Midi and Strawberry Music Festivals 2013: An Audience Matures

This blog does a pretty good job of reviewing and complaining about music festivals happening in Beijing, Shanghai, and sometimes even other cities (by our tireless contributors). However, from an audience perspective, we have precious few gripes this year for 2 of China’s longest-running music festivals, Midi and Strawberry.

Your Radar correspondents, split between Beijing and Shanghai, attended the first day of Strawberry in Beijing, the third day of Midi in Beijing and day three of Strawberry in Shanghai. Miracle of miracles, there was beer for sale at Strawberry in Beijing. More importantly, it didn’t come in tepid cans out of a sketchy backpack. Danish beer juggernaut Tuborg claimed sponsorship duties at Modern Sky’s flagship festival, complete with VIP “pavilion,” microphone-toting MC and plenty of scantily clad Tuborg honeys. There are unsubstantiated rumors that the beer was only there the first day – can any of our readers shed some light on the situation? In Shanghai, we were pretty outraged to find out that Strawberry had (seemingly) sold exclusive alcohol rights to Bacardi. While this is good for the coffers in the short run and great for a brand to force everyone that wants to drink alcohol to drink theirs, it’s moves like this that destroy the long term credibility of a festival. It is simply greed that is driving a festival to deny consumers choice to make MORE money.

Usually strongest with their domestic lineup, Strawberry’s foreign headliners this year was Travis, they of the inoffensive between-Oasis-and-Coldplay Britrock persuasion; experimental pop savants Deerhoof; and Lenka, who played at Modern Sky 2011. We stayed for the entirety of Travis’ set, and enjoyed it very much, to our great surprise. There were no surprises in the domestic lineup, from New Pants taking the slot before the headliner for the second year in a row to Xie Tian Xiao’s 75th appearance to close out the festival (more on that in a bit), but the sheer number of people at the festival – the organizers stopped selling door tickets at 3PM – speaks to it’s success, even with single day tickets priced at 150 RMB.

Midi Festival took over the space at China Music Valley in Pinggu district this year, extending the festival’s eternal quest to find the furthest possible location whilst still remaining within Beijing’s municipal borders. In past years, the China Music Valley Festival (of Avril Lavigne and Jesus and Mary Chain notoriety) have installed two stages in the entire area, and alternated set times so that only one act would be playing at any given time. Midi brought 5 stages. The sonic experience was…interesting. However, the festival experience was not lacking. From 20 RMB beers and 5 RMB water to donuts that were “much better than they had to be” (quoth one enthusiastic festivalgoer), parking yourself in front of a stage and letting the music wash over you was not a bad way to pass the day. Continue reading

Modern Sky Announces lineup

Modern Sky has moved it’s eponymous festival out of Beijing, to Huairou.

They announced their lineup last night: foreign artists include Lenka, the Whip, the Go! Team, Mogwai and other less well known acts. Lenka and Mogwai are definitely bands that China knows and the Go! Team came here in 2007 to good effect.

W

Modern Sky Festival Beijing, Huairou, 2011

So what do we think? Exciting?

No Midi Zhenjiang this year

UPDATE: Modern Sky have just released a statement on their Douban.

In May 2009, Midi Festival decamped from Beijing and set up shop in their traditional national holiday berth in a town in Jiangsu province called Zhenjiang. The festival was a success and was the first of many times over the last few years that China’s more famous festivals and festival organizers were invited to provincial towns to attract attention and tourism. We predicted this back in 2009 and so it has come to pass, with government funding making up the majority of the 100 or so festivals that have sprung up in the last couple of years.

Midi did it’s job pretty well, drawing a huge amount of attention to the town that was previously most famous for the manufacture of vinegar, with two pretty decent festivals by all accounts (we didn’t make it to either).

So we were surprised when Midi officially announced on Weibo yesterday that they wouldn’t be doing a 2011 version, despite the fact that all systems were go until a week ago. There is plenty of mud being slung on various Chinese SNS/ forums, and apparently Midi will make a formal announcement after their Rizhao festival in early August. Miserable Faith have made their thoughts plain on Weibo too. What have you heard?

