-promotional. But, a lot of people have said that I have brought something to the scene. I personally don't think I've brought anything new to the scene in the past couple of years, but I know I did contribute something back in 2005/2006 when I was doing Live bar and then Windows.
SH24/7: Who else do you feel contributes to the scene?
BF: Everybody! Adam Gaesnler, Han Han, people like Andy Best, Zhang Hai Shen at Yuyintang... Lots of people.
SH24/7: You mentioned earlier that there weren't too many bands when you first came here, how do you see things these days?
BF: There still aren't many bands around. For me, the peak was around late 2006/early 2007. It seemed to me that at that time there were a lot of good bands. I had my list of every band I knew the name of and I ranked them. "These are the bands that could headline, these are the bands that could support, these are the bands that need a little more time"... I had around 50 bands on that list and maybe 10-12 of them could headline a weekend gig, a local show - it wouldn't be a blowout 600 people kind of thing, but it would be a decent 200-250 person show. There just aren't that many bands that could do that right now - the majority of them are the expat bands. That's another thing that's happened in the last few years, the expat bands have taken over the scene. I don't think that is necessarily a good thing or a bad thing, it just is. I think there will be another cycle; there will be more Chinese bands coming through. The bands that have been around for a long time, like Loudspeaker and Reflector, are still around - they don't play every week, but they're still around. A lot of bands just seem to break up after a year or so; somebody turns 30 or someone gets married or someone has a kid and then they break up. I really respect bands like Top Floor Circus, where they are married and have kids but they still play regularly.
SH24/7: The future for Shanghai music, where does it lie? What do you make of the newer Chinese bands coming through?
BF: All the university bands at the moment suck, they're terrible. Actually most of the expat bands suck too but at least they can throw a party! That's one thing that really bothers me about this recent push to get more of the younger Chinese bands to let them open for other shows… Pairs invited some student bands and they sucked. Why would you do that? I know it's Rhys's thing to reach out to the Chinese community, but the bands are terrible. Then they had this thing where they pay you 1 kuai to come see them - that to me is overtly racist to split it up like that, on two different nights. All of the Chinese bands that played that night were bad - there are only one of them that are even listenable. You couldn't pay me 30 kuai - that's not even exaggerating... if you bought me two or three drinks I might sit through their show, they're just bad you know? To say, “We want to introduce the expat community to these Chinese bands”, and then put on a show where all the bands suck is just giving people the impression that bands in Shanghai suck, when there are some good bands, you just have to be willing to see the same bands twice a month, every month because that's all the good bands that there are.
My feeling about the expat band night - actually, it was the afternoon... The expats, or the people organising it, they're sitting back and saying, "Hmm, well Chinese people seem to like shows that start earlier, so let's start ours in the afternoon... Chinese people don't like to spend money, so let's make our show free, and we'll even give you one kuai... Chinese people don't like to sit around waiting for the show to start, so let's start it exactly on time". Instead of trying to change the Chinese attitude towards local music they're trying to capitulate. So all those bands played for free, the bar didn't make any money, and I know it's not all about money but if the bar doesn't make any money they can't continue to host the shows. I was looking at the Wooozy site, and on that I saw a review of the show where (they said) it was good that it was free and it was good that it was in the afternoon but the complaint was that the drinks were still too expensive. So basically what this audience that they've now reached want is afternoon shows that are free with free drinks - why would you even want to reach out to those people? Fuck those people.
SH24/7: So you think money is almost seen as a dirty word sometimes?
BF: This is another complaint I have about the expat bands and I would probably say Pairs specifically. They really don't like to play for money... I guess, I'm describing a lot of what Rhys (drummer from Pairs) has never said out loud but I'm guessing is what he thinks. They'll go outside of Shanghai on a tour and not get paid for it, and that's not something we should be encouraging bands to do. Bands should be encouraged to ask for the money that they deserve. They have expenses - not all the bands can have cushy jobs where they get paid 20,000 RMB a month. Some of these bands have to work real hard jobs or they starve. And then they pay their practice fees, they buy their instruments, they pay for taxis, all of it out of their own pocket, and then you want them to play for free or feel bad about asking for money? It's just wrong.
SH24/7: I know the guys putting on these shows would argue that they're doing it to try to bring in a new audience...
BF: Sure, some of them might have been converted, I totally agree with that. But if you think about how many bands played that night - 4 or 5? Think about anywhere else in the world; think about how much you would have to pay for 4 or 5 bands to play for an evening and how much you would expect the bar to make and add all that up. That's how much you bribed those people. It's not the 1 kuai per person. So each band should probably get 1000 kuai, so that's 5000 kuai. The bar should be making 20,000 in a night, so that's 25,000 kuai that you spent getting maybe 10 new fans? And any of the none live music bar owners who just heard me say that a bar makes 20,000 in a night they're just laughing their asses off because they all make ten times that amount.
When somebody says to me, "Yuyintang is making a ton of money, I should just be able to bring my own beer in", I feel that's wrong. And even if they are making some money, that's their job! They don't do it for fun - well they do do it for fun, but it is their only form of income. When they're making money they're not even making as much as the average person who goes to see a gig.
SH24/7: So how would you change things around then?
BF: I can't force people to like music, I can't force people to pay for it. I just would just try and avoid putting on free shows, unless they're sponsored by some kind of brand who's paying for the venue and paying the bands.
SH24/7: A lot of people rile against that sort of corporate sponsorship though don't they?
BF: There are some people who are completely anti-corporate, 100% against it, there is no grey area. But even these guys can admit that it doesn't bother them as much when beer brands or alcohol brands sponsor the bands at a bar, because it is a bar! So when Tiger sponsor a battle of the bands at a bar, even though the format for Battle of the Bands is stupid and Tiger beer sucks... When they sponsor an event like that there is no conflict. It's not like Volkswagen sponsoring a music festival, what do cars have to do with music? Actually, that's not a good example!
SH24/7: People are in a bar, they're going to drink...
BF: Yeah, so put up your Tiger poster and your Jaegermiester banner or whatever, and then there is some benefit. I don't see any of it as 'selling out'; all these people should be getting paid, whether they're getting paid by door sales or by a beer sponsor, to me that doesn't really make any difference as long as they're not getting screwed by the sponsors.
There are a lot of sponsors out there, and bands actually take these gigs, where they're getting paid basically nothing AND they're selling out - that to me is even worse. I get calls all the time from various marketing agencies who say, "We have such and such a brand and they want to put on a show and they want a rock band. We can't pay much but you're going to get a ton of exposure, there are going to be all sorts of photographers and media there". In the beginning I'd try and be polite to them but recently there was one where there was a fashion show at Mao livehouse and they were offering to not pay the bands! They wanted bands to play for them for free! Basically saying there was going to be a ton of exposure because there would be fashion photographers there. I said, "Are the models getting paid? Is your company getting paid? Then why aren't the bands getting paid? Why do you think music is worth less than walking on the catwalk? You'd pay a DJ to play a CD but you won't pay a band to actually play their instruments?" It's bullshit.
SH24/7 : I suppose there are a lot of bands that would be susceptible to that kind of thing...
BF: I have another point to make on that - bands selling out for no money. All of the so called ‘record labels’ in Shanghai, with the exception of Zang Nan Recordings… All of them - Soma Records, Ako Studios - they're all scams, they rip off the bands, they rip off everybody. They are all about making money for themselves; they're not about music at all. In the west, the standard for an agent, manager etc. is a 10% cut of profits, or maybe even a 10% cut of revenue, but all these labels are taking 80-90%, They're giving the band 10-15%. It's wrong; they shouldn't do that.
And with the corporate shows, basically what happens is that a brand like Dickies, they come and they say, "We want a band for this and we're willing to pay 50,000 RMB". For 50,000 RMB you can a pretty good band; the fees for commercial gigs are usually higher than for a night at Yuyintang, but there are really good bands in China who would play a corporate gig for 50,000 RMB. But they tell that to the ad agency and then their ad agency takes a cut. Maybe they cut it in half. Then the ad agency goes out to these so-called labels and they say, "We're looking for a band and our budget is around 25,000". Then the so-called labels, who often don't have full contracts with the bands, say to one of their bands, "Hey you got this gig, go play it", and they pocket the money and give the band maybe 1000 RMB.
I don't know which is worse, but there is another kind of scam that happens. This is where the agency just calls random people, people who have band contacts but aren't actually working as a label. The agency will ring them up and say, "Hey, I'm looking for a band and my budget is 25,000 RMB". That person rings a friend and says that his budget is 10,000, and that friend calls someone else and says, "I'll give you 1000 RMB to play". By the end of it, the brand have spent 50,000 RMB, the band made 1000 RMB and the show's going to be shit because the only band that will take the gig is a band that will play for 1000 RMB! And then everyone who sees that, from the brand or the agency, they say, "What? We paid 50,000 for this? But it's shit! We should never hire bands anymore". It gives music in Shanghai and China a bad reputation.
Then what happens is, they find out that the band only got paid 1000 RMB because they'll just walk up to the band and ask them, then they find out that there are bands that will play for 1000 RMB, so in the future they'll say they have a budget of 1000 RMB
SH24/7: Is that the same with all the labels in China?
BF: No, Maybe Mars are a real label which actually promotes its bands and puts out records. Modern Sky, as much as they do some stuff I don't like, are an actual label who puts out records and promote their bands. Soma or Ako - these things aren't labels, they're artist management companies and they're ripping off the bands. The sad thing about it is that they're all run by people who are in, or who were formally in bands. It's like they suddenly have a few business world contacts and now are willing to rip off their own people.
People ask me why I'm so cynical and why I'm so negative about the scene in general but it's bad... There are some good bands trying to do interesting things, but they're pushed into a corner. They can only play at Yuyintang, and they have to book their show like four months in advance, AND then if they play two shows in a month they get all these people on message boards, especially the expats, saying, "I've already seen those bands before, why would I want to go see them again?"! I saw one of the blogs on Shanghai 24/7, the guy from Battle Cattle saying, "I didn't even go to the Duck Fight Goose CD release, I've already seen those bands play a few months ago"!
SH24/7: I think in that particular case there was a whole discussion about whether it's better to have shit different bands or good bands that play all the time.
BF: Was it the same discussion that Rhys (of Pairs) posted Douban links to all these unknown bands saying that anyone could get some of those people at the show? All those bands suck. The reason why Boys Climbing Ropes, Duck Fight Goose, Pairs and Rainbow Danger Club etc. play all the time is because they are the good bands that people want to see. OK, now I regret putting Pairs in that list! But they are the bands that people want to see, whether they are good or not, people do want to see them.
SH24/7: So do you think that people are kind of guilt tripped into going to see shit bands then?
BF: In a way... (people say) "We should support the local Chinese scene, we should support the students". Sure support them, but don't clap them if they suck... well, no that's kinda mean. Then you get called-out for being a poser standing at the back with his arms crossed not getting into it!
SH24/7: Speaking of new interesting bands, you've been involved in the recording of Next Year's Love's debut CD?
BF: Yeah, I'm working on it right now. It's actually already recorded and I'm way behind on producing it, but it'll be out very soon. That will be on Andy's (Best) record label, Qu records.
SH24/7: Where was that recorded?
BF: It was recorded at 0093 space and in Andy's apartment.
SH24/7: How was it recorded?
BF: It was recorded live in the practice room - I borrowed a big mixer from Yuyintang and lugged it upstairs. It was terrible! Andy and I carrying this thing, it weighed something like 20 kg and the stairs are really windy and covered in grease. So we're trying to carry it down and then back up again. But we did it OK, and then we re-did some bits in Andy's apartment. It should have already been out but I'm way behind.
SH24/7: What does the future have in store for you personally?
BF: If there was a new venue I'd be happy to do that, if there are any bands out there reading this interview who would want me to record them, if their music is good or they at least have potential I'd definitely record them. I'm basically going to do what needs to be done, I don't have any concrete plans.
SH24/7: What is your feeling about the current state of the venues in Shanghai? Various voices say that we need another mid-sized venue, like Shanhai (now closed!)...
BF: It's owned by Lezi, from Zhu Lu He Feng, also former manager of the old Mao Livehouse, also the drummer of Top Floor Circus, Pinkberry and like five other bands! So you can see what he did at Mao - he basically ran that place into the ground. I assume he had outside help with it, the Soma people, they're all assholes who don't know how to run a business, so they helped him run it into the ground. When he left they set up a new one! I'd like to get some of that money, I don't know where that money comes from but if they just give it to incompetent people then great, I could take some of that and do something really cool!
I think the more venues the better, but there's a limited number of bands to go around, so if it's the same bands playing every weekend rotating through 4 or 5 different venues then I don't think there is really any need for that. I personally don't go to Mao or Livebar or 696. I don't have anything personal against 696 but it's too far away! But Live bar I have a history with, and at one point the guy (who owns it) told a friend of mine that if he ever saw me there he would kill me! Apparently he's not there anymore but you never know!
The thing is that there are all these people who think that they're in China and they have to have a real authentic experience, so when they see a place like Yuyintnag which is fairly integrated, even expat-heavy, they think that it can't be the 'real' Shanghai scene. They think they need to go to a shitty place like Live Bar and see some shitty band in a shitty venue and then that's somehow more 'real'. They think they have to go somewhere near the universities because that's where all the cool bands are going to be, but what they don't realise that most Chinese students are not 'cool'. They don't become cool until they're about 25! And by the time they're 30 or so it starts to fade out again. So you have a five-year window to start playing your instrument, to get good, to start your band, to record your album and then break up. Then you can get married and have kids! That explains completely why there are very few good bands in Shanghai.
SH24/7: And do you think that's the same all over China?
BF: I guess in Shanghai, with the cost of living so high there are basically no full-time bands here. In Beijing there are a few. I'm not sure about anywhere else. Yuguo used to be one, but they have jobs now. As far as I know there are no full-time bands here in the indie music scene. I'm sure there are jazz musicians who are full-time musicians but in the indie music scene they all have day jobs.
SH24/7: I guess for a band like Duck Fight Goose, with all their kit, it's necessary to have a decent job to afford it all...
BF: The cost of all that stuff is absolute - it costs the same or even more here than it does in the UK or the US, but the salary is so, so much lower here than it is in those other places it means you have to have a really good job to be able to afford, for example, an American made Fender Guitar. In the States it's expensive - it costs $1000 or something - but you can work at McDonald's and make $1000 in a few weeks. But here, that's 7000 RMB plus import tax and all of that, and then you're looking at a pretty decent white collar salary per month.
