Linkin Park, Imagine Dragons, Robbie Williams ... Is the Beijing Live Music Drought Over?

It was only a couple of weeks ago that we were writing about how everything was canceled. Now it seems like the wind has shifted, and maybe, just maybe, big music is welcome again in Beijing.

Three concerts set for July, August, and September, respectively, certainly seem to support that. Linkin Park, one of Western rock music's biggest names in China, will wrap a five-city tour on July 26 with their first-ever Beijing concert show. After performing in Shanghai in 2007, the group was set to come to Beijing in November 2008, but canceled their entire Asia tour after singer Chester Bennington suffered a back injury. That date was never rescheduled, until now. Tickets for that show may be reserved now.

In August, alternative rockers Imagine Dragons will play the MasterCard Center on August 21, after their appearance at Japan's two-day Summer Sonic festival. It's their first visit to Beijing. Tickets for that gig are not yet available.

Prior to either of these, former Take That star Robbie Williams confirmed he will entertain us, also at the MasterCard Center, on September 17. Tickets for the Williams concert are on sale now.

Add to these scheduled performances by Mika on May 29, and the Carly Rae Jepsen show that went ahead on May 1, and maybe we were just experiencing a live music blip in late March until May 1 weekend?

To provide context, a whole host of concerts by local, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Korean pop stars have been scheduled and gone off without a single cancellation or hitch. And none of that includes the regular parade of world-class classical musicians that visit Beijing, including Lang Lang, Zubin Mehta, and this weekend, Leonard Bernstein's son Alexander Bernstein. Maybe it's just Western music, no matter whether performed by local metalheads or original artists, that ends up in the crosshairs?

Having events and festivals canceled and moved out of Beijing sucks. But maybe we just shouldn't try to schedule anything during the second quarter of any year? Anyway, we hope the above events won't be pre-canceled.

Photo: I Love Free Concerts

Comments

New comments are displayed first.

Define "underground."

admin wrote:

The third implication is that the local live music scene is alive.

Yeah it's breathing, so it's technically alive.

But in a city of 20 million people, I think there might be somewhere around a dozen venues that regularly show live original music.

Every year in our bar and club awards we struggle to get our nomination panel of 200 to even name an original local band. This pisses me off because I'd love to see Beijing local bands make it as professional musicians, but there's simply not the interest.

Not sure why. Long ago we used to put together concerts to support local acts. We did it for fun and for publicity but made no money out of the deal. That was OK, but even after significant promotion, the bands would be walking away with something like RMB 1000 to split amongst each other. To me, that didn't seem like a fair wage given the fact that from sound check to finishing the gig, the bands end up working somewhere around 8 hours.

I'd like to see more venues, more new bands, and the ability for more musicians to make a living from their music.

And I'd love to see Tom share more of his knowledge of local bands via our website here -- the more publicity we can give the scene, the better.

Other than the lack of venues, I think you just described the local music scene in nearly any city. No one makes any money doing this stuff, other than maybe Houhai bar bands or guys who plow through jazz standards for weekend corporate gigs or whatever. But I don't think any original rock/electronic/etc. musicians in Beijing start their bands with the intention of making a living, or even making any kind of money at all really. Everyone's got a day job.

That the nomination panel isn't aware of any original local bands probably says more about the panel members than it does about the scene - I know a pile of good original locals and I'm not even as well-versed as some of my mates. We're out here. Live Beijing Music, SmartBeijing and Aweh have done a lot of solid coverage on the local underground scene.

Interesting. The show is also not listed on their website. We will check this and report back.

Hey guys: Full disclosure: I'm an old fart. I typically don't go to any concerts anymore because I can't stand the smoke, the noise and the crowds. 

But I was once twentysomething and totally into the local music scene (Taipei's at the time, not Beijing), and proudly defined myself by shitting all over any musical act that showed any elements of commercial success. I felt there was a time limit on how cool a band could be, and turned my back on any fringe artist that I loved if I discovered everyone around me liked them as well: if everyone likes them, well damn I'm not getting caught listening to popular music -- my cutting-edge, indie credentials will be shot!

Then as I got older I realized that I no longer need to define myself by the music I love. More importantly, I realized I no longer needed to define myself by the music I professed to hate.

I don't blame others for doing this; it's a phase that I think a lot of people go through beginning around puberty and usually grow out of by their 30s.

These days I can't be bothered to worry about whether something is popular or not. There's commercial pop I love and underground indie stuff I love. Likewise, there's tons of shitty pop and tons of shitty indie stuff. I listen to what I like and I don't worry about which genre the music belongs to or which subculture it is championed by.

