我和广州的地下音乐圈 by曾向华

我和广州的地下音乐圈 [ 曾向华 ]

我所见到的广州地下音乐圈算起来正好将近十年。 十年中,一批人出现,另一批人消失; 大部分的人都成了不错的朋友,而有的人却成了敌人,不过谁也没有成为英雄。

我正巧是一个从来记不住年月日的人,所以一直没有把旧事翻出来的打算。只是在去年年底的某日于深圳, 一位摇滚青年盯着我说:“你好象很面熟,你是……” “曾向华。”他说了一句也许我终生难忘的话:“老前辈了!”在不知该觉得荣幸还是尴尬之余, 我突然自觉可以鼓起勇气来写一写印象中的我和广州的地下音乐圈。

在这里要首先说明的是我并不认为“地下” 二字对于广州的这个情况很合用,它只是在找不到更合适的词语时的一个替代语。

象牙塔中

85年我考入暨南大学物理系, 不久就成为暨大艺术团声乐队主力之一。最初我与两位师兄组成了一支名叫“自由人FREEMAN BAND” 的吉他演唱组,当时这个演唱组在各高校及电视台的演出都相当受欢迎。

那几年, 高校间的文艺活动很多,气氛也相当宽松。期间我所认识的各个学校的吉他手、 歌手中,华师外语系84级的钟春阳是有趣的一位,他吉他的技术很棒, 英文歌唱得也相当好。他也有一支三人演唱组,他在另外两名成员毕业时写了几首奋发向上的歌(那时广州还没有什么人玩摇滚),有不错的旋律。他也许是所有人中唯一一个至今以音乐表演为生的 (我前年最后一次见他是在海口的一家歌舞厅—他应是海口数一数二的吉他手了)。

我们的FREEMAN BAND一直以唱英文民歌(FOLK) 为主,因为那是我们三个人都喜欢的东西, 我们所唱过的唯一一首原创歌曲是我在高中时写的。第一次发觉将几个人搞到一起玩音乐有多困难是一年多以后, 那时,我受到侯德健、罗大佑、李宗盛、披头四、BOB DYLAN、EAGLES等的影响越来越大(到了几乎要摇滚起来的地步),于是我开始比较独立了。

在87年以前, 所有高校学生乐队的身份几乎都是“校艺术团乐队”,我所组织的乐队也不例外。 但与其他学校的乐队不同的是:因为我们曾经有许多的外籍成员(除了几位国内同学外, 先后还有过巴西、阿根廷、法国、泰国、加拿大的成员) ,所以我们的乐器、设备以至技术在当时是最好的(但现在的孩子们看了一定会发笑) ;而更重要的是:我们一直在玩我们喜欢的音乐、也一直在创作、演奏自己的作品。

我常用这个例子来证明我们的设备是最先进的: 在一次外校的演出中,我们如常使用了吉他失真效果器, 当我们下得台来,一位观众急匆匆跑上来关心地问:“你们的吉他是不是坏了?”

88年广东省电视台在肇庆组织的一次“未来星座” 高校文艺汇演上,我认识了广州大学的“SHADOWS”乐队。这支乐队的灵魂人物林羽也在以后的日子里成为广州地下音乐活动中的一位活跃分子, 先后与多人组织起“艳阳天”等有相当实力的乐队组合。

89年, 一场政治风波使高校间的互访表演变得非常谨慎而稀有。过于深刻的体验如同没有体验一样地使人麻木, 我的创作也突然停顿下来,音乐的风格从迷惑、 激动变得冷静、虚无。在我眼中,广州高校的文艺创作至今无论在思想上、 艺术上都再没有能达到87、88年间那种深度和丰富,那种压抑的氛围是其原因之一。

这时,最大型的演出机会便是中秋节在广州东方乐园的表演了—他们需要廉价劳动力, 我们需要发泄。观众是来看热闹的市民,他们大都为不知从哪里冒出这些音乐而好奇。

我在校期间, 自己的音乐(也可能是当时所有校园乐队创作)出现在校园外的公众面前的唯一一次,是90年广东流协在“卜通100”举行的“第三届新歌试唱会” —我的乐队碰到了麻烦—鼓手为那套鼓漂亮的音色惊呆了、键盘手对着复杂的合成器不知如何是好、 我则被自己的几个吉他地雷效果器的电源弄得晕头转向, 但我们也得到了捞仔、陈小奇等人的热心帮助;观众热烈的反应使所有的紧张、疲劳得到了回报。