SH24/7: So let's talk quickly about SXSW - I watched the video of Han Han who said he thought the invitation was spam!?
BF: I don't think he really thought it was spam, but he was shocked to have been invited. I sent him a text message and I said, "Do you want to go to SXSW?" and he said he did and so I told him they'd just sent me an invitation, and he told me to forward it to him 'right now'. That's what happened.
SH24/7: That must be pretty exciting...
BF - Yeah, it’s exciting. It's a really good thing that the band signed with Maybe Mars for this album otherwise we wouldn't really have the support to be able to go there. Maybe Mars have just announced that they're taking three other bands too; Carsick Cars, Snapline and something called Cradle Death - I think that's a guy from Carsick Cars and another noise band. So that's four bands from Maybe Mars. It'll be really cool. It's my hometown too, so it'll be fun to hang out with the band.
SH24/7: Do you class Maybe Mars as the best label in China?
BF: That's kind of a leading question! Yeah, sure. I can't think of another label who has put out as many good records as they have. And I guess they are good to their bands, or the bands wouldn't stay with them. Take a band like Carsick Cars, who are big enough now that if they wanted to switch to another label or if they wanted to do their own thing - they definitely could but they're part of the label, it's a family thing. So far they've been good to Duck Fight Goose too.
SH24/7: So that must give you some hope that there are people out there who actually want to push good Chinese music...
BF: Yeah, I'm excited to see what they do next, now that D22 is closed. I know they say that the two aren't related, but it's the same people running the label who ran the club, so they're related somehow. I hope they do something good with their next club. I don't have any special knowledge but my understanding is that they want to open up a place in Gulou, which is the hipster area, just down the street from where Mao is, and they want to focus on the experimental stuff. They do a night called Zoomin' Night, which is their noise night. It's all those really, really noisy, noisy bands; they play their effects peddle. Not personally my thing, but I think it's really cool, the musicians involved are all good.
SH24/7: The main guy at Maybe Mars is an American - do you think that makes a difference to how the bands are treated?
BF: I think he ran a club in New York too, and also I think he's an economics professor at one of the Beijing universities, like a world renowned economics guy! I really don't want to cast it as a 'we're from the US' sort of thing, but one of my main principles when I first started doing this was that I asked the bands how much they got paid in other places, how much they got here. So some bands weren't getting paid or they were getting promised money then not getting paid. So I said to them, "When you play for me you'll get this amount on a Wednesday or this amount on a Friday", and I paid them every night as soon as they finished playing. That was my principle and I felt good about the fact I was treating the bands better than other people. Not necessarily because the other people were Chinese or anything, but just because that's what they were doing and the bands hadn't been demanding any better. So I feel like that's one of my contributions, getting the bands to ask for money from the venues. But definitely treating the bands better is something everyone should do.
This is ace! Brad needs to speak more often, I reckon. Give him his own column.
Of course we get paid when we tour though, I'm not sure where that came from. We got everything covered in Hong Kong and Dalian and some other places, but you have to go out on those first few shows assuming you're not going to make much coin, even losing a bit when you factor in hotels and all that trash. But when you return you can charge a bit more.
With the student bands thing, whether those bands sucked or not isn't really the point. It was to give them shows as I really believe in learning on stage. Give them a chance and an opportunity to play because I know when I was just starting to play in bands, a lot of people took chances on my shitty band and let me jump on their bills, let me ask questions, let me see things first hand so I could see how things were run and organised and to give me the experience to start organising my own tours, nights, parties, promo etc.
It's kind of like going for a job interview and being told 'come back when you have more experience' but no-one is willing to give you a chance to get some experience.
Some bands may not be real good yet, but there might be 1 or 2 musicians in that band, that given a chance and more experience go off and start something a bit better, and get more shows and more comfortable writing and that shit continues and can go a long way.
That bit about having to make it between age 25-30 is spot on and made me laugh out loud.
Brad was diplomatic about one particular thing though, and maybe it's because he thought it wasn't interesting or relevant ... but the events at the end of his Windows tenure were highly entertaining (taking into account the shittiness of the circumstances.)
About the CD release show on Dec 9, it was not directed at Duck Fight Goose, but the fact that the 3 bands playing that night played heavily at YYT the month before. Just could have made an effort. I would like to add that I am not "the guy from Battle Cattle", we are 3 distinct individuals with our own thoughts, guitarist went to the show actually.
Now do you see what happens when you don't come to a DFG show? You'll be persecuted for months!
Honestly, at the time I was just using your comment about bands playing too often as an example of an attitude I disagree with. It wasn't about you personally not coming to that one show. Now that I know xiaozhong agrees with you, I'll use him as an example in my next rant.
No pb, i ll go to the next one and no problem to alternate rants with Rhys.
Now I got it! I am really slow sometimes! I did not think I was pointing fingers at anybody in particular either (more an attitude as you said), but in fact I was. I mean, this show got "Brad Ferguson" written all over it and I did not see it. The line-up makes more sense too, way too much sense if you ask me but I get it. My bad. I guess I have no more pb to be the expat Battle Cattle guy then.
May be you could create a label or something, so that outsiders can understand better the situation.
Anyway, it was fun, now, back to the thing that really matter, music!
I can get behind what Brad is saying about money. A band should get the money that they deserve if they desire it. No band should EVER feel bad about demanding payment for a gig. And that payment should reflect the value of the band/performance.
I think bands like Pairs who WANT to set up student shows for free do it simply because they enjoy doing it. I imagine there is a little bit of "this is my legacy in Shanghai" going on there too.
The venue might make a loss on free shows, but perhaps they are planting seeds. These students who can't afford a beer at the bar today might in a couple years be decently-paid engineers, teachers, artists, designers, whatever. They might want to go back to YYT and spend some money and enjoy some music. The average income is going up. Likewise, those bands that are shitty right now might have 1-2 members that in 4-5 years will have honed their skills and written something better than any of us! This means more talent pool with live experience and that is good for the music venues too.
At the end of the day we are living in experimental times in an experimental city and living out our passion and we might completely disagree with each other on how we should operate. As long as its underscored by our genuine love of the music and having a good time, I argue that none of it is all wrong. And if we do right by the venues that actually treat musicians with respect (YYT, Logo*) by promoting, getting people in the door and discouraging street beers, those places will prevail and venues like them will pop up. more experience = more talent = more/better bands = more venues = more opportunities = more money = more fun. At least that is the theory and it may not work out like that. Life has no guarantees.
Anyways, probably the best thing SH247 has ever published. cheers!
*yes, Logo's equipment is shit and they are a tad disorganized, but at least they let the band set the door price and keep all of it. Its a pretty transparent transaction if you ask me.
To not-the-guitarist-from-Battle Cattle dude, I guess you're referring to our band then, BCR, who opened up for Duck Fight Goose on their CD release -- I don't know what to tell you, man -- we're a band that enjoys playing. Seems to me to be kind of the point to being in a band... the whole playing shows thing.... playing when you get the opportunity to do so, especially if it happens to be sharing a show with your friend's band when they have a big night like a CD release.
Although that was our only show in December, we did play a couple times in November. It's hard to tell if you're playing too much or not enough...
But I guess my new system for when we get offered shows is to get in contact with not-the-guitarist-from-Battle Cattle and ask if it's okay with him. Problem solved.
Referring to the free shows thing, surely these afternoon shows are going to be making more money anyway by default of being open outside of their regular scheduled hours. Sure, factor in their staffing costs, but people will still pay for items at the bar-at a time where they wouldn't normally have been open anyway so surely it's a win win situation regardless of whatever price is charged for the door cover and the quality of the bands. In my view, these are excellently staged performances which allow these student bands to learn and harness their skills before taking the plunge of a Saturday or Friday night slot. Good on Pairs for taking the lead in this and promoting the raw talent that this city has amongst it's citizens.
Just a note - the bands playing these Sunday afternoon free shows aren't student bands. Tomorrow is Biubiu, Death to Giants, and a couple more. YYT used to have a student band night every Wednesday, called New Faces, but it eventually went away when there were no new bands with more than one original song.
The not guitarist AND not drummer of Battle Cattle was refering to the concurrent gig of 3 bands playing very often at YYT and himself feeling bored about it, that's all. Not only NYL, not only BCR, not only DFG, the conjonction of the 3. In one place, YYT. Anyway, I am sure plenty of people went there, you do not need me to fill the YYT on these nights. And I have nothing against the above-mentioned bands (otherwise I would not have attended 10 to 15 gigs in 2011 with the above-mentioned bands).
There are other places to play, even it s not always easy to deal with bar owners who are not used to bands from other cities. But that's the fun of it. Get out of the comfort zone, go to Baoshan, Kunshan, Hangzhou, Nanjing, Changzhou. That's how WE (on this one I think I can include the other guys) see it.
Morgan can correct me if I'm wrong, but I think the only two shows BCR and DFG played together in 2011 were the Shanghai 24/7 party in March and the DFG album release in December. The album release was the only show DFG has ever played with NYL. These three bands may play more often than you like, but they rarely play together.
You're the only person I've ever heard say a nice thing about playing in Nanjing. Last time DFG went it was a disaster.
Sure, it s certainly not easy to play in venues where people play dices and drink whiskey with green tea, but there will be a few people that will enjoy the show. We try to play for these ones. Last disaster for us, Changzhou who got scared of our music, show got cancelled 2 days before.
This thing is going off! It's killer.
I was a little bit annoyed at the DFG show because for me, it was never in any danger of being packed. People were always going to come for their CD launch, it was a big deal. So why not take that chance to book some bands that didn't have their CD launch at YYT a few weeks before or play with a Xi'an band at YYT one or two weeks earlier.
If you say you want to keep it with friends, why not ask Curry Soap or some of those noise acts that I know Panda is friends with. That would have been cool.
When you are in that position where you can pretty much guarantee a good crowd, I reckon you can take some risks. To be honest, I didn't get there until 11pm as I'd seen BCR a few weeks earlier and had just done 4 shows in a row with NYL a month or two earlier and I'm also a jerk.
Nanjing can fuck off, too. Some nice people there, but it's not a nice place to play. Dalian and Guangzhou for the win.
First, you might have been confident about the turnout, but we certainly weren't at the time. A lot of people were leaving for holidays to the US/Canada/Thailand ... in fact, one member of BCR had to change his holiday plans in order to play the show. The reason I asked them to play is because I like them (and NYL), and I don't particularly like those noise bands.
You're more than welcome to take risks with the shows you book, though ... but I'll probably still complain about your poor choice of openers.
Ah, so Nanjing is not the best place to try and get a gig? Think the answer to that seems to be a resounding 'no' from what I have read here- I am hearing good stuff about Kunming though (and this is a digression I realise...)
Learning from the locals, so to speak ... a good way get a consistent big, local crowd of decent fans seems to be to keep a collective of music in the same genre, and invite out-of-town acts also in the same genre. Like Playful Warrior.
The metal shows always do well and have mainly young, local crowds. It's because they like the genre and know what to expect at the shows. The bands will be to their liking, it will start on time and there's a friendly community feel cos everyone's into metal there.
Over time, this consistency turns into regular followers. They go because it's the same and they like it. Metal fans think other styles of music are weak.
But whether those shows make enough on the door to compensate for lower bar sales is another issues of course, Brad?
I was at the Playful Warrior metal show last night, and while it seems like a few more people are buying drinks these days, bar sales were still disappointing. Most of the door money goes to the bands, so no, what's left over doesn't help much. Also, whoever the pop-punk band were that played second were really super tight. If they had better taste in music they could be a great band.
That will have been Monkey Shine. They are pretty good. I blogged their old stuff, when Xiao Ding was singing. They used to have a bit of the emo about them.
The drummer is Xiao Zhong (the original Xiao Zhong from Little Nature) and he can hit a kit pretty good.
Love it Brad. Some really great points and insights, and not a little controversy. Also, big love to Shanghai 24/7 for their dedication to full and uncompromising interviews - amazing typing stamina
I think it's been covered in the comments already, but I have to back Rhys and B.O. in their efforts to broaden the offering in Shanghai. It all has to start somewhere (let's face it, 6 years ago, people couldn't see a future for YYT, D-22 or even Modern Sky). But the efforts of all these people, plus the efforts of supportive media, the bands, the promoters and the fans have broadened horizons to a point where Chinese bands can tour Australia, the US and Europe while there are full houses in Shanghai and Beijing venues weekly for both Chinese and International bands.
Things were getting a bit stale in Shanghai in 2011 with all the "local" band showcases, so Rhys and Brian decided to try something different, and hey, it's drawn attention to new bands and new people. They are doing because they love it, and because they believe there are probably benefits to them and their bands in the future. Big up yourselves
I think B.O (and Toshi and Misuzu) did a great job with Trash-a-gogo, bringing in cool bands from Japan and Europe, and putting on a good show every month. However, putting on segregated shows is just not cool. It's even less cool when you partner with people like Ako/乐空 to put on a show featuring shit bands like Da Bei, Prank, and Bai Yu.
BF: Everyone who knows me knows that I'm not the kind of person who goes around trying to build myself up, I'm not self-promotional at all, I hate it when I see other people in the scene being really self-promotional.
then, the second comment:
The best part about this interview is they transcribed all of my exclamation marks, so it makes me sound super-excited and demonstrative!
I've gotta take Brad's side here and agree that he rarely talks about himself or his projects unless he's asked. You can usually find him standing at the corner of the bar at YYT nursing a beer and quietly taking it all in.
I'd venture that Brad's second comment you have there is his attempt at levity. A "joke," if you will. Chill out.
Re: Nanjing -- we've played there, I think, three or four times over the years. The first time was a real long time ago -- 4 years ago -- which is like 9 million years in Chinese rock years... it was one of those shows were you play in a dance club and people turn up at the end because they're there for the 50 Cent or whatever afterwards.
A couple of years later we were there to play a festival but got axed from the bill because the promoter didn't have the right permits for cracker bands or something, and we ended up playing a quick make-up show with Fever Machine and Little Dragon at this tiny dive bar. I think I commented on Jake or Andy’s blog something like – “a sissy college rock band like BCR is not able to play, but a band that is actually, literally fucking called ‘AK47’ got approved”.
