Metallica in Shanghai, Pet Shop Boys Tour

Well, it’s official (almost). Douban kids have found Metallica’s MOC permit. August 13 in Shanghai, kiddies. We reproduce it in part below:

Screen shot 2013-05-28 at 10.26.17 AM

94 members in the touring party will keep AEG busy, whereas Live Nation will host the Pet Shop Boys for a two-week tour of Beijing and “other Chinese cities” from August 14 to 28. LIve Nation has been keeping busy, recently inking a deal with international entertainment company Lushington to promote concerts in Hong Kong and Singapore. The JV, Live Nation Lushington, kicks off activities with a Linkin Park show in August.

Festival Season is almost upon us

May is one of the two main seasons for outdoor festivals, and as such, we are expecting imminent announcements for Midi and Strawberry Fests. Apparently Deerhoof will be back for Strawberry, playing alongside 90′s Scottish “post britpop” (according to their Wiki :-) ) band, plus Lenka, Immanu El and the usual slew of domestic headliners (Xie Tian Xiao, Omnipotent Youth Hotel). Nothing from Midi yet, but that’s as to be expected. They rarely announce anything before mid April. There is also the heavily rumored return of the Great Wall Music Festival, but we’ve been here before, so let’s wait a while before we get too excited about seeing David Guetta and Andy C hit the Wall.

One festival that we haven’t heard much about is the big joint venture between LiveNation and Pinggu local government, China Music Valley. Timeout Beijing report that it’s been postponed until the autumn this year, and we tend to believe them. The festival that gave us Friendly Fires, Jesus and Mary Chain and Joss Stone in 2012 will be “back shortly”.

China Music Valley lineup released in full

Last year, a new festival sprung up near Beijing with weightier pretensions than most. Gehua-Livenation joined with the Pinggu local government to put forward arguably the biggest international lineup in China’s short festival history. Avril Lavigne topped a bill that also featured KT Tunstall, Ladytron and Editors amongst others. The festival met with very mixed reviews, mostly due to the ridiculous nature of the setup. You can read our review here that compared moderately to the slaying it received at the hands of the Global Times.

China Music Valley has decided not to repeat the decision to go head to head with Beijing’s two better established festivals on the May holiday. Instead, it will be held 3 weeks later, May 19/20. The website features a 1970′s era hippy VW combi van and there is lots of reference to the ethos of the festival, which generally means nothing here, but could indicate a more laid back vibe than 2011. The lineup features 8 international artists:

  • Jesus and Mary Chain
  • School of Seven Bells
  • White Lies
  • Glasvegas
  • Friendly Fires
  • Pixie Lott
  • Joss Stone
  • Husky Rescue

Price wise, it is definitely at the top end of the spectrum

Tickets Price:
Early Bird:
Before May 6th: 400RMB (3-day ticket)
Presale:
1-day ticket: 280RMB
3-day ticket: 480RMB
At the door:
1-day ticket: 350RMB
3-day ticket: 580RMB

Based on our experience of the festival last year (and our experience of festivals in China generally), the day that Avril was there was huge, but the second day with a much more varied and interesting program was woefully under-attended. Festivals are still in their infancy in China and whenever an event moves out of the city limits, attendances plummet. Even when Midi moved just outside the 6th Ring in Beijing last year, the crowds were noticeably thinner than previous Haidian excursions. The same happened to the Modern Sky Festival in October 2011 when they moved out of town for the first time.

The feeling at Radar Towers is that there might not be enough pulling power among these artists (or the headliners, Wang Feng and Xu Wei who have between them played nearly every other festival in China over the last couple of years) to actually pull really significant numbers out to Pinggu, particularly at these ticket prices. We hope we are wrong of course – everyone in our office wants to go and see JAMC, a band that was a key influence for many of the bigger Beijing indie artists of the last decade. We hope we are wrong because there are some great bands on the lineup and if the organizers can up their game logistically from last year, then it should be a great day out.

Linkin Park: will they won’t they (again)?

UPDATE: Linkin Park’s management have confirmed that they won’t be coming to China any time soon. Don’t go buy those tickets…

OK, so Timeout Shanghai picked up a juicy nugget from the official Shanghai Cultural Information (government run) website. Apparently, Linkin Park are playing a New Year’s Eve gig at Hongkou Football Stadium, the stage for their original triumph way back in 2007.

This is strange for a number of reasons:

  1. Livenation had their multi-million $$ stadium tour in September cancelled due to an inauspicious meeting between the band and he who shall not be named
  2. Livenation don’t know anything about this new show – we would imagine they would have been given a heads up
  3. Can you imagine how freaking cold it will be in Hongkou stadium on the 31st December?

We are awaiting official confirmation/ denial shortly. In the meantime, perhaps hold off buying tickets…..

 

Madonna tour dates a hoax

Yesterday, Timeout Shanghai posted a press release on Live Nation letterhead with a list of Madonna dates that included Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou in May 2013.