校园是地下音乐的最肥沃的土壤。 我记得这样的一幕:侯德健在86年暨大的一次歌唱比赛中被我们请来当评委,我在后台向他借烟抽,他问:“没烟啦?”我说:”穷嘛!”“穷好哇,穷了就能写出好东西了。”

牛扒城的民歌手

广州比较早期的地下音乐人们聚到一起, 常会为这样一件事而觉得奇怪:几乎所有的人都在西部牛仔啤酒牛扒城这间酒廊当过弹唱歌手。 这也许从一个侧面说明广州的地下音乐是从民谣开始的。

我也是其中最早的那批民歌手之一。在这里,我见到了王闻、原“SHADOWS”乐队的灵魂人物林羽、 方辉、我原来学校乐队的吉他手李宗贤、鼓手陈郁葱及后来去了北京的杨一等人。 45分钟的演出时间,三、四十元一场的演出费;这已足以使91年初广州的民歌手们趋之若骛了。

赚钱有术的台湾老板、 昏暗的灯光下特别的装修、客人进门时侍应生高呼的“欢迎光临” 、奇差的音响效果和民歌手,形成了牛扒城独特的吸引力。这里渐渐聚集了一批又一批文人、 雅士和酒疯子;我们有时与来捧场的朋友们把酒欢歌、 调情悦趣,有时与撒酒疯的客人拍桌子骂娘、大打出手。在酒杯的碰撞声中音乐只是赚钱、 练嗓子的手段,并无情趣可言,这时我最大的乐趣就是把林羽拉上来跟他唱二声部。

不期然间, 这里交流着各种各样的思想,传递着四面八方的信息,酝酿着一个又一个的举措。

音乐公社

虽然印象中“音乐公社” 与牛扒城有着某种必然的联系,但我不肯定“音乐公社” 是怎么酝酿出来的,因为那时我已从原来工作的国营厂跳槽到一家私人音响乐器行, 同时也因为长久没有在牛扒城唱民歌而几乎与地下音乐人们失去联系。

一天我在公司接到了一个电话, 电话那头是我当时不认识的钟名。他是个非常礼貌的人, 当他告诉我现在有一群朋友想组织一个地下音乐人团体,并很客气地问我是否有兴趣加入时, 我在很客气地表示愿意同时,内心却已激动得不行—这个想法太好了!

音乐公社一开始就得到了《音乐天堂》 的朋友们的支持,音乐公社的成立会便是在《音乐天堂》 的所在地开的(大概是92年的春天,我不记得准确的日子了) 。到场的大概有二、三十人,其中一些是以前的朋友,而更多的是不认识的新面孔。 大家为团体的名字和社长、理事等事项稍事讨论后,一切就定下来了:

名称: 音乐公社,社长:方辉,理事:钟名。
音乐公社的成立标志着广州地下音乐第一个高潮的开始。在很短的时间内,艳阳天、 KSM、NO NAME、铁蜘蛛、支点、藻泽、一窝蜂、焦距、王闻、田敏、朱昕荣和我等(还有一些我记不起来的但未必不重要的) 乐队和个人突然频繁地出现在报纸、 电台等新闻媒体上,为数不多的几次“社员汇演”为“社员”同志们提供了交流、观摩的机会,同时也让更多的人了解了公社的存在。

提到音乐公社, 我觉得不能不提这几个人:方辉、钟名、熊晓杰、江南藜果。 方辉作为社长,一开始就陷入了一个困境:他实际上是一个光杆司令。大部分的社员其实都在自留地上辛勤工作, 而到公社有收成时就不知不觉、理所当然地到方辉那里去领公粮。 方辉有时也坦然承认这应部分地归咎于自己不知该如何组织这群英雄豪杰,但他的工作实在太多了—他几乎是唯一一个工作在国营单位(相当忙的那种)的成员(其他如我在私人琴行打工,NO NAME、支点、藻泽、焦距在读书,KSM、一窝蜂、王闻晚上在酒吧、歌厅上班,另一些人则无业) ,而联系场地、协调各乐队的器材(有时还要租用)、新闻发布……没完没了的烦心事把我们的社长搞得焦头烂额, 事成之后,大概也没有多少人感谢过他的一切努力。 我常常看到原本天真烂漫的他变得灰头土脸,但却又不知该如何安慰他才好。

钟名是伟大的, 一位政府部门的职员,与音乐创作毫无关系,仅凭一副热心和耐性默默地有条有理地帮助着我们这群疯子和自大狂。 他和方辉的结识直接导致了音乐公社的诞生,而在音乐公社存在的全过程中,由于他的低调作风,你甚至可以根本感觉不到他的存在; 但在音乐公社名存实亡的那段时间,钟名给了我一份厚厚的音乐公社活动的资料—他的确不用说什么,他所做的就已经很值得我们尊敬了。