Anyways, that was pretty good one (around 120 people or something) thanks, I think, to some last minute hype from Dan Shapiro and Abe Deyo, and also Little Dragon is a pretty well-known band, so kids turned up to see them. It was a good show but we didn’t play very well – you can always tell the shows where you are making actual head-way with people and maybe we were too drunk or it just wasn’t our night…
The very last time we were in Nanjing, it was just us and X is Y at one of those clubs again where they have the rock bands on at 8pm and done by 10pm because everyone wants to play dice and listen to electro house / trance and not some Shanghai rock bands that no one has heard of. In addition to that, the club did fuck all promotion because they said they had a big booking the next night for some shitty Euro folk singer that Split Works was bringing in (no offense Archie, haha), so they didn’t want to promote two live music events in one weekend. And then they didn’t charge about 150 of the people there because they were “club members”. So our two bands ended up splitting something like 220 RMB total to cover travel, hotel, food, everything.
… however, that ended up being the best one because there were about 12 kids – foreigners and Chinese -- who specifically came to see our two bands play off hearing the douban or whatever. And a few of them were (are) also in local bands in Nanjing with similar sorts of interests, so it turned out being nice. Just a good show because even though you get screwed, a few people cared and you can make real connections off of that. If the kids you want to hear your stuff do – even though its only 12 of them – then it’s worth it in my book.
So yeah… Nanjing… we’d go back if we can find the time to do it and the money to pay for it again.
I think they have a real problem with their live venues in that city -- 1) them actually existing and 2) the people running them actually caring about it at all.
But it has potential because I’ve seen at least 12 kids that give a shit and some good bands are from there as well…
as an addendum to that whole spiel -- sorry, i know i've said my piece -- I wouldn't discourage anyone from going to any small city to play. That's the whole point to being in a band... and know that you're doing noble work for the next band by clearing the path in even a small way.
just temper your expectations is all. Or come up with clever ways to get people into the show besides merely booking the date and sitting back -- which, sad to say, is what we usually do, alas...
I agree somewhat, but there's also something to be said for boycotting certain bars in certain cities when they're known to treat bands like shit -- Castle in Nanjing, for example.
Yeah, most definitely. On that last night in Nanjing, our friends from Xi'an The Fuzz had a booking at Castle and they turned up and it was closed. And as I say, this other club fucked us righteously, but I don't know if boycotting is the answer, especially in a small city where you options for places to plug your guitars into are pretty limited. Well maybe it is... I dont know.
Brad talks a lot of sense - why don't we hear more from this guy.
Although I don't agree with the idea that the more venues the better. Venues open and close too fast in Shanghai because few are succesfull enough to last more than a couple of years. We need more stability here for venues to watch alternative music.
Because this:
"Everyone who knows me knows that I'm not the kind of person who goes around trying to build myself up, I'm not self-promotional at all, I hate it when I see other people in the scene being really self-promotional."
I'd push for quality over quantity in regard to venues. And most importantly, venues run by people who care about music and musicians - not just the bottom line.
And you believe him? I mean, all that I read feels wrong on so many levels that I don t know where to start. Shit bands? really? And everybody finds it normal, even great? Ever been in a band, Brad? You respect musicians? Really? Where are your balls people?
Listen carefully to what Iggy says, Brad. And then, take a good look at yourself.
So I'll keep my attitude, sir, because I think that insolence is healthier than elitism. And I am sorry if hypocrisy mixed with rock'n roll is a cocktail that I find hard to swallow.
Furthermore, when it comes to this, "Where are your balls people?" it would seem to me that those here who disagree with Brad have been, like yourself, quite vocal about it. I'd take "ballslessness" from everyone else as a sign of tacit approval of the opinions expressed herein.
I'm not sure how the Iggy bit is relevant. He's talking about The Sex Pistols and The Stooges, leaders of sigificant popular movements in their respective countries. Brad is talking about Da Bei. Then again, I shouldn't be throwing any stones as I too live in a glass house.
Well, he is talking about something larger. He is talking about a certain conception of life. He is talking about people putting their guts on stage and getting that feeling that nothing matters anymore, no time, no pain, nothing. I am sure you experienced that feeling when you are being sucked into your music and, suddenly, all the world around you disappears. Personally, I like that feeling, we all do. We like to share it too.
And when he talks about himself, me, being a "true genius", he is talking about everyone of us being true geniuses in our own rights, and being proud of it. It's about being proud of who you are and not taking any shit from other people.
It applies to basically everything. Sex Pistols, Dabei, Prank or whatever. If this is what they are into, I have no problem with that. And if some people like it, it s fine with me.
If you're referring to my comment, I was talking about venues. Quality venues.
Elements determining “quality” include:
1. An attentive, responsive, caring and considerate staff & management, including the sound engineer, booker, and doorman
2. A transparent and fair revenue-share policy
3. A reasonable location
4. Equipment that performers can rely on
5. A stage of reasonable size
For example, Logo meets criteria 2 and 4, but not 1, 3 and 5. Live Bar meets numbers 1, 2, 5 and sort of 4, but not 3. Mao meets numbers 3 and 5, but not 1, 2, or 4.
Clearly, this is in an ideal world. Here, I’m just happy to play somewhere.
Ah yes, sorry, I read too fast. This one is on me.
It seems to me that we have decent venues, not the best in the world, granted, but we ll always find something to complain on. On point 3 and Livebar, I think that people living near Livebar might disagree with you, it is a reasonable location for them. Not for us, living nearby YYT.
I am not sure I agree on Logo on point 2, we still did not get fully paid for one of the gig we played there. I mean the policy was clear but we still did not get paid, so... I mean if you chose the "get paid on the drinks model"
Totally. Like I said, in Shanghai, I'm just happy to play.
And yeah, I can only speak for myself. Schlepping up to Live Bar = no fun. That having been said, (PROMO ALERT), Moon Tyrant, Girls Like Mystery, and Bigong Bijing have a show there in April, for which we'll be booking a beer bus to shuttle us and attendees to and from the gig. Should be a sloppy old time.
Have you gone back to Logo to request your cash? Maxime's gone, but you can talk to Lin Di about it.
When I'm being asked about my personal opinions, I get to decide what I consider to be quality music. I mean, I think your band is pretty good -- I've seen you play a couple of times and shared a couple of beers with your drummer. Is there a specific band you think I'm being unfair towards? Or do you believe that all music is good by definition? Will I see you at the Shanghai band showcase this Sunday? I've seen all the bands before, and don't think any of them are particularly good -- Da Xifu are an ok pop band, I guess -- but I'd be really happy to be proved wrong.
I think that everybody going up there on stage deserves the right to not being called a "shit band", as bad as they might be. I am glad you like what we do today, but without people letting me do shit on stage on and off for a way too long time now, I would not be playing here today.
About the show, no I won't go. I may not share their musical taste, but I am happy they have this show. Good for them. I mean there are thousands of shows I will not attend. I feel mostly indifference towards this kind of show. And when I started to feel the same about bands I care about, well, that pisses me off.
Note: comments below this one aren't being displayed right now. I sent an email to the site administrators, so hopefully they'll fix it soon and the shitstorm will continue.
So I'm gonna put my 2 cents in on this, a bit late.
First off,things Brad said are insightful, and somethings idiosyncratic, defensive, and/or self-promotional- whether he or anyone else wants to admit it- stealth marketing is still marketing. Not necessarily judging, but it's there.
None the less an interesting interview.
On the other hand,speaking as a music fan, I disagree with Brad and Morgan's stance that multiple shows in a month by the same band AT THE SAME VENUE is easily justified, especially by "cause people want to see them" fan demand, and therefore beyond criticism.
First off,like most people in this conversation, I've seen a ton of live music in my life.I am from the NYC area, which is blessed with an over-saturation of music and music venues- it has a mature music culture. Back home I have rarely seen the same band playing in the same club during a one month period, even if they were "regulars", unless they were local bar bands and/or cover bands- that's the dynamic of the music scene. Personally, I am easily bored, so I dislike repeat viewings of anything without sufficient downtime- call it auditory fatigue. There are few bands, regardless of quality, that I am willing to watch multiple times unless they are touring with new music. If I have watched them more than once in a short period it's usually at a new bar/club.
Now there are a lot of great bands in Shanghai- BCR and DFG among them, that is no doubt. I was pleasantly surprised to find this when I first came here- since I expected no rock scene at all. But that being said, there is an insularity to the Shanghai music scene that is quite evident for a city of this size, especially compared to NYC Metro area. There are probably a lot of causal variables that influence this- Chinese culture, expat culture, Chinese/expat band segregation, lack of quality venues, fractured promotion. That can be debated. But it is there. There are a limited number of bands, and out of that a small percentage that might be considered good, at the moment (I do enjoy watching them, I assure you).
The fan base is insular also- with a great divide between these "hidden" Chinese college bands/fanbase people are talking about- and which I unfortunately know nothing about (where the hell is this mythical Metal scene?! Brad tell me about this!), and the expat crowd. I don't see much crossover. Even if the still maturing Chinese college bands may not draw a large expat crowd, where the hell are the hordes of Chinese college kids at YYT/Mao/whatever who should be coming to see what practiced bands sound like? They should be tearing down the doors, but they are nowhere to be found. I also note the parasitic presence of tone deaf hipster yuppies who are more interested in socializing/be-seen-in-the-scene then appreciating/supporting the music culture. Somebody give me a can of RAID.
With that in mind, if Mr/Mrs.Promotion lines up gigs with everybody's awesome favorite bands just to please this kind of a crowd week after week, you might as well be DJing a classic rock station hammering out those "deep cuts". People are conservative/tribalistic/fanboyish by nature- if you make it comfortable they are gonna eat the same thing every damn day. On that note, how exactly are these bands, which obviously are heavily promoted, being "pushed into a corner" and "having to book 4 months in advance", "can only play YYT"??!! BS Brad! These are showcase bands who have multiple bookings month after month!!Be honest!
As for me, even filet mignon gets boring after a while- sometimes I want to try something unpolished but with potential. So as a music fan, even though I might love a band, if I go to my favorite venue and see them 3 times in a row, with similar sets, I am experiencing diminishing returns from each viewing. And my perception of the band diminishes,and I don't want that! I want to feel when I see them, I can experience them in a fresh way, to see a new perspective, catch a different nuance. Its bad enough the music scene is so small and by default repetative.I am a serious music fan, and if you pander to the tastes of the musical dilettantes, you are ostracizing and marginalizing the people like me who really care about the music.
So as much as I love the top shanghai bands-and I really really do respect, support and enjoy them-I am still craving for new material,new styles. Kudo's to Rhys and Brian, xiaoxhong for pushing that. AND if you don't like the crappy Chinese college bands, I KNOW that there are very good bands that get marginalized from venues from YYT because they get forced out by the over-rotation of the "regulars". If you say that doesn't happen, you are fooling yourself. I am a critical SOB,but I'll support a sloppy street punk band or technocore or whatever ( WTF is wrong with emo and pop-punk Brad?!) if they got heart,even if they suck a bit, SIMPLY TO SUPPORT THE MUSIC CULTURE. You have any idea how many VFW/Rotary Club and basement shows I've been to? I know you guys have done the same. Young bands never get better if they are not given opportunity. You think the Ramone's sounded great their first 6 gigs? If we continue down this pathway, the next proto-DFG is never gonna make it out of the starting blocks. Cue Rush "The Trees"
to finish off :
When you have a music "scene" this small and directionless as Shanghai, I think CBGB's tactic of "just let lots of people play and see what sticks" has to be aggressively followed, even in premiere venues. Aggressive promotion of shows for college kids- and HS kids! at different venues should be part of the plan, to build a grass roots fan base. Cross promotional pathways have to be developed. If it failed before, push it again. If we don't get fresh blood in, this whole music culture is gonna atrophy.
nuff said, and if you don't like it, suck it.
"Trendy we'll see in the future what'll be, who is obsolete The one who takes it to extremes."
Do you even live in Shanghai? For someone with such verbose opinions on the local scene, you seem to know very little about what's actually going on.
where the hell is this mythical Metal scene?!
There's a Chinese social networking site called douban. You can go to each club's page to see the events they have lined up: Yuyintang, MAO, etc. Or you check out the listings section of City Weekend, or read Shanghaiist sometime.
if Mr/Mrs.Promotion lines up gigs with everybody's awesome favorite bands just to please this kind of a crowd week after week
Your Mr/Mrs.Promotion is a straw(wo)man. This doesn't happen. If you lived in Shanghai, or even knew anything about the scene here from following this website or something like Andy Best's blog, you would see understand how ridiculous you sound.
"Even if the still maturing Chinese college bands may not draw a large expat crowd, where the hell are the hordes of Chinese college kids at YYT/Mao/whatever who should be coming to see what practiced bands sound like?"
They don't exist. Chinese college kids don't like rock music.
"On that note, how exactly are these bands, which obviously are heavily promoted, being "pushed into a corner" and "having to book 4 months in advance", "can only play YYT"??!! BS Brad! These are showcase bands who have multiple bookings month after month!!Be honest!
Be coherent! The bands who have "multiple bookings" are either good enough that they're invited to play a lot, or they proactively go out and find shows to play. The scene is the bands. There's not some conspiracy of promoters controlling everything from behind the curtain. As for only being able to play YYT, here's my assessment of the local venues:
YYT: Good venue to play at. Fair to bands (mostly). Weekends booked 4-5 months in advance. Weekdays 2-3 months. Mao: Great stage. Shit Sound. Dismissive of bands. Requires renting the whole venue or 300+ attendance guarantee. 696: Terrible stage and sound. Can be fun, but only holds 50 people. Logo: Terrible stage and sound. Hipster bands with bad taste think playing there is fun. Hipster fans with bad taste think spilling beer on bands is fun.
"I am a serious music fan"
No, you're not.
I KNOW that there are very good bands that get marginalized from venues from YYT because they get forced out by the over-rotation of the "regulars". If you say that doesn't happen, you are fooling yourself.
It doesn't happen. You're paranoid and delusional. Name those "very good bands." Venues like YYT go out of their way to avoid having the same bands play all the time, but it's not always possible. I've been there with the booker and the owner, going over upcoming shows, trying to fill out the schedule when the only bands willing to play were the same expat bands who played two weeks before. And, as I mentioned in a previous comment, the student/new band night failed because there weren't any new bands with original material willing to play for free on a Wednesday night.
Young bands never get better if they are not given opportunity. You think the Ramone's sounded great their first 6 gigs?
The Ramones didn't play saccharine mando-pop. I'm not talking about young bands playing new and exciting music. I'm talking about 25-30 year olds playing straight-up schlocky cheesy diabetic coma pop music.
