Slow Motions
Long hiatus, Beijing stuff:
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shootout to The Batman
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Slow week, here's some things my friends write that I read in lieu of having any real friends in Beijing:
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The highlight of the night was a Japanese-Korean band called 10 ("我们名字是...十"). My new kolegas-affiliated friend Michael nailed it when he described them as "Japanese Bjork meets Kraftwerk." I couldn't tell if the girl (on the left) was on drugs or just cool, but she gave off this infectious weirdo vibe that successively transformed the set from pretty good to really good to the most fun I'm likely to have this week. The musical setup was pretty complex, with the dude on the right running some simple 808-style beats and modulating/looping the girl's mic, into which she inputed her voice (which had a considerable range on its own), balloons, squeak toys, a kazoo, and various other economical noise-emitting items. The best parts of the set were when she would lapse into the kind of deskilled, transcendent shredding you can only pull off if you're a cute Japanese girl with red Kanye glasses and a red panda umbrella and a red plastic keyboard guitar.
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Another weekend, another post-late night late afternoon post.
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Last night I met Yan Jun, a Beijing-based poet/musician/organizer. I dropped off some copies of the then new Black Monk LP for Yan Jun at a record store in 798 when I was in Beijing in 2007, but didn't end up seeing him in person. I got back in touch with him the other day. Luckily he remembered me, and told me about a weekly experimental music night at a bar a couple of miles away from my apartment.
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Last night I got to see the one Beijing band I had previously heard of, Carsick Cars. It happened to be their major tour-ending, 2nd cd-releasing blowout show. Not much of a blowout actually, just two bands. The first one had a very atmospheric, shoe-gazey thing going on, which was fine until it was punctuated by weird guitar thrashes and high-pitched wailing, along with seriously obnoxious lights (not their fault). I wasn't too into it but I had no expectations and I was psyched to see anything with a general indie reference point.
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Riding a bicycle in Beijing is really fun, especially if you like cheating death. My boss gave me his hand-me-down Khan bike so he could upgrade, or downgrade, to a ride with more street cred, but I'm perfectly happy falling in the ex-pat pack with this model. It's big, a plus since being visible is a life or death matter on these streets.
I'm being melodramatic. It was only on day one that I had some potentially life-threatening scrapes. On day two I got my street legs. By day three I was virtually local in my casual disregard for cars with perfectly legitimate objections to my presence in their lane. There actually proved to be very little difference between these three evolutionary steps, except exponential increases in use of the novelty bell on my right handlebar.
So having a bike means I'll be highly mobile, and hopefully will have some solid field trips documented here over the next few weeks. At least until it gets too cold. I'm a huge advocate of walking, but now that I have this bike I feel like I'm commuting for the first time. What was I thinking before? I guess Boston is much smaller than Beijing.
Now I need to join a bicycle gang.
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