Festival Announcements

Modern Sky have announced their October holiday lineup. Outside of the usual bands, the Modern Sky festival (which moves this year back from Chaoyang Park to the original home at Haidian).

Of the foreign artists, Modern Sky 2010 will feature 90′s Britpop icon Brett Anderson (of Suede fame), the Big Pink, Camera Obscura and Free Energy, plus a long overdue appearance by Blonde Redhead who have been touted for China for nearly 4 years.

Top 10 musical moments of the (half) decade

Archie arrived in China in 2005 to set up Split Works, a company focused on building a music industry in China and generating compelling creative and content for brands that have a youth bias. Split Works book and produce tours all around China and Southeast Asia, and curate and produce festivals and brand campaigns — outdoor monster Yue Festival (watch out for this returning in 2010), the International Music and Arts Festival JUE | Music | Art, Bacardi Sino Sessions, Converse Love Noise, etc. He writes a blog on the Chinese Music Industry called China Music Radar and manages a Chinese language only blog on the music industry in China called Wooozy.

I arrived in China exactly half way through the decade. Now, at the end of it, I look back with affection on some of my favorite musical moments of the last 5 years, 5 years that have seen extraordinary growth in live music in China.

My choices are somewhat skewed towards Split Works events, because

  1. I attend them all
  2. I have generally listened to the music intensely for 3 months prior to the shows
  3. I have a large say in which artists, and thus pick artists that I love already.

I have tried to be objective though, and I hope my choices reflect this:

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Modern Sky 2009 Photo Gallery

Modern Sky 2009 review to follow tomorrow.  In the meantime, check out some photos (especially our favorite – PSB playing Rambo)!!

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60th Anniversary washout

On Twitter this morning, a friend that we follow wished the Chinese Communist Party a happy 60th Birthday. Well, the powers that be are doing everything possible to make sure the party is as turgid and dull as it can be. Off the back of the banning of all foreign artists from the Modern Sky Festival (HERE and HERE), it seems like the ban is nationwide.

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It’s true – Modern Sky Festival decimated

After proudly claiming that “at least half the bands on the main stage will be foreign”, Modern Sky Festival has been rocked by the news (reported HERE yesterday) that no foreign artists will be able to perform the festival this year.  We assume this is in large part to prevent the Buzzcocks from igniting the masses into frenzies of anti-capitalism!!

This reminds us (as if we were ever in danger of forgetting) that we are doing business in a very hostile environment. Indeed, much progress has been made in recent years, but it will be hard for the music industry in China to develop any sense of solidity and purpose until these kinds of mistakes are erased. The official statement is below.

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Uh oh – no foreign bands at Modern Sky?

We’ve seen debacles before – Oasis, Linkin Park II, Hohhot Green Flag, Midi 2008, but this is as serious a China moment as we’ve seen to date.  Apparently, no foreign bands will be allowed to play Modern Sky festival this year.  Boss Shen Lihui was phoned this morning by the local PSB and told this really rather rubbish news.

It has been a source of confusion for us since Modern Sky announced that their festival would be held in Chaoyang Park during the 60th birthday celebrations of China’s communist party.  It was claimed that the festival was going to be a part of the celebrations – we did laugh at the prospect of 70′s punk band the Buzzcocks playing the official birthday party for this harmonious regime.

This is a sad day for China’s music industry, which has recovered from similar blows before, but this is hugely worrying for the future of Chinese festivals…

Foreign performances at Modern Sky Music Festival has been cancelled

Converse’s new “Let’s Play” campaign

Crowd sourcing and UGC are the buzzwords around marketing initiatives these days. Since Trent Reznor opened up Ghosts to create a Youtube “Film Festival” in 2008, and Radiohead allowed anyone to remix their song Nude from core components around the same time, bands all over the globe have been trying to engage fans in all elements of the production process. The explosion of the tools and distribution methods online have allowed this to happen more easily and frequently, and most recently Imogen Heap received plaudits from all over when she invited all her fans to absorb themselves fully in the production of her latest album, a painstaking 2 years of communication that led to this little known indie artist amassing nearly a million followers on Twitter.

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