Sound Kapital: Beijing's Music Underground
From Rock in China Wiki
Sound Kapital: Beijing's Music Underground, a photo book by Matthew Niederhauser
Contents |
Introduction
A new wave of Chinese musicians is taking Beijing by storm. Revolving around four venues spread across the city, this burgeoning group of performers are working outside government-controlled media channels, and in the process, capturing the attention of the international music community. They now constitute a fresh, independent voice in a country renowned for creative conformity and saccharine Cantonese pop. In Sound Kapital, photographer Matthew Niederhauser captures the energy of the performers involved in this innovative orgy gripping Beijing's music underground.
General Information
| Title: | Sound Kapital: Beijing's Music Underground |
|---|---|
| Year: | 2009 |
| Tech Details: | Hardcover w/ CD, 6.75 x 9.25 inches, 176 pages, 125 four-color photographs |
| Language: | English |
| ISBN: | 978-1-57687-521-6 |
| Website: | http://www.soundkapital.net/ |
| Publisher: | powerHouse Books, Brooklyn, NY |
| Available at: | amazon |
Credits
| Photography & Text: | Matthew Niederhauser |
|---|---|
| Illustrations: | Ca Zhuxi (Chairman Ca) |
| Compilation Mastering: | Yuli Chen |
Blurb
China exists today in a liminal realm, caught between the socialist idealism of old and a calamitous drive for wealth spurned by recent free market reforms. This seemingly unbridgeable gap tears at the country’s social fabric while provoking younger generations to greater artistic heights. The unique sound emerging from Beijing's underground delves deeply into this void, aggressively questioning the moral and social basis of China's fragile modernity even as it subsists upon it.
A formidable new wave of Chinese musicians is taking the city by storm. Revolving around four venues spread across Beijing, a burgeoning group of performers are working outside government-controlled media channels, and in the process, capturing the attention of the international music community. They now constitute a fresh, independent voice in a country renowned for creative conformity and saccharine Cantonese pop. In Sound Kapital, photographer Matthew Niederhauser captures the energy of the personalities and performers at D-22, Yugong Yishan, 2 Kolegas, and Mao Livehouse. These revolutionary Beijing nightclubs remain at the core of the city’s creative explosion by hosting an eclectic mix of punk, experimental, rock, and folk performances.
Included with the book are concert posters and illustrations that encapsulate the underground scene in Beijing, as well as a CD sampler of the new music being produced. There is no doubt that these musicians will continue to break ground within Beijing’s nascent artistic landscape, helping to push the boundaries of an already expanding realm of independent thought and musical expression in China.
Contributors
Photography
After studying anthropology at Columbia University, Matthew Niederhauser split his time between the National Committee on US-China Relations and the International Center of Photography, before returning to Beijing as a fulltime freelance photographer. Over the past year, his work covering youth culture in China has appeared in the New Yorker, Time Magazine, The Washington Post, PDN, and the Guardian Weekly amongst others. While his nights are spent photographing Beijing’s underground music scene, Niederhauser also works on a large-format, photo-documentary project entitled Visions of Modernity that investigates urban development and new architecture in China’s swelling capital.
Illustration
Ca Zhuxi is an illustrator and graphic novelist based in Beijing. After graduating from the Communication University of China in 2006, he helped found the Cult Youth collective, and subsequently produced two anthologies of the group’s comics and graphic shorts. His sometimes morbid but engrossing images mirror the kaleidoscope of often-conflicting interests, desires, and traditions found in modern China.
Compilation Mastering
Yuli Chenuli Chen is a music producer and sound engineer based in Beijing who grew up in Paris and was trained in New York City. Most notably, he recorded, mixed, and produced the music for the Beijing Olympic Games Opening Ceremony, working closely with Director Zhang Yimou to create a fascinating score that fused both western and eastern sensibilities. As a trusted indie music producer, Yuli Chen continues to work on a dozen highly acclaimed underground projects in China.
Compilation CD: Track Listing
- Queen Sea Big Shark - Hard Heart
- AV Okubo - AV Terminator
- Subs - So Fine Emo
- Carsick Cars - You Can Listen, You Can Talk
- White - Spring House
- Ourself Beside Me - Sunday Girl
- The Gar - Cat
- Hedgehog - Noise Hit World
- 24 Hours - Earthquake
- Re-TROS - My Great Location
- Casino Demon - Teenage
- P.K. 14 - Some Surprises Come Too Soon
- Pet Conspiracy - Don't You Move
- New Pants - Peking Monster
- Lonely China Day - The Future
- Snapline - Sustaining
- Joyside - All Night
- Demerit - Beijing Is Not My Home
- Carsick Cars - Zhong Nan Hai
Further Information
Official Pages
- Official Website
- Book on powerHouse Books
- Q&A with Matthew Niederhauser by powerHouse
- Buy the book on amazon
In The Press
- Review CHINA'S UNDERGROUND PUNKS by Erin DeJesus on More Intelligent Life/The Economist
- Gallery Opening & Book Launch "Punk's not dead - it's just moved several thousand miles east" by Gareth Grundy in The Observer/Guardian (October 4, 2009)
- Niederhauser’s “Sound Kapital” Shares Chinese Indie With World by Adam J. Schokora on NeochaEDGE (November 2, 2009)
- Interview with Matthew Niederhauser on China Music Radar: 1 & 2 (October 27 & November 2, 2009)
- Sound Kapital on Cool Hunting (November 6, 2009)
- Gallery opening of the week by The Washington Post (November 6, 2009)
- Beijing surprise: A 'Sound Kapital' of indie rock, article by David Malitz at The Washington Post (November 13, 2009)
- P.K. 14 + Xiao He: 14.Nov.09 - Washington DC, event review by Mehan Jayasuriya on PopMatters.com (November 16, 2009)
- Beijing's Underground Music Scene by Claire O'Neill on The Picture Show Blog/NPR (November 16, 2009)