Aggressive promotion of shows for college kids- and HS kids! at different venues should be part of the plan, to build a grass roots fan base. Cross promotional pathways have to be developed. If it failed before, push it again.
Why aren't you doing this? Good luck prying HS kids away from their mommies, but maybe cross promotional pathways could work!
First, let me state that I am not a Shanghai resident.
Next, in my opinion, the notion that a 'good' band can play twice a month in Shanghai as being either 'acceptable' or not diluting their message somewhat is something I consider to be absurd. Unless they have a similar prolificity as say, The Clash, around 1976 to 1981. And no-one comes close here.
Now, I am sure bands playing with such regularity happened during the rise of punk in both New York and London and also elsewhere; however Shanghai in 2012 isn't comparable, for much of the reasons stated in the original article, I admit.
In 1993, That Petrol Emotion finished then started tours in the same city. The band were so deeply ashamed (in local dialect, the phrase is 'black affronted'), that they decided to play their complete set at the second gig in reverse order.
We're not even seeing such wit, humour or even honesty in Shanghai at the moment.
And in my opinion, criticising both Chinese provincial cities, and some of Shanghai's live music venues, isn't really helping matters improve.
Anyway, my opinions in the grand scheme of things are not important. When I next come to Shanghai, I want to visit The Bund and Yu Yin Garden. Someone has also mentioned Manhattan club; still to do my reseach on that.....
Shanghai doesn't have a music reputation proportional to its population, and in my opinion this article and most of its comments isn't going to enhance matters.....the sad reality is that if you've taken the time to respond to the article, your music passion is such that you DO want to see improvement.
So, in the words of BCR- "Grow Up, Stop Fucking Around".
Regards
PA
PS Regarding the allegation and defence regarding YYT- 3 simple words, m'lud-
Shanghai doesn't have a music reputation proportional to its population, and in my opinion this article and most of its comments isn't going to enhance matters.....the sad reality is that if you've taken the time to respond to the article, your music passion is such that you DO want to see improvement.
Such a great comment dude!~ Great Job, Thank you so much :)
There is a chance that your comment is aimed at myself. That's fair enough, as metaphorically, to use my local language, I am a 'big man'.
There's enough clues that point to who I am- an outsider, quoting dialect from my home city, a username linked to music etc....maybe I need to mention that the associated band was once described as a cross between 'Pixies and Pavement'?
But, notwithstanding the freedom of the internet, the interviewee, whilst admittedly making his personal opinions, is making some outrageous allegations; such as-
1. It is okay to watch a band 24 times a year in the city.
2. A whole swathe/cross-section of the music community is labelled as 'shit'.
I do read your blogs and I do see comments from you such as- "Not really my cup of tea, but, these guys/girls are something different, and they bring an infectious energy rarely seen in the city, so if you're not doing anything else, maybe go along and check them out?". I'm paraphasing here, though people get the point, I am sure.
Your blogs are 180 degrees diametrically opposite to some of the comments posted in the original article above. That's all, really.
But, if my annonymity causes any issues, I am happy to retreat back to the provinces.....and my chemical weapons design.....
1. It is okay to watch a band 24 times a year in the city.
I didn't say that. In a city like Shanghai, where there aren't a lot of bands, some repetition is unavoidable. Would you prefer the venues enforce a "once a month" policy and just shut their doors once all the bands have played? I really don't understand your vehement objection to bands playing "too often"...
2. A whole swathe/cross-section of the music community is labelled as 'shit'.
I didn't say that, either. I labelled a few bands as shit, and I stand by my opinion. Those bands aren't "something different" that's just "not my cup of tea", they're bands playing tired schlock, poorly, and consider themselves rock stars who are above the whole scene. There are plenty of bands I don't personally like to listen to, but wouldn't label as shit. I can forgive differences of musical taste if the musicians are technically proficient, and I can forgive technical sloppiness if they're breaking new ground. I can even forgive both, in the case of very young student bands, but bad music played badly (and with a bad attitude) is just shit.
Well, I was writing in annoyed reply to "Three Cyders", but yeah the implications are there.
That's just my thing. As much as I respect the right to privacy and understand the issues surrounding net anonymity, I feel that it is better to stand by your own name and identity when you want to be taken seriously. Your posts are longer and thoughtful, so I don't think it's a big issue there. I just personally make a point of being transparent. Although spam has forced me to disable comments for the meantime at my blog.
As to my opinions. You are right, they are right there on my blog and they are quite different,if not in direct opposition, to most of those in this interview and a lot of the comments. They may be even more radical than that, I think music can have value for reasons other than the actual music itself through the community and actions of the band.
Me and Brad are friends and meet often. We have these conversations a lot. We differ in some aspects, and overlap in some and learn from each other - but at no time do we have to personalize or get aggressive.
I haven't worked out who you are. Like I said, as soon as I see a nickname my brain just switches off when it comes to debate or serious responses. I see that we probably have similar views on the above topics, if we know each other, drop me a private mail.
Hi Andy , are you referring to me ?
Oh I m sorry that moment I posted annoyed you, but I just felt that I agree with that words PA said.
I ve been in this so-called scened more than 9 years and in recent 3 years there s a lot of help from "expats blog", I was hoping to see some improvement, but unfortunately I was wrong.
Anyway I really love to see people here have been debating about Shanghai scene for few days, there s been no such thing in town for too long, you know the best Local rock n roll BBS shut down at early of 2008.
Whatever you guys "debating" for, as a local rock player, I like to say thank you guys~
Fine. I've been here since 2001 myself. As for local BBS, it's all been Douban for a while now. There's never been any serious or consistent writing in a modern format for the scene in Chinese language. I guess people are just happy with BBS style.
I'm interested to know the bands you like. You mentioned 2008, me and Brad were talking lately about how much we liked the bands and shows from 2004-08 in Shanghai. I really liked Sui. And from out of town, The Subs.
May be we could ask the guys from shanghai247 to help us set up a forum. that would be cool.
It starts to be difficult to follow everything, plus we could share info about venues we played in, contacts, music influences, people looking for bands etc... anybody in?
Well, there used to be a forum when these guys first started, but no one was posting. They got rid of it when they updated the website. Maybe it would work now that it's more established. Btw, I love following this debate. I'm sure there are many others reading and not posting. Keep up the entertainment guys!
My apologies. All those years watching American TV, from Starsky and Hutch through to CSI, ER, and Gray's Anatomy, and I still cannot accurately interpret American English.
So, when I say: 2. A whole swathe/cross-section of the music community is labelled as 'shit'.
I really should have been more precise and used the word 'suck' or 'terrible'.
"I didn't say that, either. I labelled a few bands as shit, and I stand by my opinion."
Yes, I am apologising to you again. What is the phrase you guys use......
....got it! My bad!
From the original article:
BF: All the university bands at the moment suck, they're terrible. Actually most of the expat bands suck too but at least they can throw a party! That's one thing that really bothers me about this recent push to get more of the younger Chinese bands to let them open for other shows… Pairs invited some student bands and they sucked. Why would you do that? I know it's Rhys's thing to reach out to the Chinese community, but the bands are terrible.
Anyway, I think I've written enough for the moment.
Hmm...well...ok...I need some better adjectives to describe bands I just don't like very much, but who should keep working hard to make better music. "Suck" and "terrible" might be a little harsh, and could be interpreted as synonyms for "shit," and that's not how I meant it at the time I said it. All Shanghai emo bands suck, but only some of them are shit, for example.
That being said, the university bands are still not "a whole wide swathe" of the scene. Unfortunately, they barely register on the scene. Maybe someone should put on free Sunday afternoon shows to encourage them to come out more...
Ok, firstly, I'm one of the lads who did not appreciate any strong words you used in the interview as "...racist..." and the way you discredit bands which don't match with your taste.
I think most of that guys are good musicians, passionate and they got more soul than some of your favourites sometimes...however Warm, Simplicity are not "tendance" actually.
Anyway, it's not so important...
Let's upgrade the Topic -
PK14 recorded in Sweden, played with Carsick cars in US, a SHG band was in US last summer, Pairs in NZ...
While Western Culture has issues to reach the country, Chinese bands export a sound for fun or to find identification ...A kind of resignation, isn'it?
My main question is to the manager/businessman: Besides to ensure the success of the DFG, will you work on the promotion of the bands you like, the venues you like...?
I acknowledge your backing down somewhat, however I do not want this to degenerate into a Nadal-Djokovic 40 stroke tennis battle.
In no where have I used the word 'wide'; this is completely unfair.
And, if the University music scene isn't so relevant; and my trips to Live Bar, may disagree with you, perhaps, then stating your negative views, not once; but twice, could also be seen as being unfair.
So, no offense to anyone- I step out the debate and leave to others. I wanted to discuss music with a little more positivity. Instead I find myself defending my own English.
I'm not backing down, just admitting that I can understand how you might misunderstand me. I don't really know what more to say about the student bands. Do you think having been to Live Bar magically gives you some insight into the scene? Do you think I've never been there? You haven't said anything about which bands you've seen, what you liked about them, or how student bands in general are currently relevant to the scene.
You say you want to discuss music with more positivity, but you didn't come to this thread to discuss music -- you came in to say that I shouldn't be taken seriously, that Shanghai bands should be deeply ashamed (black affronted in your language) of playing too often, and that this article and surrounding discussion are somehow damaging the "music reputation" of Shanghai.
Hopefully all this chatter and talk gets more people doing more stuff. Whether it just be blogging on this site, designing shit, filming bands and uploading it for all to see, sharing contacts, making zines, starting a photo blog, booking more shows, starting a band or playing more shows (in and out of Shanghai), putting your money where your mouth, chucking a heaps sick party, helping promote something, contact bands with ideas - all that stuff goes a long way.
Ok, firstly, I'm one of the lads who did not appreciate any strong words you used in the interview as "...racist..." and
the way you discredit bands which ones don't meet your taste.
Anyway, it's not so important...
I think most of that guys are good musicians, passionate and they got more soul than some of your favourites sometimes...however
warm, simplicity is not "tendance" actually.
Anyway, let's upgrade the Topic -
PK14 recorded in Sweden, played with Carsick cars in US, a SHG band was in US last summer, Pairs in NZ...
While Western Culture has issues to reach the country, Chinese bands export a sound for fun or to find an identification somewhere else...
My question to the manager/businessman is: Besides to ensure the DFG success overseas , will you work/help on the promotion of the bands you like, venues you like...
could be an act of general interest...but you don't work for free, in'it?
I forgot, I'd suggest the bands to run the subway, to improvise in the streets, Clubs front door, supermarkets, markets, restaurants...
..record a video and blog it on 24/7...(the name could be 24/7 shanghai take me out)
the interest is:
to play i place at your level (For me , you bands play in unappropriate places -Live Bar- YYT -MAO, too much Watts, too big. Logo(s) and Lune fit you more)
to show the shanghainese to the world.
to learn Live session
to create unexpectation
Dropping the race card? You know, it loses its value when played excessively. Let's see where Brad the racist erred, shall we? As far as I can tell, he's both praising and criticizing Chinese bands, bands of mixed membership, and laowai bands. And not for reasons derived from their ethnicity, but for his opinions of their music, work ethics, and so on. Perhaps my racism senses aren't as finely attuned as yours, but I'm not seeing it anywhere. Please elaborate.
Ok, firstly, I'm one of the lads who did not appreciate any strong words you used in the interview as "...racist..." and
the way you discredit bands which ones don't meet your taste.
Anyway, it's not so important...
I think most of that guys are good musicians, passionate and they got more soul than some of your favourites sometimes...however
warm, simplicity is not "tendance" actually.
Anyway, let's upgrade the Topic -
PK14 recorded in Sweden, played with Carsick cars in US, a SHG band was in US last summer, Pairs in NZ...
While Western Culture has issues to reach the country, Chinese bands export a sound for fun or to find an identification somewhere else...
My question to the manager/businessman is: Besides to ensure the DFG success overseas , will you work/help on the promotion of the bands you like, venues you like...
could be an act of general interest...but you don't work for free, in'it?
Also to the Shg scene, I'd suggest the bands to run the subway, to improvise in the streets, Clubs front door, supermarkets, markets, restaurants...
..record a video and blog it on 24/7...(the name could be 24/7 shanghai take me out)
the interest is:
to play i place at your level (For me , you bands play in unappropriate places -Live Bar- YYT -MAO, too much Watts, too big. Logo(s) and Lune fit you more)
to show the shanghainese to the world.
to learn Live session
to create unexpectation
no need to be in circle and to book 5 months in advance.
Please do not confuse, I've just pick up the word "racist"and my feeling is that it's just exaggerate...sectarian would be more appropriate according to what you explained...
I don't know Mr Ferguson, so I have no judgement excepted trough this article, which could desolate an indie rock youth*...
Should I continue? the spirit of next sentence is really particular too:
"Instead of trying to change the Chinese attitude towards local music they're trying to capitulate."...Like what? SHG Venues use tp play 'til 2~3 am. F*** *FF, my friends got a family life on Sunday, It's cultural!!!!...Don't look to them to down the beer barrels...and so to loose money - YOU LOOSE AN HUGE AUDIENCE.
The audience, I discover for the first time at the Brett Anderson's GIG. CANCEL - WHY - Because of a F**** equipment...( if the reason was other please accept my apologise)
Special for you Yvan: I don't say, it's Mr Ferguson's fault. But from his dinosaure rock position, he could deplore the lack of serious attitude whilst a genius guy as Suede's leader come to China...
This entire discussion is about, as you yourself referenced, "the Chinese attitude towards local music". I'd hardly say Brett Anderson applies. The conversation is not about how popular Suede is. I'm sure Brett Anderson loves and appreciates his Chinese fan base. It's about local, independent music. K?
I'm going to take a cue from Pampered Adolescent (that real big guy! Check out his big swinging dick! Oh my god! His band sounds like Pavement! OoooOOOoooOOooo!) and leave this be. Btw - #40 in the UK Singles Chart? Nice work! I mean that seriously and not sardonically.
And about the racist thing, I totally understand. Be careful with using that word. It's a dangerous one, and a pretty serious thing to call someone without substantial cause.
Why? Because some people asked him to show how big his dick is!! They make it a motherfucking pissing contest.
"Hello, new kid"
"Who are you new kid?"
"How big is your dick, new kid?"
"Play nice new kid or you will not have to play on my playground"
Their are bullies, and people like you let them do without moving their little finger. They made me sick at school as you make me sick today. I mean physically SICK, I could puke. Herd mentally, sheeps. Your scene is a motherfucking kindergarden. And you think you are the cool kids...
