Tag Archives: live music

zebra music festival

Sometimes it seems my laptop is up against it’s own Great Firewall in addition to the normal BS we encounter over here – I’ve been unable to log onto my blog, but it seems specific to my computer. Maybe I am more important than I thought. Or maybe this macbook is just on its way out (please god no.) At any rate time is flying and a lot has gone un-blogged.

First off – the Zebra Music Festival. The leadup to the festival was shrouded in a degree of hype and mystery. Our friends said it was the most fun they’d had in Chengdu last year. Go Chengdoo’s annual poll named it the best event of 2010. But information was slow to emerge, and that compounded by a Chengdu- aversion to detailed planning meant we were only getting our act together the morning the festival began. This task was exacerbated by the cocktail party we threw the night before which ended in too much KTV, leaving our motor functions slow and heads fuzzy Saturday morning as we attempted to set off.

My only point of music festival comparison being Bonnarroo, I had low expectations for what Zebra would be like, which made it that much more fun in the end. The weather was festival-perfect – hot and balmy, with a light breeze and the persistent threat of warm rain (that held off until after we left for the night, when it released in full force on all those camping). The main stage was set at the bottom of a rolling hill on which everyone set up campsites and picnic blankets; there were tons of people, tons of festival food (there was no funnel cake, but there WAS cotton candy), and tons of cold budweiser wheeled around by scantily clad budweiser girls. It almost felt like America. Aside from a several hour power-loss (…China) the performances impressed. As the sun went down the acts got rowdier as did the crowd, culminating in an AWESOME french band led by a singer who was actually out of control. I forgave them their horrible choice in band name (S.U.C.C.E.S.S.) because this cross between Freddy Mercury and Russel Brand (what?) put everyone under a dancing, screaming spell – overwhelming the Chinese with his gyrations, pseudo-strip show, and noticeably (I assume purposefully) unzipped fly that he continually thrust upon us as he pranced around the front of the stage.  Maybe you just had to be there. We didn’t end up staying for the night, and in the end only experienced that first day of the three day festival, but it was a great time and definitely is up there in my favorite Chengdu memories. Of course power outages, a completely unnecessary amount of security, and performance curfews of 10 pm made it clear didn’t let you forget this IS China, but it seemed the event organizers worked with what they got; as did the crowd, who seemed to be genuinely enjoying what the shows were rather than lamenting over what they couldn’t be. Supposedly it only got better the last 2 days.

... even jager made it to zebra festival

pic borrowed from gochengdoo

TGIF

the greenest

It was a good Friday. To speed along the recovery from a debaucherous Saint Patrick’s Day, my friend Werner and I decided to get foot massages after both claiming to know the best place in our neighborhood. As it turned out, we were talking about the same spot – an unadorned store front on a side street near our apartment complexes where reflexology posters line the walls and a variety of baths and herbs are offered to heal whatever state your feet are in. This time my masseause was a burly middle-aged Chinese man with a slight twitch to his massage tactics;  at first it was unnerving but after 15 minutes I was half-comatose, my feet in a sublime state of zen (slightly painful zen). The price for an hour worth of foot rubbing with a neck and shoulder massage thrown in? 35 RMB – or $5.25.

After the massage we went  to Little Bar – a place I’d heard about since arriving in Chengdu but hadn’t yet been.   The bar lives up to its name – it’s very small – but many consider it the best live music venue in Chengdu and last night didn’t seem to be an exception. Aside from the politely-moshing Chinese youngsters, the vibe was reminiscent of a low-key NYC venue; there was nowhere you could stand that you couldn’t see the stage, and the small crowd made the show much more intimate. The band playing Friday was a Chinese punk group called The Subs – the lead singer was appropriately decked out in punk lace and her energy and stage presence was completely disproportionate to her small size. Her band mates were equally engaged and I was impressed by their music and the reaction it aroused from the eager crowd. I will definitely make Little Bar a larger part of my social life.

After the show a bunch of us went to a hole-in-the-wall Korean restaurant that once I find the name and address of I will certainly post and endorse. We sat shoe-less and indian-style around a low table and ate an excessive amount of kimchi and Korean dishes I had never tried before, plus Soju which tastes like a mouth explosion of sake and baijiu. As the group started dwindling, what remained of us headed to Machu Picchu – another bar I have heard about for months but never checked out. It’s a very small place that also has frequent live (acoustic) music,  run by a friendly Dutch guy whose signature shot is apparently now spreading across Chengdu: “Russian Cocaine” – bite down on a slice of lemon covered in coffee grinds and sugar and then throw back a shot of Russian vodka. It does the trick. The bar draws an interesting crowd and also feels like a little break from China, inside China.

jen.wern.eitan.

It was a good way to start the weekend; today we have the Peach Blossom run for the Hash and then Tuesday night my mom and brother come visit for a week. I am SO EXCITED!