Beijing Beat blog with Mark Godfrey
Beijing Beat
Author:mark_godfreyCreated:3/26/2007 7:03 AM
Talking with the movers and makers of China's rock scene

Having read an earlier post on his band on Beijing Beat, lead singer Xiao Rong decided to meet up and fill in the blanks in the earlier post - about an early Eagles affinity and making it in America

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Arguably Beijing's most inventive band, arty Lonely China Day has found a new drummer and is preparing for a US album release in July

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Film that defined a generation and its rock-poet is ignored in wealthier China

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There's a Chinese version of Christy Moore favourite Ride On

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The Bacardi Sino Sessions delivered talent in The Infadels, but the turn-out will have disappointed a drinks brand chasing young Chinese

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Warner and Sony BMG have pumped money into a Chinese technology company which is coming up with more secure systems for selling downloads to China's 500 million mobile users

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Linkin Park will headline the extravaganza, but previous well-meaning extravaganzas have failed miserably to generate ticket sales in this bureaucratic music market

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Nirvana spawners and Free Tibet activists Sonic Youth miraculously got visas and performance rights from China's Ministry of Culture - more into ginseng than grunge - but the local, and banned, support act wasn't so lucky

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China’s punk pioneers Brain Failure do fashion shoots and sing in English. Where’s the bollocks in that? Beijingers used to stop and stare at the members of punk band Brain Failure when they appeared on Beijing's streets in the 1990s, all mohawks and dog collars. Today the band sings in English, for a Japanese record label, and spends as much time in America as it does in China. Nobody's staring now, but there's still shades of the old idealism

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One of the most enduring and artful of China's rock groups, Muma talk with Beijing Beat

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