Rock'n roll is not a motherfucking list of dates and bands and I am certainly no motherfucking encyclopedia of motherfucking rock'n roll. It's fucking emotions that we share together. It's guts, sweat, tears, joy, and all that shit.
These people are your fans, my fans, they go to concert more than I do. You don't respect your fans, man. Music is about bands and their public. It's not about building a scene, promoters, blogs, and those other BS. Respect them.
But I am preparing my answer, an exhaustive one. You want to make it about being a pissing a contest. I ll make it a pissing contest. It will take time, I need to gather my thoughts. May be I will publish it, may be not, we will see.
It's just funny when people are like "CRED CRED CRED I'M AN OLD CHINA HAND LOOK AT MY CRED". And it's not just PA. You're entirely right that what we have here has diverged from a conversation about local attitudes towards local music and into one where people are primarily focused on being the one who's right. And our scene is only a kindergarten because it's so new and young, and people get passionate and emotional because they care about it.
Blogs help spread knowledge of what's happening to people who might not be clued in. Though I don't like all the bands Andy and Jake discuss, I can't argue with their mission of repping and supporting local musicians, no matter the genre. Promoters are the ones who bring in outside acts who can set a great example for aspiring local musicians. I know I got a pretty good reality check from watching Lamb of God's flawless performance. A scene isn't an exclusive club. It's a word to encapsulate all things music that happen in a place. It's not just musicians who help things grow.
However, after that, your post becomes meaningless. And if I had your number or email, I'd contact you to personally discuss this next bit, but I don't, so it goes here.
Show me where I've insulted anyone who likes my music and supports my band. Each time I take the stage, I make a point to thank the audience multiple times for choosing to spend their night with and money on me and my band. It's humbling when you realize the choice they've made, given all the other options available in this city on a Saturday night. Show me my disrespect. Fucking show me. What have you done? You know what I've been up to. How are you helping? Moon Tyrant is running a student band showcase at YYT next month. I expect to see you there, Mr. Big Talker. It's Sunday, March 4th, at 2pm. Don't be late. The cover is 20 RMB, time to put your money where your mouth is.
To quote Say Anything, "Ha ha ha, show me what you got."
You're pissed? That's good. Turn it into a song and keep your flailing about to yourself.
BTW, forums are open now. I hope your participation is constructive.
Blogs help spreading the word but his is not the essential. If English was my mother tongue, i would probably have one. But that does not matter. I would rather see Andy Best on stage.
Yes, Lamb of God is good. I did not go but one of my students get back with the pick of the bassist, and put it in a glass box. I teach music to kids from 5 to 20 years old. I was a student once. I had a shitty band when I was 17 and one guy put us on stage in front of 1,000 people. I don't know why but I will be forever grateful to him. I played with RMV at the student showcase at YYT in Dec. And when people criticize students or shit bands I overheat very fast. Sorry for that.
You give awards ok, no problem, but the jury, I would not want to give awards to myself... i would like to see people going to shows to vote. Internet poll? You like international act? Me too, they are our guest. Give them awards.Not that they will care, but we ll talk about it.
And yes, I will write songs because I am pissed or bored. Most of songs comes from there.
I am 34, Andy, so you don t want to see me on stage. I hope I will still be going up on stage at 50 years old. If that night, there was 2 doors, one with you playing with Xiao Punk, and the other one with that line up of yours, I would have picked the first one.
That's ok, just be honest about what you are doing. Marketing.
Hey everyone - So there have been a few people asking about forums over the last few days, we did try it a while back but no one posted. Let's try this again. The forums are located here - http://www.shanghai247.net/forum.
Any registered user can set up a topic, we've added a few including one for continuation of this comment thread.
There may be bugs so if you find any post in 'bugs' forum topic
We'll probably keep them open for 3 weeks, see how it goes. Enjoy!
Rare Brett Anderson is a contrexample to the "chinese kid doesn't like rock"...
they were many...and how many of them were desapointed then...
I guess this audience could be interested in BCR or BC on weekend...
My last comments, I hope/ think DFG, NY'L and Pairs are "The fire starter" to your Chinese indie rock scene.
More than the others before...
And THANKS for the forum!
with the times - smart and moderate -a bit hype - talented- 100% Chinese (XiaZhong included).
This is the longest thing I've ever seen for about 2 years, Harry Potter might be slightly longer though.
Something I want to share with everyone
1. In every city, the scene is unique. So don't judge a scene based on another. If a band sucked, I think what they have to know is they really suck and try to avoid that in the future. I personally want this procedure to be as fast as possible. It'll be a disaster if they find they sucked after playing 10 years.
2. Anyone tried to book Mao ever? Brad did, I did. And we really can't enjoy the strange atmosphere there. And admit it, YYT is the only decent place to play with here. Shanhai will be closed soon or already. So when you see a band playing twice there in a month, it's just normal.
3. For DFG, we are always playing with "expat" bands so far here. From my perspective of view, the expat bands here are much much better than most of the local bands and much much better than expat bands in Beijing or any other city in China. And that's the scene. Are there any group of Chinese musicians care about local scene and willingly to pay enough attention to local scene? Absolutely no, as far as I know. So, no matter what you guys said to each other, that's fantastic and bring it on.
4. About money. I personally don't care too much about it. But to be honest, I won't play a show now if they said I can only get 500 kuai here,for example, unless I want to. The thin-line is: If you invite us to play to help you reach some goal, why don't you be honest? You pay for what you get. But if you are playing that night with me, then I'll be very happy to play with your band and we will suffer or benefit from the same crowd.
And here is the reason: I've been in band from 1999 and someone here may knew the label called miniless. For 5-6 years I and my friends paid for everything to play outside, joining festival, etc. It's not wrong or right, it's just that, you want to play somewhere. But sometimes, you paid for taxi, hotels, instruments, promotion, recording, mailing, food all by yourself but eventually it seems that no one give a shit to that, they don't even know that. Then the question emerges like "why I'm doing that?" Forget about those bureaucratic shit, from the historical perspective you may have contribute to Chinese rock scene or youth culture, but if you keep doing that for 5 years or even 10 years, you will have to try so hard to find appropriate reasons to fill that emptiness. Unless you are a true punk, unless you don't care anything else but you.
5. And to some of the participants...You really don't know what are the youth here like now. They don't need rock music, from the very beginning. You can not TEACH them, it's always a business about cool. If a band ever played in YYT has reached national, even international success, kids will rush into that place with no fear of tickets, drinks, crowds, etc. So face it, we are playing for a really small group and do we want to keep doing that forever.
Comments
Thank you Brad
That's all. Just, thanks for saying things no one else has.
The best part about this
The best part about this interview is they transcribed all of my exclamation marks, so it makes me sound super-excited and demonstrative!
!!!
I know! Right?!
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This is ace! Brad needs to speak more often, I reckon. Give him his own column.
Of course we get paid when we tour though, I'm not sure where that came from. We got everything covered in Hong Kong and Dalian and some other places, but you have to go out on those first few shows assuming you're not going to make much coin, even losing a bit when you factor in hotels and all that trash. But when you return you can charge a bit more.
With the student bands thing, whether those bands sucked or not isn't really the point. It was to give them shows as I really believe in learning on stage. Give them a chance and an opportunity to play because I know when I was just starting to play in bands, a lot of people took chances on my shitty band and let me jump on their bills, let me ask questions, let me see things first hand so I could see how things were run and organised and to give me the experience to start organising my own tours, nights, parties, promo etc.
It's kind of like going for a job interview and being told 'come back when you have more experience' but no-one is willing to give you a chance to get some experience.
Some bands may not be real good yet, but there might be 1 or 2 musicians in that band, that given a chance and more experience go off and start something a bit better, and get more shows and more comfortable writing and that shit continues and can go a long way.
Apology
I must have misinterpreted some of your previous comments about touring. Thanks for correcting me ... I'm sorry I accused you of playing for free.
Good interview, again.
That bit about having to make it between age 25-30 is spot on and made me laugh out loud.
Brad was diplomatic about one particular thing though, and maybe it's because he thought it wasn't interesting or relevant ... but the events at the end of his Windows tenure were highly entertaining (taking into account the shittiness of the circumstances.)
About the CD release show on
About the CD release show on Dec 9, it was not directed at Duck Fight Goose, but the fact that the 3 bands playing that night played heavily at YYT the month before. Just could have made an effort. I would like to add that I am not "the guy from Battle Cattle", we are 3 distinct individuals with our own thoughts, guitarist went to the show actually.
Bistoo?
You're not "the guy from Battle Cattle." That's fair.
So, is Bistoo your real name then?
I plead guilty your honor!
I plead guilty your honor!
Now do you see what happens
Now do you see what happens when you don't come to a DFG show? You'll be persecuted for months!
Honestly, at the time I was just using your comment about bands playing too often as an example of an attitude I disagree with. It wasn't about you personally not coming to that one show. Now that I know xiaozhong agrees with you, I'll use him as an example in my next rant.
No pb, i ll go to the next
No pb, i ll go to the next one and no problem to alternate rants with Rhys.
Now I got it! I am really slow sometimes! I did not think I was pointing fingers at anybody in particular either (more an attitude as you said), but in fact I was. I mean, this show got "Brad Ferguson" written all over it and I did not see it. The line-up makes more sense too, way too much sense if you ask me but I get it. My bad. I guess I have no more pb to be the expat Battle Cattle guy then.
May be you could create a label or something, so that outsiders can understand better the situation.
Anyway, it was fun, now, back to the thing that really matter, music!
Keep this dialogue going!
I can get behind what Brad is saying about money. A band should get the money that they deserve if they desire it. No band should EVER feel bad about demanding payment for a gig. And that payment should reflect the value of the band/performance.
I think bands like Pairs who WANT to set up student shows for free do it simply because they enjoy doing it. I imagine there is a little bit of "this is my legacy in Shanghai" going on there too.
The venue might make a loss on free shows, but perhaps they are planting seeds. These students who can't afford a beer at the bar today might in a couple years be decently-paid engineers, teachers, artists, designers, whatever. They might want to go back to YYT and spend some money and enjoy some music. The average income is going up. Likewise, those bands that are shitty right now might have 1-2 members that in 4-5 years will have honed their skills and written something better than any of us! This means more talent pool with live experience and that is good for the music venues too.
At the end of the day we are living in experimental times in an experimental city and living out our passion and we might completely disagree with each other on how we should operate. As long as its underscored by our genuine love of the music and having a good time, I argue that none of it is all wrong. And if we do right by the venues that actually treat musicians with respect (YYT, Logo*) by promoting, getting people in the door and discouraging street beers, those places will prevail and venues like them will pop up. more experience = more talent = more/better bands = more venues = more opportunities = more money = more fun. At least that is the theory and it may not work out like that. Life has no guarantees.
Anyways, probably the best thing SH247 has ever published. cheers!
*yes, Logo's equipment is shit and they are a tad disorganized, but at least they let the band set the door price and keep all of it. Its a pretty transparent transaction if you ask me.
-Nichols / 5mao
To not-the-guitarist-from
To not-the-guitarist-from-Battle Cattle dude, I guess you're referring to our band then, BCR, who opened up for Duck Fight Goose on their CD release -- I don't know what to tell you, man -- we're a band that enjoys playing. Seems to me to be kind of the point to being in a band... the whole playing shows thing.... playing when you get the opportunity to do so, especially if it happens to be sharing a show with your friend's band when they have a big night like a CD release.
Although that was our only show in December, we did play a couple times in November. It's hard to tell if you're playing too much or not enough...
But I guess my new system for when we get offered shows is to get in contact with not-the-guitarist-from-Battle Cattle and ask if it's okay with him. Problem solved.
Referring to the free shows
Referring to the free shows thing, surely these afternoon shows are going to be making more money anyway by default of being open outside of their regular scheduled hours. Sure, factor in their staffing costs, but people will still pay for items at the bar-at a time where they wouldn't normally have been open anyway so surely it's a win win situation regardless of whatever price is charged for the door cover and the quality of the bands. In my view, these are excellently staged performances which allow these student bands to learn and harness their skills before taking the plunge of a Saturday or Friday night slot. Good on Pairs for taking the lead in this and promoting the raw talent that this city has amongst it's citizens.
Just a note - the bands
Just a note - the bands playing these Sunday afternoon free shows aren't student bands. Tomorrow is Biubiu, Death to Giants, and a couple more. YYT used to have a student band night every Wednesday, called New Faces, but it eventually went away when there were no new bands with more than one original song.
The not guitarist AND not
The not guitarist AND not drummer of Battle Cattle was refering to the concurrent gig of 3 bands playing very often at YYT and himself feeling bored about it, that's all. Not only NYL, not only BCR, not only DFG, the conjonction of the 3. In one place, YYT. Anyway, I am sure plenty of people went there, you do not need me to fill the YYT on these nights. And I have nothing against the above-mentioned bands (otherwise I would not have attended 10 to 15 gigs in 2011 with the above-mentioned bands).
There are other places to play, even it s not always easy to deal with bar owners who are not used to bands from other cities. But that's the fun of it. Get out of the comfort zone, go to Baoshan, Kunshan, Hangzhou, Nanjing, Changzhou. That's how WE (on this one I think I can include the other guys) see it.
Morgan can correct me if I'm
Morgan can correct me if I'm wrong, but I think the only two shows BCR and DFG played together in 2011 were the Shanghai 24/7 party in March and the DFG album release in December. The album release was the only show DFG has ever played with NYL. These three bands may play more often than you like, but they rarely play together.
You're the only person I've ever heard say a nice thing about playing in Nanjing. Last time DFG went it was a disaster.
Sure, it s certainly not easy
Sure, it s certainly not easy to play in venues where people play dices and drink whiskey with green tea, but there will be a few people that will enjoy the show. We try to play for these ones. Last disaster for us, Changzhou who got scared of our music, show got cancelled 2 days before.
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This thing is going off! It's killer.
I was a little bit annoyed at the DFG show because for me, it was never in any danger of being packed. People were always going to come for their CD launch, it was a big deal. So why not take that chance to book some bands that didn't have their CD launch at YYT a few weeks before or play with a Xi'an band at YYT one or two weeks earlier.
If you say you want to keep it with friends, why not ask Curry Soap or some of those noise acts that I know Panda is friends with. That would have been cool.
When you are in that position where you can pretty much guarantee a good crowd, I reckon you can take some risks. To be honest, I didn't get there until 11pm as I'd seen BCR a few weeks earlier and had just done 4 shows in a row with NYL a month or two earlier and I'm also a jerk.
