2008 May 28 Review: DJ Nu-Mark at Song

May 24
DJ Nu-Mark
RMB 100.
10pm. Song Music Bar (6587 1311)
After some rescheduling and a bit of reshuffling, DJ Nu-Mark finally made his Beijing debut at Song last Saturday, May 24. The vibe for the night was a bit strange for a DJ/producer who's spent the past 14 years as the backbone of the Los Angeles Jurassic 5 – as Nu-Mark's blend of funk and soul with old-school and underground hip hop played an awkward backdrop to gay Europeans and quasi-lesbian Chinese women making out on a constricted dance floor. But then again, Song is just the type of venue, with its staggered-wood interior, imposing centerpiece pillar and secluded cubby holes leading to stretch-leather couches seemingly intended for lovemaking.
The show was decent enough – a solid set spun by a solid DJ. The drum kits and toys Nu-Mark has been known to incorporate were present, as is no surprise, but nothing new or spectacular was done with them. All in all, the show definitely didn't exceed expectations and certainly didn't surpass the originality brought by Cut Chemist (the other half of the Jurassic 5 DJ/producer-duo when the group was together), who also played in Beijing earlier this month.

For the record, straight out of Nu-Mark's mouth, "J5 officially disbanded nine months ago" after a semi-successful fourth album, Feedback. Each member is now "doing their own thing," Nu-Mark is working on solo projects – namely a collaboration with fellow DJ/producer Pete Rock – as well as a second installment of Hands On, an album released in 2004 in which Nu-Mark incorporated hip hop from around the world. Awaiting induction is a representative from China, and according to Nu-Mark, "I definitely, definitely want something in Chinese on there – either Cantonese or Mandarin – and that's part of the goal of this tour."
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