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Thursday, 18 March 2010 04:03 Written by Urbanatomy Weekend Guide The second weekend of everyone's favorite Shanghai-Beijing indie music and art fest is upon us. You want beats? Paintings? American- 1990s- Alternative-inspired tunes? How about, flesh-eating, rhinestone-studded rockabilly? Yep, they got that too.
Friday
![]() Tripple Nipples Lady-punk performance art from Tokyo. Electronic beats, synth melodies, screaming. They come promising mayhem. Listen here. Tickets: 50 RMB, 40 RMB for students and pre-sale Location: Yuyintang, 8:30 pm
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JD Twitch (Optimo) Scottish DJ duo, Keith McIvor and Jonnie Wilkes. They're owners and founders of Optimo night club in Glasgow. And they've been all over the world DJing. Their MySpace: Here. Tickets: 70 RMB Location: The Shelter, 9:30 pm
Saturday
![]() Miyuki Akiyama Debut solo Chinese show for this Japanese painter. Her oil works portray dreamy landscapes inhabited by forest creatures and wild animals. Tickets: Free Location: Andrew James Art, Opening Party 6 - 9 pm. Work shows March 20 - April 25 (Galley open Tuesday - Sunday 11 am - 7 pm)
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Moving House! Party ART LABOR is selling off some works, at ten- to twenty-percent discounts. They'll also give away one giant ink jet printer to a lucky winner. Eclectic music and drinks for 10 RMB each. Proceeds go to Bright Gold Children's Foundation, a foundation that helps blind people in China. Tickets: Free Location: ART LABOR Gallery, 7 to 11 pm
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Dead Elvis & His One Man Grave Graveyard-chic, Vegas-inspired one man band. Expect rockabilly songs with names like "Monster Under Your Bed" and "Get Outta My Grave." Listen here. Tickets: 50 RMB Location: Logo, 8:30 pm
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Omnipotent Youth Hotel Originally formed in Shijiazhuang, Hebei Province, they say they draw influences from Blind Melon and other early 90s American alternative acts, as well as jazz, blues and psychedelic noise. Listen here. Tickets: 50 RMB Location: Zhijiang Dream Factory 8:30 pm
A Taste of Red by 5th Wall (Sunday night also) ![]() Multi-media performance installation exploring the last moment's of a woman's life juxtaposed with a rapidly changing city. The performance will use "synaesthesia" - where audience members will have multiple senses trigged as part of the performance. Tickets: 150 RMB at the door, 100 RMB pre-sale ( This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it ) Location: River South Art Center 5 pm
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Music
Tuesday, 16 March 2010 11:03 Written by Urbanatomy American indie pop-punk trio at Yuyintang Thursday. Hailing from Portland, Oregon (that's the upper-left part of the United States, for you geography nubes) and about to release their fifth album, The Thermals have four China tour dates: Beijing, China, Chengdu, Wuhan. And guess which one they're most excited about! The Thermals are best known for their third album, The Body, The Blood, The Machine, which weaves a dark tale of an America manipulated by Christian facism. Kinda over the top, but soooo catchy. Tickets are 100 RMB. Show starts at 9 pm at Yuyintang. Singer and guitarist Hutch Harris answered a few questions for us: Thoughts on coming to Shanghai? Personally, Shanghai is the city in China that is making me the most excited. It just looks so incredibly futuristic. I wish we were going to have more time there! What can we expect at the show Thursday? Lots of old songs, "the hits", as we say. Lots of new stuff too, all unreleased! We are in the process of making a new record, titled Personal Life. We'll be playing more than half of it. How did you guys decide to play mainland China? What do you know about your fans here? We booked an Australian tour and were offered this Chinese tour, how could we say no? Honestly, I never expected to come to China, much less do a tour here, but it looks to be amazing and very fun! I know nothing of our fans here. Frankly I'll be surprised if we have any at all!
What can we expect from your new album Personal Life? A lot of our new songs are more introspective and make good use of space. Kathy wrote a lot of the songs on bass so there's a lot less guitar and singing than when I write the songs. Personal Life will explore love and lies between humans. It's as dark a subject as politics and death, which we've already explored ad nauseam.
Why I Write
Tuesday, 16 March 2010 10:03 Written by JFK Miller In 1946, George Orwell wrote an essay entitled Why I Write detailing the forces which compelled him to put pen to paper. In this, our continuing Web series, we talk to China authors about their literary habits and reading preferences, and examine Orwell's question which lies at the heart of being an author – why they write Thomas S. Mullaney received his Ph.D. in History in 2006 from Columbia University, and in the same year joined the faculty of Stanford University as Assistant Professor of Modern Chinese History. He is the author of Coming to Terms with the Nation: Ethnic Classification in Modern China (University of California Press, forthcoming 2010, foreword by Benedict Anderson). This book charts the history of China’s 1954 Ethnic Classification project (minzu shibie), a joint social scientific-Communist state expedition wherein a group of ethnologists, linguists, and Party cadres traveled to the most ethnically diverse province in the People’s Republic to determine which minority communities would and would not be officially recognized by the state. He is also principal editor of Critical Han Studies: Understanding the Largest Ethnic Group on Earth, a pathbreaking volume that examines China’s majority ethnonational group. He is currently writing the first-ever global history of the Chinese typewriter, one of the most significant and misunderstood technological innovations of the 19th and 20th centuries.
Books
Tuesday, 16 March 2010 02:03 Written by JFK Miller Our ongoing series looks at the people who run Shanghai's art market - the curators. Patricia Portillo was until recently the curator of EV Gallery (Patricia Portillo Contemporary Artists) on 210 Taikang Lu. She knows works as a freelance art dealer and curator organizing exhibitions when possible. The 35-year-old Spaniard opened EV Gallery in July 2007.
Art
Monday, 15 March 2010 02:03 Written by JFK Miller Our ongoing series looks at the people who run Shanghai's art market - the curators. Magda Danysz is the curator of 18Gallery (at Bund 18) which she opened in June 2009. She also runs Galerie Magda Danysz in Paris, which has been open for over a decade now. Magda, 35, is French-Polish. Why did you open your gallery? |
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