Nanjing can fuck off, too. Some nice people there, but it's not a nice place to play. Dalian and Guangzhou for the win.
First, you might have been
First, you might have been confident about the turnout, but we certainly weren't at the time. A lot of people were leaving for holidays to the US/Canada/Thailand ... in fact, one member of BCR had to change his holiday plans in order to play the show. The reason I asked them to play is because I like them (and NYL), and I don't particularly like those noise bands.
You're more than welcome to take risks with the shows you book, though ... but I'll probably still complain about your poor choice of openers.
The good thing is that you
The good thing is that you always know what to expect from a filipino band!
Ah, so Nanjing is not the
Ah, so Nanjing is not the best place to try and get a gig? Think the answer to that seems to be a resounding 'no' from what I have read here- I am hearing good stuff about Kunming though (and this is a digression I realise...)
Keep it going ...
Learning from the locals, so to speak ... a good way get a consistent big, local crowd of decent fans seems to be to keep a collective of music in the same genre, and invite out-of-town acts also in the same genre. Like Playful Warrior.
The metal shows always do well and have mainly young, local crowds. It's because they like the genre and know what to expect at the shows. The bands will be to their liking, it will start on time and there's a friendly community feel cos everyone's into metal there.
Over time, this consistency turns into regular followers. They go because it's the same and they like it. Metal fans think other styles of music are weak.
But whether those shows make enough on the door to compensate for lower bar sales is another issues of course, Brad?
I was at the Playful Warrior
I was at the Playful Warrior metal show last night, and while it seems like a few more people are buying drinks these days, bar sales were still disappointing. Most of the door money goes to the bands, so no, what's left over doesn't help much. Also, whoever the pop-punk band were that played second were really super tight. If they had better taste in music they could be a great band.
Monkey Shine
That will have been Monkey Shine. They are pretty good. I blogged their old stuff, when Xiao Ding was singing. They used to have a bit of the emo about them.
The drummer is Xiao Zhong (the original Xiao Zhong from Little Nature) and he can hit a kit pretty good.
Brutal honesty
Love it Brad. Some really great points and insights, and not a little controversy. Also, big love to Shanghai 24/7 for their dedication to full and uncompromising interviews - amazing typing stamina
I think it's been covered in the comments already, but I have to back Rhys and B.O. in their efforts to broaden the offering in Shanghai. It all has to start somewhere (let's face it, 6 years ago, people couldn't see a future for YYT, D-22 or even Modern Sky). But the efforts of all these people, plus the efforts of supportive media, the bands, the promoters and the fans have broadened horizons to a point where Chinese bands can tour Australia, the US and Europe while there are full houses in Shanghai and Beijing venues weekly for both Chinese and International bands.
Things were getting a bit stale in Shanghai in 2011 with all the "local" band showcases, so Rhys and Brian decided to try something different, and hey, it's drawn attention to new bands and new people. They are doing because they love it, and because they believe there are probably benefits to them and their bands in the future. Big up yourselves
2012 looks promising....
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I think B.O (and Toshi and Misuzu) did a great job with Trash-a-gogo, bringing in cool bands from Japan and Europe, and putting on a good show every month. However, putting on segregated shows is just not cool. It's even less cool when you partner with people like Ako/乐空 to put on a show featuring shit bands like Da Bei, Prank, and Bai Yu.
We really take this guy seriously?
From the main article:
BF: Everyone who knows me knows that I'm not the kind of person who goes around trying to build myself up, I'm not self-promotional at all, I hate it when I see other people in the scene being really self-promotional.
then, the second comment:
The best part about this interview is they transcribed all of my exclamation marks, so it makes me sound super-excited and demonstrative!
Regards,
PA
haha oh you
I've gotta take Brad's side here and agree that he rarely talks about himself or his projects unless he's asked. You can usually find him standing at the corner of the bar at YYT nursing a beer and quietly taking it all in.
I'd venture that Brad's second comment you have there is his attempt at levity. A "joke," if you will. Chill out.
@Brad
@Brad
Re: Nanjing -- we've played there, I think, three or four times over the years. The first time was a real long time ago -- 4 years ago -- which is like 9 million years in Chinese rock years... it was one of those shows were you play in a dance club and people turn up at the end because they're there for the 50 Cent or whatever afterwards.
A couple of years later we were there to play a festival but got axed from the bill because the promoter didn't have the right permits for cracker bands or something, and we ended up playing a quick make-up show with Fever Machine and Little Dragon at this tiny dive bar. I think I commented on Jake or Andy’s blog something like – “a sissy college rock band like BCR is not able to play, but a band that is actually, literally fucking called ‘AK47’ got approved”.
Anyways, that was pretty good one (around 120 people or something) thanks, I think, to some last minute hype from Dan Shapiro and Abe Deyo, and also Little Dragon is a pretty well-known band, so kids turned up to see them. It was a good show but we didn’t play very well – you can always tell the shows where you are making actual head-way with people and maybe we were too drunk or it just wasn’t our night…
The very last time we were in Nanjing, it was just us and X is Y at one of those clubs again where they have the rock bands on at 8pm and done by 10pm because everyone wants to play dice and listen to electro house / trance and not some Shanghai rock bands that no one has heard of. In addition to that, the club did fuck all promotion because they said they had a big booking the next night for some shitty Euro folk singer that Split Works was bringing in (no offense Archie, haha), so they didn’t want to promote two live music events in one weekend. And then they didn’t charge about 150 of the people there because they were “club members”. So our two bands ended up splitting something like 220 RMB total to cover travel, hotel, food, everything.
… however, that ended up being the best one because there were about 12 kids – foreigners and Chinese -- who specifically came to see our two bands play off hearing the douban or whatever. And a few of them were (are) also in local bands in Nanjing with similar sorts of interests, so it turned out being nice. Just a good show because even though you get screwed, a few people cared and you can make real connections off of that. If the kids you want to hear your stuff do – even though its only 12 of them – then it’s worth it in my book.
So yeah… Nanjing… we’d go back if we can find the time to do it and the money to pay for it again.
I think they have a real problem with their live venues in that city -- 1) them actually existing and 2) the people running them actually caring about it at all.
But it has potential because I’ve seen at least 12 kids that give a shit and some good bands are from there as well…
as an addendum to that whole
as an addendum to that whole spiel -- sorry, i know i've said my piece -- I wouldn't discourage anyone from going to any small city to play. That's the whole point to being in a band... and know that you're doing noble work for the next band by clearing the path in even a small way.
just temper your expectations is all. Or come up with clever ways to get people into the show besides merely booking the date and sitting back -- which, sad to say, is what we usually do, alas...
I agree
I agree somewhat, but there's also something to be said for boycotting certain bars in certain cities when they're known to treat bands like shit -- Castle in Nanjing, for example.
Yeah, most definitely. On
Yeah, most definitely. On that last night in Nanjing, our friends from Xi'an The Fuzz had a booking at Castle and they turned up and it was closed. And as I say, this other club fucked us righteously, but I don't know if boycotting is the answer, especially in a small city where you options for places to plug your guitars into are pretty limited. Well maybe it is... I dont know.
Under-rated
Brad talks a lot of sense - why don't we hear more from this guy.
Although I don't agree with the idea that the more venues the better. Venues open and close too fast in Shanghai because few are succesfull enough to last more than a couple of years. We need more stability here for venues to watch alternative music.
Because this:
Because this:
"Everyone who knows me knows that I'm not the kind of person who goes around trying to build myself up, I'm not self-promotional at all, I hate it when I see other people in the scene being really self-promotional."
I'd push for quality over quantity in regard to venues. And most importantly, venues run by people who care about music and musicians - not just the bottom line.
And you believe him? I mean,
And you believe him? I mean, all that I read feels wrong on so many levels that I don t know where to start. Shit bands? really? And everybody finds it normal, even great? Ever been in a band, Brad? You respect musicians? Really? Where are your balls people?
Now listen to what Iggy Pop and Mogwai would have to say about it: http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XNTYwNjQ4NzY=.html
Listen carefully to what Iggy says, Brad. And then, take a good look at yourself.
So I'll keep my attitude, sir, because I think that insolence is healthier than elitism. And I am sorry if hypocrisy mixed with rock'n roll is a cocktail that I find hard to swallow.
Furthermore, when it comes to
Furthermore, when it comes to this, "Where are your balls people?" it would seem to me that those here who disagree with Brad have been, like yourself, quite vocal about it. I'd take "ballslessness" from everyone else as a sign of tacit approval of the opinions expressed herein.
I'm not sure how the Iggy bit is relevant. He's talking about The Sex Pistols and The Stooges, leaders of sigificant popular movements in their respective countries. Brad is talking about Da Bei. Then again, I shouldn't be throwing any stones as I too live in a glass house.
Well, he is talking about
Well, he is talking about something larger. He is talking about a certain conception of life. He is talking about people putting their guts on stage and getting that feeling that nothing matters anymore, no time, no pain, nothing. I am sure you experienced that feeling when you are being sucked into your music and, suddenly, all the world around you disappears. Personally, I like that feeling, we all do. We like to share it too.
And when he talks about himself, me, being a "true genius", he is talking about everyone of us being true geniuses in our own rights, and being proud of it. It's about being proud of who you are and not taking any shit from other people.
It applies to basically everything. Sex Pistols, Dabei, Prank or whatever. If this is what they are into, I have no problem with that. And if some people like it, it s fine with me.
And who gets to decide what
And who gets to decide what is quality music?
If you're referring to my
If you're referring to my comment, I was talking about venues. Quality venues.
Elements determining “quality” include:
1. An attentive, responsive, caring and considerate staff & management, including the sound engineer, booker, and doorman
2. A transparent and fair revenue-share policy
3. A reasonable location
4. Equipment that performers can rely on
5. A stage of reasonable size
For example, Logo meets criteria 2 and 4, but not 1, 3 and 5. Live Bar meets numbers 1, 2, 5 and sort of 4, but not 3. Mao meets numbers 3 and 5, but not 1, 2, or 4.
Clearly, this is in an ideal world. Here, I’m just happy to play somewhere.
Ah yes, sorry, I read too
Ah yes, sorry, I read too fast. This one is on me.
It seems to me that we have decent venues, not the best in the world, granted, but we ll always find something to complain on. On point 3 and Livebar, I think that people living near Livebar might disagree with you, it is a reasonable location for them. Not for us, living nearby YYT.
I am not sure I agree on Logo on point 2, we still did not get fully paid for one of the gig we played there. I mean the policy was clear but we still did not get paid, so... I mean if you chose the "get paid on the drinks model"
Totally. Like I said, in
Totally. Like I said, in Shanghai, I'm just happy to play.
And yeah, I can only speak for myself. Schlepping up to Live Bar = no fun. That having been said, (PROMO ALERT), Moon Tyrant, Girls Like Mystery, and Bigong Bijing have a show there in April, for which we'll be booking a beer bus to shuttle us and attendees to and from the gig. Should be a sloppy old time.
Have you gone back to Logo to request your cash? Maxime's gone, but you can talk to Lin Di about it.
I do
When I'm being asked about my personal opinions, I get to decide what I consider to be quality music. I mean, I think your band is pretty good -- I've seen you play a couple of times and shared a couple of beers with your drummer. Is there a specific band you think I'm being unfair towards? Or do you believe that all music is good by definition? Will I see you at the Shanghai band showcase this Sunday? I've seen all the bands before, and don't think any of them are particularly good -- Da Xifu are an ok pop band, I guess -- but I'd be really happy to be proved wrong.
I think that everybody going
I think that everybody going up there on stage deserves the right to not being called a "shit band", as bad as they might be. I am glad you like what we do today, but without people letting me do shit on stage on and off for a way too long time now, I would not be playing here today.
About the show, no I won't go. I may not share their musical taste, but I am happy they have this show. Good for them. I mean there are thousands of shows I will not attend. I feel mostly indifference towards this kind of show. And when I started to feel the same about bands I care about, well, that pisses me off.
Comment Problem
Note: comments below this one aren't being displayed right now. I sent an email to the site administrators, so hopefully they'll fix it soon and the shitstorm will continue.
EDIT: Fixed
yep sorry
yeah sorry about that, comments now have no limit so should be no more problems!
Rinse wash repeat and repeat and repeat...
So I'm gonna put my 2 cents in on this, a bit late.
First off,things Brad said are insightful, and somethings idiosyncratic, defensive, and/or self-promotional- whether he or anyone else wants to admit it- stealth marketing is still marketing. Not necessarily judging, but it's there.
None the less an interesting interview.
On the other hand,speaking as a music fan, I disagree with Brad and Morgan's stance that multiple shows in a month by the same band AT THE SAME VENUE is easily justified, especially by "cause people want to see them" fan demand, and therefore beyond criticism.
First off,like most people in this conversation, I've seen a ton of live music in my life.I am from the NYC area, which is blessed with an over-saturation of music and music venues- it has a mature music culture. Back home I have rarely seen the same band playing in the same club during a one month period, even if they were "regulars", unless they were local bar bands and/or cover bands- that's the dynamic of the music scene. Personally, I am easily bored, so I dislike repeat viewings of anything without sufficient downtime- call it auditory fatigue. There are few bands, regardless of quality, that I am willing to watch multiple times unless they are touring with new music. If I have watched them more than once in a short period it's usually at a new bar/club.
Now there are a lot of great bands in Shanghai- BCR and DFG among them, that is no doubt. I was pleasantly surprised to find this when I first came here- since I expected no rock scene at all. But that being said, there is an insularity to the Shanghai music scene that is quite evident for a city of this size, especially compared to NYC Metro area. There are probably a lot of causal variables that influence this- Chinese culture, expat culture, Chinese/expat band segregation, lack of quality venues, fractured promotion. That can be debated. But it is there. There are a limited number of bands, and out of that a small percentage that might be considered good, at the moment (I do enjoy watching them, I assure you).
The fan base is insular also- with a great divide between these "hidden" Chinese college bands/fanbase people are talking about- and which I unfortunately know nothing about (where the hell is this mythical Metal scene?! Brad tell me about this!), and the expat crowd. I don't see much crossover. Even if the still maturing Chinese college bands may not draw a large expat crowd, where the hell are the hordes of Chinese college kids at YYT/Mao/whatever who should be coming to see what practiced bands sound like? They should be tearing down the doors, but they are nowhere to be found. I also note the parasitic presence of tone deaf hipster yuppies who are more interested in socializing/be-seen-in-the-scene then appreciating/supporting the music culture. Somebody give me a can of RAID.
