Music Reviews
2010 Dec 01 Psycho Creates the Future - Interview with Queen Sea Big Shark & Album Review

It has been three years since Queen Sea Big Shark released their self-titled debut album. And they finally had their new album Wave land in Beijing in October, spaceship style. (Check out the pictures of their album launch in our gallery.)
Their first album had only English songs; maybe they got tired of answering "why do you sing in English?" Because three and half Chinese songs (2nd Track Glow in Dark is half English half Chinese) are included in this new album. Lead singer Fu Han's extended voice singing in Chinese glows with the electronic effects, especially in the titled track Wave.
Read more...2010 May 21 Love to Edit and Write? Opportunities Available at True Run Media

Don't just read about it ... join our team and help us cover the most happening city in the world! True Run Media is hiring for the following editorial positions:
Read more...2009 Oct 19 Midori Goto Steals Everyone’s Breath

From the opening chord of Jean Sibelius' symphonic poem, “Finlandia” – a bold, brassy, suscitating growl – to the end of intermission, when the musicians retook their seats, the audience inside the Beijing Concert Hall on Friday waited 75 minutes before Midori Goto, the woman they had come to see, appeared onstage wearing a gray dress and familiar smile.
2009 Oct 11 Turandot Turn-off

Staging Giacomo Puccini’s operatic classic Turandot at the National Stadium seemed like a good idea on paper, especially with Zhang Yimou directing and renowned tenor Dai Yuqiang in a lead role. Tickets ran up to RMB 8,800 for the best seats, which, as you’d expect, offered a pretty great view. For those sitting above field level, however – which is to say, the vast majority of those in attendance on Tuesday and Wednesday – paying any price was probably too much.
2009 Sep 05 Eternal (Sonic) Youth & Skepta Stays Grimy - more music reviews
The Eternal
by Sonic Youth
It’s easy to criticize bands like Sonic Youth when they start doing things like teaming up with Starbucks and making radio-friendly music. But now, the coolest rock band since The Velvet Underground are back in the zone with this indie release off Matador Records.
Apart from a few lukewarm tracks like “Antenna” and “Walkin Blue,” that trademark guitar and tribal drumbeats will call back fans of Confusion Is Sex and Daydream Nation for a new revolution. The disaffected adolescent spirit nearly lost since Murray Street is once again reincarnated on The Eternal – otherwise, why else would Thurston Moore and Kim Gordon be howling “anti-war is anti-orgasm”? WG
2009 Sep 01 Girls No Longer Waiting & the Cross-Dressing Rose – Album Reviews
Girls Are Waiting To Meet You (GAWTMY) 女孩们在等你
Though they’ve only been around for a little over a year, Girls Are Waiting To Meet You (aka GAWTMY) has already seen a few band member changes. Luckily, that hasn’t kept them from recording their debut. An amalgam of Irish melodies, Swedish indie pop, mellow blues-rock and gypsy tunes, this self-titled album showcases an adventurous collective from all corners of the globe, willing to play music on the subway with no regard for the police – not an easy task with a seven-man band playing instruments as diverse as the flute, saxophone and ukulele.
2009 Jul 20 Music Reviews – Local: July 2009
Downtown Production
Brain Failure
Brain Failure was one of the first Chinese bands to be classified as punk rock, but you wouldn’t know it from their latest album, which sounds more like a mixture of classic rock, blues and ska. A majority of the tracks are quite mellow and pleasant – adjectives usually not reserved for those of the School of Punk. Still, palatable can’t be worse than offensive, and Downtown Production is definitely nice on the ears.
This fourth album features the well-publicized collaboration between Brain Failure and Chuck D – one of the first alliances of its kind, at least when it comes to seminal punk bands from China working with seminal figures in American hip-hop.
2009 Jul 18 Music Reviews – International: July 2009
21st Century Breakdown
Green Day
Ever since Dookie, Green Day has garnished their three-chord punk records with the odd polka, raga, rockabilly, acoustic or vaudeville experiment. Each one was a good track, though jarring in the context of their albums. Now those genre-bending investigations finally pay off. 21st Century Breakdown is a flood of influences that swashes and purls through hoarse guitars, sweet ballads and hollered punk anthems. Whereas American Idiot gorged on indulgent ten-minute symphonies, 21st Century presents taut overtures fastened by lyrical and musical buckles. Take it as a treasure chest and not a scattering of doubloons – a triumphant addition to Green Day’s already sparkling catalogue. MJ
2009 Jun 23 Music Reviews – International: June 2009
Middle Cyclone by Neko Case
Neko Case has a voice made of dirt and wind. The earthy indie girl’s latest album of hard melodies laced with smooth country-girl vocals is yet another exhibition of her distinct bluegrass style. Teaming up with members of Los Lobos as well as several New Pornographers bandmates, Middle Cyclone is heavy on the love songs, as well as just plain heavy (“They’ve traded more for cigarettes than I’ve managed to express,” she croons on “Prison Girls”). Still, the album brims with an energy belonging only to a girl that is part sweetheart and part wild animal – a set of human tunes for howling at the moon. MD
Read more...2009 May 21 Review: Ratatat at MAO Livehouse
Ratatat's Mike Stroud does magic with a distortion pedal
It’s feels a little beside the point to write about the Ratatat show, because you were probably there. Everyone else in the city was.
I don’t mean that in an “everybody who’s any anybody was at THIS show” kind of way, but more that there seemed to be, by my rough estimate, about 17 million people inside of MAO Livehouse last night.