Today, Madonna’s publicist Liz Rosenberg confirmed that the tour dates published on a Madonna fan site were fake. Sorry Madge fans – you’re going to have to wait for your opportunity to see those leotard clad muscles in the flesh….

The problem with Linkin Park

You may or may not know that Linkin Park are without doubt the biggest Western rock band in China. They have also committed a huge amount to this region. We’ve devoted a lot of coverage on this site to the band including

our first article, a review on the Hongkou Stadium show in November 2007

the man who broke Linkin Park in China

the cancellation of the 2008 China tour

This is a band that has been promoted extensively in China for over 10 years, has done 2 tours of the mainland, and were slated to return to China this September for a run of three stadium shows (Shanghai, Beijing, Wuhan) that Livenation were putting together. Contracts were signed, licenses applied for, things were looking good. A rock stadium show in Wuhan – we’re not the biggest LP fans in the world, but we would have gone to that show….

Until a couple of weeks ago that is.

Linkin Park China cancelled banned

Continue reading

The Beijing festivals: Pinggu, Strawberry and Midi in review

Music Festival Madness: May Holiday Festival Weekend 2011

Perhaps to make up for a dearth of musical festivities elsewhere, Beijing municipality –  because let’s be honest, most of these festivals were in locations much closer to Hebei than Tiananmen – managed to outdo itself with five major music festivals this May Holiday season, of which your intrepid Radar correspondents attended the “Big Three:” China Music Valley, MIDI, and Strawberry.

The newcomer to scene this year is China Music Valley, which featured a heavy-hitting, Western-music-centric lineup in the wild hinterlands of Pinggu District east of Beijing. Produced by Gehua-LiveNation and funded in large part by various levels of local and municipal governments, it resembled the first year of a festival. The two stages were set up right next to each other, so that performances were staggered between the two all day. Windstorms buffeted the valley venue which functions as a ski resort in the winter months. Day One of the festival featured Avril Lavigne, and she was obviously the main attraction to the festival-goers, approximately 90% of whom were locals. We met 14-year old girls who were dropped off by their parents, metal-and-Avril-loving young gentlemen from Changchun and many, many police and baoan, who ringed the perimeter of the festival grounds like menacing, confused tentpoles.

Continue reading

Bob Dylan in Beijing, Baidu goes legit and other linky goodness

We are pushed for time again this week, but we have been reading lots and there is lots out there. Here are some browser windows we would like to close sometime soon…

Bob Dylan Beijing review

A strange seating arrangement (thanks as always to the wonderful PSB), but by all accounts (a few first hand ones too), it was a special atmosphere with Dylan smiling throughout and even coming back for an encore. Shanghai on Friday night.

Bob Dylan, Gongti Worker's Stadium, Beijing

Baidu to do legitimate music streaming?

In May, Baidu will attempt to distance itself from the slings and arrows fired in their direction over recent years by launching Baidu Ting, a legitimate music streaming service, that will be supported by ad-revenue. The article doesn’t cover important bits and pieces, like how much revenue will be shared with the creators, and it doesn’t seem like the service has reached deals with the major international labels. It also doesn’t say if there will be a mobile element, but anything that publicly recognizes the problems of piracy and tries to address them, especially from a major player like Baidu is to be appreciated.

Modern Sky does a folk and poetry festival in Zhouzhuang

According to Jake Newby at Kungfuology. This festival has been running for a few years, and we assume the organizers are bringing Modern Sky in to legitimize it. Nice lineup, definitely worth a visit.

Strawberry Lineup announced

The Wujiang leg, at least. No real surprises in the listed artists. The festival is pretty cheap though.

Cui Jian 3D show biography

Tentatively titled Stereo Symphony On the New Long March, the roughly 75-minute film will feature footage shot around two New Year’s 2010 concerts Cui gave in December at Beijing’s outdoor Workers’ Stadium cut together with interviews with the rock legend and his fans.

Pinggu Website Launch

At the beginning of March, we drew your attention to what is most certainly the biggest festival lineup in China to date. They have now launched a slick looking website with some details except that

  1. Every time you open the site, a Avril Lavigne montage starts up which is most disconcerting
  2. None of the other pages do anything yet. Expect that to change.

How’s this one going to run, do we think?

Pinggu Festival website and lineup

Pinggu Festival

A few weeks back, we talked a little about the Gehua-Livenation tie up with the Beijing suburb of Pinggu to put on a music festival to compete with existing May holiday festivals MIDI and Strawberry.

Well, they seem to be spending a little bit of money in order to try and get people down to Pinggu rather than heading to the more usual Tongzhou Canal or Haidian Parks. According to Last FM, the following artists are going to feature:

  • Avril Lavigne
  • KT Tunstall
  • Hot Hot Heat
  • Editors
  • Ladytron
  • Negative
  • Little Boots
  • Juliette Lewis

The lineup is probably on a level with last years Music Funhill and Pilot Records Festivals, neither of which managed to steal critical mass from Modern Sky’s incumbent. It will be interesting to see if Pinggu fares better.

What do you think? Would you go to Pinggu to see these acts?