With that in mind, if Mr/Mrs.Promotion lines up gigs with everybody's awesome favorite bands just to please this kind of a crowd week after week, you might as well be DJing a classic rock station hammering out those "deep cuts". People are conservative/tribalistic/fanboyish by nature- if you make it comfortable they are gonna eat the same thing every damn day. On that note, how exactly are these bands, which obviously are heavily promoted, being "pushed into a corner" and "having to book 4 months in advance", "can only play YYT"??!! BS Brad! These are showcase bands who have multiple bookings month after month!!Be honest!
As for me, even filet mignon gets boring after a while- sometimes I want to try something unpolished but with potential. So as a music fan, even though I might love a band, if I go to my favorite venue and see them 3 times in a row, with similar sets, I am experiencing diminishing returns from each viewing. And my perception of the band diminishes,and I don't want that! I want to feel when I see them, I can experience them in a fresh way, to see a new perspective, catch a different nuance. Its bad enough the music scene is so small and by default repetative.I am a serious music fan, and if you pander to the tastes of the musical dilettantes, you are ostracizing and marginalizing the people like me who really care about the music.
So as much as I love the top shanghai bands-and I really really do respect, support and enjoy them-I am still craving for new material,new styles. Kudo's to Rhys and Brian, xiaoxhong for pushing that. AND if you don't like the crappy Chinese college bands, I KNOW that there are very good bands that get marginalized from venues from YYT because they get forced out by the over-rotation of the "regulars". If you say that doesn't happen, you are fooling yourself. I am a critical SOB,but I'll support a sloppy street punk band or technocore or whatever ( WTF is wrong with emo and pop-punk Brad?!) if they got heart,even if they suck a bit, SIMPLY TO SUPPORT THE MUSIC CULTURE. You have any idea how many VFW/Rotary Club and basement shows I've been to? I know you guys have done the same. Young bands never get better if they are not given opportunity. You think the Ramone's sounded great their first 6 gigs? If we continue down this pathway, the next proto-DFG is never gonna make it out of the starting blocks. Cue Rush "The Trees"
to finish off :
When you have a music "scene" this small and directionless as Shanghai, I think CBGB's tactic of "just let lots of people play and see what sticks" has to be aggressively followed, even in premiere venues. Aggressive promotion of shows for college kids- and HS kids! at different venues should be part of the plan, to build a grass roots fan base. Cross promotional pathways have to be developed. If it failed before, push it again. If we don't get fresh blood in, this whole music culture is gonna atrophy.
nuff said, and if you don't like it, suck it.
"Trendy we'll see in the future what'll be, who is obsolete The one who takes it to extremes."
Do you even live in Shanghai?
Do you even live in Shanghai? For someone with such verbose opinions on the local scene, you seem to know very little about what's actually going on.
where the hell is this mythical Metal scene?!
There's a Chinese social networking site called douban. You can go to each club's page to see the events they have lined up: Yuyintang, MAO, etc. Or you check out the listings section of City Weekend, or read Shanghaiist sometime.
if Mr/Mrs.Promotion lines up gigs with everybody's awesome favorite bands just to please this kind of a crowd week after week
Your Mr/Mrs.Promotion is a straw(wo)man. This doesn't happen. If you lived in Shanghai, or even knew anything about the scene here from following this website or something like Andy Best's blog, you would see understand how ridiculous you sound.
"Even if the still maturing Chinese college bands may not draw a large expat crowd, where the hell are the hordes of Chinese college kids at YYT/Mao/whatever who should be coming to see what practiced bands sound like?"
They don't exist. Chinese college kids don't like rock music.
"On that note, how exactly are these bands, which obviously are heavily promoted, being "pushed into a corner" and "having to book 4 months in advance", "can only play YYT"??!! BS Brad! These are showcase bands who have multiple bookings month after month!!Be honest!
Be coherent! The bands who have "multiple bookings" are either good enough that they're invited to play a lot, or they proactively go out and find shows to play. The scene is the bands. There's not some conspiracy of promoters controlling everything from behind the curtain. As for only being able to play YYT, here's my assessment of the local venues:
YYT: Good venue to play at. Fair to bands (mostly). Weekends booked 4-5 months in advance. Weekdays 2-3 months.
Mao: Great stage. Shit Sound. Dismissive of bands. Requires renting the whole venue or 300+ attendance guarantee.
696: Terrible stage and sound. Can be fun, but only holds 50 people.
Logo: Terrible stage and sound. Hipster bands with bad taste think playing there is fun. Hipster fans with bad taste think spilling beer on bands is fun.
"I am a serious music fan"
No, you're not.
I KNOW that there are very good bands that get marginalized from venues from YYT because they get forced out by the over-rotation of the "regulars". If you say that doesn't happen, you are fooling yourself.
It doesn't happen. You're paranoid and delusional. Name those "very good bands." Venues like YYT go out of their way to avoid having the same bands play all the time, but it's not always possible. I've been there with the booker and the owner, going over upcoming shows, trying to fill out the schedule when the only bands willing to play were the same expat bands who played two weeks before. And, as I mentioned in a previous comment, the student/new band night failed because there weren't any new bands with original material willing to play for free on a Wednesday night.
Young bands never get better if they are not given opportunity. You think the Ramone's sounded great their first 6 gigs?
The Ramones didn't play saccharine mando-pop. I'm not talking about young bands playing new and exciting music. I'm talking about 25-30 year olds playing straight-up schlocky cheesy diabetic coma pop music.
Aggressive promotion of shows for college kids- and HS kids! at different venues should be part of the plan, to build a grass roots fan base. Cross promotional pathways have to be developed. If it failed before, push it again.
Why aren't you doing this? Good luck prying HS kids away from their mommies, but maybe cross promotional pathways could work!
That Petrol Emotion
First, let me state that I am not a Shanghai resident.
Next, in my opinion, the notion that a 'good' band can play twice a month in Shanghai as being either 'acceptable' or not diluting their message somewhat is something I consider to be absurd. Unless they have a similar prolificity as say, The Clash, around 1976 to 1981. And no-one comes close here.
Now, I am sure bands playing with such regularity happened during the rise of punk in both New York and London and also elsewhere; however Shanghai in 2012 isn't comparable, for much of the reasons stated in the original article, I admit.
In 1993, That Petrol Emotion finished then started tours in the same city. The band were so deeply ashamed (in local dialect, the phrase is 'black affronted'), that they decided to play their complete set at the second gig in reverse order.
We're not even seeing such wit, humour or even honesty in Shanghai at the moment.
And in my opinion, criticising both Chinese provincial cities, and some of Shanghai's live music venues, isn't really helping matters improve.
Anyway, my opinions in the grand scheme of things are not important. When I next come to Shanghai, I want to visit The Bund and Yu Yin Garden. Someone has also mentioned Manhattan club; still to do my reseach on that.....
Shanghai doesn't have a music reputation proportional to its population, and in my opinion this article and most of its comments isn't going to enhance matters.....the sad reality is that if you've taken the time to respond to the article, your music passion is such that you DO want to see improvement.
So, in the words of BCR- "Grow Up, Stop Fucking Around".
Regards
PA
PS Regarding the allegation and defence regarding YYT- 3 simple words, m'lud-
THIS
YEAR'S
LOVE
Case concluded.
Next Year's Love?
Do mean Next Year's Love? What about them? Do they have trouble getting gigs because of other bands playing too much?
Thank you dude~
Shanghai doesn't have a music reputation proportional to its population, and in my opinion this article and most of its comments isn't going to enhance matters.....the sad reality is that if you've taken the time to respond to the article, your music passion is such that you DO want to see improvement.
Such a great comment dude!~ Great Job, Thank you so much :)
Hmmn, yeah, right.
Brad's been here ten years and directly involved. He's speaking at length, in detail under his real name and identity.
And then we also have some generalised knee jerk comments under fake names and handles.
I know which ones I'm going to take seriously.
Is there any comments
Is there any comments disappeared ?
Whoops!
Sorry, that should be fixed now!
FAO Andy Best
Andy,
There is a chance that your comment is aimed at myself. That's fair enough, as metaphorically, to use my local language, I am a 'big man'.
There's enough clues that point to who I am- an outsider, quoting dialect from my home city, a username linked to music etc....maybe I need to mention that the associated band was once described as a cross between 'Pixies and Pavement'?
But, notwithstanding the freedom of the internet, the interviewee, whilst admittedly making his personal opinions, is making some outrageous allegations; such as-
1. It is okay to watch a band 24 times a year in the city.
2. A whole swathe/cross-section of the music community is labelled as 'shit'.
I do read your blogs and I do see comments from you such as- "Not really my cup of tea, but, these guys/girls are something different, and they bring an infectious energy rarely seen in the city, so if you're not doing anything else, maybe go along and check them out?". I'm paraphasing here, though people get the point, I am sure.
Your blogs are 180 degrees diametrically opposite to some of the comments posted in the original article above. That's all, really.
But, if my annonymity causes any issues, I am happy to retreat back to the provinces.....and my chemical weapons design.....
Regards,
PA
Context
1. It is okay to watch a band 24 times a year in the city.
I didn't say that. In a city like Shanghai, where there aren't a lot of bands, some repetition is unavoidable. Would you prefer the venues enforce a "once a month" policy and just shut their doors once all the bands have played? I really don't understand your vehement objection to bands playing "too often"...
2. A whole swathe/cross-section of the music community is labelled as 'shit'.
I didn't say that, either. I labelled a few bands as shit, and I stand by my opinion. Those bands aren't "something different" that's just "not my cup of tea", they're bands playing tired schlock, poorly, and consider themselves rock stars who are above the whole scene. There are plenty of bands I don't personally like to listen to, but wouldn't label as shit. I can forgive differences of musical taste if the musicians are technically proficient, and I can forgive technical sloppiness if they're breaking new ground. I can even forgive both, in the case of very young student bands, but bad music played badly (and with a bad attitude) is just shit.
Hey
Well, I was writing in annoyed reply to "Three Cyders", but yeah the implications are there.
That's just my thing. As much as I respect the right to privacy and understand the issues surrounding net anonymity, I feel that it is better to stand by your own name and identity when you want to be taken seriously. Your posts are longer and thoughtful, so I don't think it's a big issue there. I just personally make a point of being transparent. Although spam has forced me to disable comments for the meantime at my blog.
As to my opinions. You are right, they are right there on my blog and they are quite different,if not in direct opposition, to most of those in this interview and a lot of the comments. They may be even more radical than that, I think music can have value for reasons other than the actual music itself through the community and actions of the band.
Me and Brad are friends and meet often. We have these conversations a lot. We differ in some aspects, and overlap in some and learn from each other - but at no time do we have to personalize or get aggressive.
I haven't worked out who you are. Like I said, as soon as I see a nickname my brain just switches off when it comes to debate or serious responses. I see that we probably have similar views on the above topics, if we know each other, drop me a private mail.
Hi Andy , are you referring
Hi Andy , are you referring to me ?
Oh I m sorry that moment I posted annoyed you, but I just felt that I agree with that words PA said.
I ve been in this so-called scened more than 9 years and in recent 3 years there s a lot of help from "expats blog", I was hoping to see some improvement, but unfortunately I was wrong.
Anyway I really love to see people here have been debating about Shanghai scene for few days, there s been no such thing in town for too long, you know the best Local rock n roll BBS shut down at early of 2008.
Whatever you guys "debating" for, as a local rock player, I like to say thank you guys~
Sure.
Fine. I've been here since 2001 myself. As for local BBS, it's all been Douban for a while now. There's never been any serious or consistent writing in a modern format for the scene in Chinese language. I guess people are just happy with BBS style.
I'm interested to know the bands you like. You mentioned 2008, me and Brad were talking lately about how much we liked the bands and shows from 2004-08 in Shanghai. I really liked Sui. And from out of town, The Subs.
Yeap, it s good to have some
Yeap, it s good to have some debate.
May be we could ask the guys from shanghai247 to help us set up a forum. that would be cool.
It starts to be difficult to follow everything, plus we could share info about venues we played in, contacts, music influences, people looking for bands etc... anybody in?
Well, there used to be a
Well, there used to be a forum when these guys first started, but no one was posting. They got rid of it when they updated the website. Maybe it would work now that it's more established. Btw, I love following this debate. I'm sure there are many others reading and not posting. Keep up the entertainment guys!
There's context.....then there's UK versus US English.....
Dear Brad,
My apologies. All those years watching American TV, from Starsky and Hutch through to CSI, ER, and Gray's Anatomy, and I still cannot accurately interpret American English.
So, when I say: 2. A whole swathe/cross-section of the music community is labelled as 'shit'.
I really should have been more precise and used the word 'suck' or 'terrible'.
"I didn't say that, either. I labelled a few bands as shit, and I stand by my opinion."
Yes, I am apologising to you again. What is the phrase you guys use......
....got it! My bad!
From the original article:
BF: All the university bands at the moment suck, they're terrible. Actually most of the expat bands suck too but at least they can throw a party! That's one thing that really bothers me about this recent push to get more of the younger Chinese bands to let them open for other shows… Pairs invited some student bands and they sucked. Why would you do that? I know it's Rhys's thing to reach out to the Chinese community, but the bands are terrible.
Anyway, I think I've written enough for the moment.
Regards
PA
You got me
Hmm...well...ok...I need some better adjectives to describe bands I just don't like very much, but who should keep working hard to make better music. "Suck" and "terrible" might be a little harsh, and could be interpreted as synonyms for "shit," and that's not how I meant it at the time I said it. All Shanghai emo bands suck, but only some of them are shit, for example.
That being said, the university bands are still not "a whole wide swathe" of the scene. Unfortunately, they barely register on the scene. Maybe someone should put on free Sunday afternoon shows to encourage them to come out more...
Ok, firstly, I'm one of the
Ok, firstly, I'm one of the lads who did not appreciate any strong words you used in the interview as "...racist..." and the way you discredit bands which don't match with your taste.
I think most of that guys are good musicians, passionate and they got more soul than some of your favourites sometimes...however Warm, Simplicity are not "tendance" actually.
Anyway, it's not so important...
Let's upgrade the Topic -
PK14 recorded in Sweden, played with Carsick cars in US, a SHG band was in US last summer, Pairs in NZ...
While Western Culture has issues to reach the country, Chinese bands export a sound for fun or to find identification ...A kind of resignation, isn'it?