I don't happen to listen to Robbie Williams, Linkin Park or Imagine Dragons. But still I'm happy to see them performing concerts here.

Beijing is a tough place to put on any act, and there was a time when any foreign band that came here was big news.

I'm always hoping the floodgates open for all acts, so any time anyone plans an East Asian leg of their tour, they put Beijing on their list of places to play (usually they do not). 

So frankly I appreciate any and all international acts that come and visit out fine city, be they mega-stars, has-beens, nobodies, up-and-comers, whatever.

And when things are looking up, I hate to see a smackdown of these changes using criticisms that are off the cuff and incorrect.

The original assertion was that these bands are coming to Beijing because they can't make money back home.

Not true.

The second implication is that they are somehow dinosaurs from days gone by.

You'll probably be shocked to learn that many of the local indie bands plying the circuit in 2015 Beijing have been around far longer than Imagine Dragons and Mika, and likely around almost as long as Linkin Park (I believe Robbie Williams is sufficiently ancient to pre-date pretty much all the bands in Beijing).

The third implication is that the local live music scene is alive.

Yeah it's breathing, so it's technically alive.

But in a city of 20 million people, I think there might be somewhere around a dozen venues that regularly show live original music.

Every year in our bar and club awards we struggle to get our nomination panel of 200 to even name an original local band. This pisses me off because I'd love to see Beijing local bands make it as professional musicians, but there's simply not the interest.

Not sure why. Long ago we used to put together concerts to support local acts. We did it for fun and for publicity but made no money out of the deal. That was OK, but even after significant promotion, the bands would be walking away with something like RMB 1000 to split amongst each other. To me, that didn't seem like a fair wage given the fact that from sound check to finishing the gig, the bands end up working somewhere around 8 hours.

I'd like to see more venues, more new bands, and the ability for more musicians to make a living from their music.

And I'd love to see Tom share more of his knowledge of local bands via our website here -- the more publicity we can give the scene, the better.

 

 

Books by current and former Beijinger staffers

http://astore.amazon.com/truerunmedia-20

How would you know that, considering Tom doesn't generally write about music for us?

admin wrote:
Please go ask a local band. I'm guessing they will tell you it is very difficult to make a living without a day job and may not entirely agree with your characterization of the scene being very much alive.

I think you've misinterpreted my meaning of alive as "making boatloads of money." The world is full of bands not making a single buck from their output and Beijing is no different. The fact is, I could go out on any day of the week and have the choice of dozens of venues to see a gigging band, playing purely for the fun of it and having no interest whatsoever in what monetary gain that may or may not come from their hard work. That's alive to me. It's no secret that bands in China have a relatively hard time making bank from their output but if playing at the MasterCard Center is what deems their music/ethos "alive" then I think they'd probably skip the opportunity.

Managing Editor, the Beijinger

Quote:
The 'drought' might be over if all you listen to is pop from a decade+ ago/washed up artists trying to make a buck outside of where they're no longer able to.
 
Careful with the blanket statements:

Imagine Dragons was founded seven years ago and is less than two years removed from their first big beakthrough. They were the No. 2 most streamed group globally on Spotify in 2014 and were named Billboard's No. 1 Top Rock Artist of 2013.

(This band may not be your cup of tea but they are certainly a band in the peak of their career. Certainly not washed up nor do they lack the ability to make a buck elsewhere)

Robbie Williams had the 12th largest grossing tour worlwide in 2014, according to Pollstar. The same chart has Linkin Park as the planet's #84 grossing tour.

(These guys I presume are old-timers (not into either of them) but given they are among the top 100 grossing tours worldwide last year, hard to argue that they are hard up for gigs and are coming to Beijing as a last resort or something)

Mika's not nearly as big a name, but he's been doing his thing for only about eight years and had a song in the Billboard Top 100 most recently in 2013. He's preparing to release his fourth album this year.

Quote:
Otherwise, the Beijing live music scene appears very much alive. <3

Please go ask a local band. I'm guessing they will tell you it is very difficult to make a living without a day job and may not entirely agree with your characterization of the scene being very much alive.

 

Books by current and former Beijinger staffers

http://astore.amazon.com/truerunmedia-20

Yawn.

The 'drought' might be over if all you listen to is pop from a decade+ ago/washed up artists trying to make a buck outside of where they're no longer able to. Otherwise, the Beijing live music scene appears very much alive. <3

Managing Editor, the Beijinger