My main question is to the manager/businessman: Besides to ensure the success of the DFG, will you work on the promotion of the bands you like, the venues you like...?
A NAM
Tennis is not my favourite sport
Dear Brad,
I acknowledge your backing down somewhat, however I do not want this to degenerate into a Nadal-Djokovic 40 stroke tennis battle.
In no where have I used the word 'wide'; this is completely unfair.
And, if the University music scene isn't so relevant; and my trips to Live Bar, may disagree with you, perhaps, then stating your negative views, not once; but twice, could also be seen as being unfair.
So, no offense to anyone- I step out the debate and leave to others. I wanted to discuss music with a little more positivity. Instead I find myself defending my own English.
Regards
PA
See ya
I'm not backing down, just admitting that I can understand how you might misunderstand me. I don't really know what more to say about the student bands. Do you think having been to Live Bar magically gives you some insight into the scene? Do you think I've never been there? You haven't said anything about which bands you've seen, what you liked about them, or how student bands in general are currently relevant to the scene.
You say you want to discuss music with more positivity, but you didn't come to this thread to discuss music -- you came in to say that I shouldn't be taken seriously, that Shanghai bands should be deeply ashamed (black affronted in your language) of playing too often, and that this article and surrounding discussion are somehow damaging the "music reputation" of Shanghai.
hopefully
Hopefully all this chatter and talk gets more people doing more stuff. Whether it just be blogging on this site, designing shit, filming bands and uploading it for all to see, sharing contacts, making zines, starting a photo blog, booking more shows, starting a band or playing more shows (in and out of Shanghai), putting your money where your mouth, chucking a heaps sick party, helping promote something, contact bands with ideas - all that stuff goes a long way.
Ok, firstly, I'm one of the
Ok, firstly, I'm one of the lads who did not appreciate any strong words you used in the interview as "...racist..." and
the way you discredit bands which ones don't meet your taste.
Anyway, it's not so important...
I think most of that guys are good musicians, passionate and they got more soul than some of your favourites sometimes...however
warm, simplicity is not "tendance" actually.
Anyway, let's upgrade the Topic -
PK14 recorded in Sweden, played with Carsick cars in US, a SHG band was in US last summer, Pairs in NZ...
While Western Culture has issues to reach the country, Chinese bands export a sound for fun or to find an identification somewhere else...
My question to the manager/businessman is: Besides to ensure the DFG success overseas , will you work/help on the promotion of the bands you like, venues you like...
could be an act of general interest...but you don't work for free, in'it?
I forgot, I'd suggest the bands to run the subway, to improvise in the streets, Clubs front door, supermarkets, markets, restaurants...
..record a video and blog it on 24/7...(the name could be 24/7 shanghai take me out)
the interest is:
to play i place at your level (For me , you bands play in unappropriate places -Live Bar- YYT -MAO, too much Watts, too big. Logo(s) and Lune fit you more)
to show the shanghainese to the world.
to learn Live session
to create unexpectation
you should check Beirut/Bloc Party/The XX at www.blogotheque.net/serie/concert-a-emporter/
That's all folk...
Also....
Dropping the race card? You know, it loses its value when played excessively. Let's see where Brad the racist erred, shall we? As far as I can tell, he's both praising and criticizing Chinese bands, bands of mixed membership, and laowai bands. And not for reasons derived from their ethnicity, but for his opinions of their music, work ethics, and so on. Perhaps my racism senses aren't as finely attuned as yours, but I'm not seeing it anywhere. Please elaborate.
well ...
I know. The people commenting here, like you, Brad, me, Ivan, Josh, Nicholls, 'Rubbish', etc don't do anything.
... you know what, I think I'm going to start a blog. You should start a band.
Ok, firstly, I'm one of the
Ok, firstly, I'm one of the lads who did not appreciate any strong words you used in the interview as "...racist..." and
the way you discredit bands which ones don't meet your taste.
Anyway, it's not so important...
I think most of that guys are good musicians, passionate and they got more soul than some of your favourites sometimes...however
warm, simplicity is not "tendance" actually.
Anyway, let's upgrade the Topic -
PK14 recorded in Sweden, played with Carsick cars in US, a SHG band was in US last summer, Pairs in NZ...
While Western Culture has issues to reach the country, Chinese bands export a sound for fun or to find an identification somewhere else...
My question to the manager/businessman is: Besides to ensure the DFG success overseas , will you work/help on the promotion of the bands you like, venues you like...
could be an act of general interest...but you don't work for free, in'it?
Also to the Shg scene, I'd suggest the bands to run the subway, to improvise in the streets, Clubs front door, supermarkets, markets, restaurants...
..record a video and blog it on 24/7...(the name could be 24/7 shanghai take me out)
the interest is:
to play i place at your level (For me , you bands play in unappropriate places -Live Bar- YYT -MAO, too much Watts, too big. Logo(s) and Lune fit you more)
to show the shanghainese to the world.
to learn Live session
to create unexpectation
no need to be in circle and to book 5 months in advance.
you should check Beirut/Bloc Party/The XX at www.blogotheque.net/serie/concert-a-emporter/
That's all folk for me...
Please do not confuse, I've
Please do not confuse, I've just pick up the word "racist"and my feeling is that it's just exaggerate...sectarian would be more appropriate according to what you explained...
I don't know Mr Ferguson, so I have no judgement excepted trough this article, which could desolate an indie rock youth*...
Should I continue? the spirit of next sentence is really particular too:
"Instead of trying to change the Chinese attitude towards local music they're trying to capitulate."...Like what? SHG Venues use tp play 'til 2~3 am. F*** *FF, my friends got a family life on Sunday, It's cultural!!!!...Don't look to them to down the beer barrels...and so to loose money - YOU LOOSE AN HUGE AUDIENCE.
The audience, I discover for the first time at the Brett Anderson's GIG. CANCEL - WHY - Because of a F**** equipment...( if the reason was other please accept my apologise)
Special for you Yvan: I don't say, it's Mr Ferguson's fault. But from his dinosaure rock position, he could deplore the lack of serious attitude whilst a genius guy as Suede's leader come to China...
At the risk of perpetuating this circlejerk bonanza...
This entire discussion is about, as you yourself referenced, "the Chinese attitude towards local music". I'd hardly say Brett Anderson applies. The conversation is not about how popular Suede is. I'm sure Brett Anderson loves and appreciates his Chinese fan base. It's about local, independent music. K?
I'm going to take a cue from Pampered Adolescent (that real big guy! Check out his big swinging dick! Oh my god! His band sounds like Pavement! OoooOOOoooOOooo!) and leave this be. Btw - #40 in the UK Singles Chart? Nice work! I mean that seriously and not sardonically.
And about the racist thing, I totally understand. Be careful with using that word. It's a dangerous one, and a pretty serious thing to call someone without substantial cause.
Why? Because some people
Why? Because some people asked him to show how big his dick is!! They make it a motherfucking pissing contest.
"Hello, new kid"
"Who are you new kid?"
"How big is your dick, new kid?"
"Play nice new kid or you will not have to play on my playground"
Their are bullies, and people like you let them do without moving their little finger. They made me sick at school as you make me sick today. I mean physically SICK, I could puke. Herd mentally, sheeps. Your scene is a motherfucking kindergarden. And you think you are the cool kids...
Rock'n roll is not a motherfucking list of dates and bands and I am certainly no motherfucking encyclopedia of motherfucking rock'n roll. It's fucking emotions that we share together. It's guts, sweat, tears, joy, and all that shit.
These people are your fans, my fans, they go to concert more than I do. You don't respect your fans, man. Music is about bands and their public. It's not about building a scene, promoters, blogs, and those other BS. Respect them.
But I am preparing my answer, an exhaustive one. You want to make it about being a pissing a contest. I ll make it a pissing contest. It will take time, I need to gather my thoughts. May be I will publish it, may be not, we will see.
But I am pissed, man and I am not backing off.
The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
It's just funny when people
It's just funny when people are like "CRED CRED CRED I'M AN OLD CHINA HAND LOOK AT MY CRED". And it's not just PA. You're entirely right that what we have here has diverged from a conversation about local attitudes towards local music and into one where people are primarily focused on being the one who's right. And our scene is only a kindergarten because it's so new and young, and people get passionate and emotional because they care about it.
Blogs help spread knowledge of what's happening to people who might not be clued in. Though I don't like all the bands Andy and Jake discuss, I can't argue with their mission of repping and supporting local musicians, no matter the genre. Promoters are the ones who bring in outside acts who can set a great example for aspiring local musicians. I know I got a pretty good reality check from watching Lamb of God's flawless performance. A scene isn't an exclusive club. It's a word to encapsulate all things music that happen in a place. It's not just musicians who help things grow.
However, after that, your post becomes meaningless. And if I had your number or email, I'd contact you to personally discuss this next bit, but I don't, so it goes here.
Show me where I've insulted anyone who likes my music and supports my band. Each time I take the stage, I make a point to thank the audience multiple times for choosing to spend their night with and money on me and my band. It's humbling when you realize the choice they've made, given all the other options available in this city on a Saturday night. Show me my disrespect. Fucking show me. What have you done? You know what I've been up to. How are you helping? Moon Tyrant is running a student band showcase at YYT next month. I expect to see you there, Mr. Big Talker. It's Sunday, March 4th, at 2pm. Don't be late. The cover is 20 RMB, time to put your money where your mouth is.
To quote Say Anything, "Ha ha ha, show me what you got."
You're pissed? That's good. Turn it into a song and keep your flailing about to yourself.
BTW, forums are open now. I hope your participation is constructive.
Blogs help spreading the word
Blogs help spreading the word but his is not the essential. If English was my mother tongue, i would probably have one. But that does not matter. I would rather see Andy Best on stage.
Yes, Lamb of God is good. I did not go but one of my students get back with the pick of the bassist, and put it in a glass box. I teach music to kids from 5 to 20 years old. I was a student once. I had a shitty band when I was 17 and one guy put us on stage in front of 1,000 people. I don't know why but I will be forever grateful to him. I played with RMV at the student showcase at YYT in Dec. And when people criticize students or shit bands I overheat very fast. Sorry for that.
You give awards ok, no problem, but the jury, I would not want to give awards to myself... i would like to see people going to shows to vote. Internet poll? You like international act? Me too, they are our guest. Give them awards.Not that they will care, but we ll talk about it.
And yes, I will write songs because I am pissed or bored. Most of songs comes from there.
... me on stage?
Andy Best is 39 years old and you don't want to see him on stage.
I am 34, Andy, so you don t
I am 34, Andy, so you don t want to see me on stage. I hope I will still be going up on stage at 50 years old. If that night, there was 2 doors, one with you playing with Xiao Punk, and the other one with that line up of yours, I would have picked the first one.
That's ok, just be honest about what you are doing. Marketing.
I am out of here.
See ya all,
Laurent aka Bistoo aka Laolao
Marketing?
If I am honest about what I am doing, I am marketing? Is this a language problem?
Can you explain how I'm involved in marketing.
FORUMS
Hey everyone - So there have been a few people asking about forums over the last few days, we did try it a while back but no one posted. Let's try this again. The forums are located here - http://www.shanghai247.net/forum.
Any registered user can set up a topic, we've added a few including one for continuation of this comment thread.
There may be bugs so if you find any post in 'bugs' forum topic
We'll probably keep them open for 3 weeks, see how it goes. Enjoy!
Rare Brett Anderson is a
Rare Brett Anderson is a contrexample to the "chinese kid doesn't like rock"...
they were many...and how many of them were desapointed then...
I guess this audience could be interested in BCR or BC on weekend...
My last comments, I hope/ think DFG, NY'L and Pairs are "The fire starter" to your Chinese indie rock scene.
More than the others before...
And THANKS for the forum!
with the times - smart and moderate -a bit hype - talented- 100% Chinese (XiaZhong included).
My encouragement to them...
Yup, those 3 bands are
Yup, those 3 bands are setting a fantastic example. Too bad there are those who whinge and whine when they play more than once every 2 months.
well
This is the longest thing I've ever seen for about 2 years, Harry Potter might be slightly longer though.
Something I want to share with everyone
1. In every city, the scene is unique. So don't judge a scene based on another. If a band sucked, I think what they have to know is they really suck and try to avoid that in the future. I personally want this procedure to be as fast as possible. It'll be a disaster if they find they sucked after playing 10 years.
2. Anyone tried to book Mao ever? Brad did, I did. And we really can't enjoy the strange atmosphere there. And admit it, YYT is the only decent place to play with here. Shanhai will be closed soon or already. So when you see a band playing twice there in a month, it's just normal.
3. For DFG, we are always playing with "expat" bands so far here. From my perspective of view, the expat bands here are much much better than most of the local bands and much much better than expat bands in Beijing or any other city in China. And that's the scene. Are there any group of Chinese musicians care about local scene and willingly to pay enough attention to local scene? Absolutely no, as far as I know. So, no matter what you guys said to each other, that's fantastic and bring it on.
4. About money. I personally don't care too much about it. But to be honest, I won't play a show now if they said I can only get 500 kuai here,for example, unless I want to. The thin-line is: If you invite us to play to help you reach some goal, why don't you be honest? You pay for what you get. But if you are playing that night with me, then I'll be very happy to play with your band and we will suffer or benefit from the same crowd.
And here is the reason: I've been in band from 1999 and someone here may knew the label called miniless. For 5-6 years I and my friends paid for everything to play outside, joining festival, etc. It's not wrong or right, it's just that, you want to play somewhere. But sometimes, you paid for taxi, hotels, instruments, promotion, recording, mailing, food all by yourself but eventually it seems that no one give a shit to that, they don't even know that. Then the question emerges like "why I'm doing that?" Forget about those bureaucratic shit, from the historical perspective you may have contribute to Chinese rock scene or youth culture, but if you keep doing that for 5 years or even 10 years, you will have to try so hard to find appropriate reasons to fill that emptiness. Unless you are a true punk, unless you don't care anything else but you.
5. And to some of the participants...You really don't know what are the youth here like now. They don't need rock music, from the very beginning. You can not TEACH them, it's always a business about cool. If a band ever played in YYT has reached national, even international success, kids will rush into that place with no fear of tickets, drinks, crowds, etc. So face it, we are playing for a really small group and do we want to keep doing that forever.
Please move it to the forums
As the number of comments keeps growing please write any new comments in our new forum. We've added a topic for the continuation of this comment thread - http://www.shanghai247.net/forum/continuation-discussion-brad-ferguson-i... - Cheers!