当时《信息时报》 的名记、股票专家熊晓杰以强大的影响力使音乐公社一夜之间拥有了相当大的知名度。 他是我在暨大时的学长,当时的一些共同战斗的经历让我觉得他具有策划活动的天赋; 而对地下音乐的热情使他成为音乐公社与新闻媒体之间不可替代的桥梁。 他很早就看到了音乐公社组织形式上的弱点,但无论是他还是我们自己,在当时都无法做出有力的改变。

《粤港信息报》 的名记江南藜果当然是当时关心音乐公社的众记者中最有力的一位吹鼓手, 也和熊晓杰一样是参与音乐公社创立的策划者之一,但在这里提到他的真正原因, 是因为他准确地预报了音乐公社的无形解散。他是熊晓杰的同班同学, 这位眼中闪烁着狡诘的干瘦的小老头有着过人的敏感和常人难以理解的行为方式。 当众人带着惋惜的心情回避面对音乐公社将近名存实亡这一事实时, 他毫不客气地以客观而敏锐的眼光和不小的篇幅在报上做出分析,最后他告诉我们:“你们快玩完了”。

音乐公社的成功之处在于它使广州地下音乐大规模地曝光, 这也使专业音乐人、 音像公司开始将注意力转移到另一个市场;94年中,太平洋影音公司的“南方大摇滚(一) ”的录制完成在标志着音乐公社的成功的同时也意味着音乐公社的结束。 一批广州、深圳的作品和出色的社员创作被并不出色的策划和制作匆匆推出。

回到混沌状态

《南方大摇滚》 专辑的录制过程中,原本不十分明显的各乐队内不同音乐风格取向和个人间的性格矛盾突然白热化。 虽然我们对这群个性强烈的人们相处在一起和组织乐队的困难早有心理准备,但这种变化依然让人意外和感伤。

这一时期,两位李姓朋友在广州地下音乐圈起着重要的作用。

一位是香港两生花独立唱片公司(Sound Factory)的李劲松先生(阿DICK) 。在广州的一次展览会上,焦距乐队的贝司手郭劲刚认识了他并把他介绍给广州的地下音乐圈。他对广州的地下音乐相当感兴趣, 但在一次次试听后,他有些失望。他的反应使部分广州地下音乐人感到了自己的问题, 这种自省引起的意见分歧和以前的各种矛盾集中在一起最终导致了几乎所有广州地下乐队解散、 重组。在相当长的一段时间里, 广州地下音乐圈几乎不存在固定的乐队组合,大家只在不同的演出场合随兴作临时组合。 最后仍与李劲松保持了较长时间联系的是独立歌手王磊和焦距乐队的主音歌手宋晓军。 王磊作为一名外间公认的广州地下音乐的代表, 虽然在音乐公社第一次的社员汇演上就曾出现,但圈中却常把他当成一位过客, 这也是此文到现在才提到他的原因;如果把他归入圈中,那他将是我们中目标最明确、最坚韧不拔的一个。

另一位李姓朋友是电台DJ李启健(阿KENT) 。他由于工作的关系以及个人的兴趣一直与地下音乐圈和校园乐队保持着接触, 音乐公社停止活动后,广州的地下音乐会不少是他组织发起或多少跟他有较大的关系。

这段时间里, 江湖上有许多的变化和是非,社员们有的暂时失去了目标,有的找到了新的生活,有的反而更专心地去玩自己的音乐了。

摇滚精神不死

必须告诉大家的是, 有许多优秀的地下音乐人在这篇文字中没有提及,这一方面是因为我要赶时间交稿; 另一方面我并不打算写一篇广州地下音乐史,不可能面面俱到。 实际上,我们还应该感谢许许多多这里没有提及的朋友,因为他们不但过去支持过广州的地下音乐, 他们也准备为广州地下音乐新的高潮的到来推波助澜。

就在这篇文字截稿的前两天,我参加了在开平举行的“五. 四新青年—摇滚精神不死” 音乐会,在那里我又见到了颇具实力的吹波糖、雨中猴群、与非门与刘晓宇等新一辈的广州地下乐手, 在那里我发现了原来在音乐公社就已是最出色的吉他手易云钢和鼓手高原都在技术上又有了质的提高, 在那里我还看到了一群全新的观众和一帮熟悉的新闻界的朋友。 我想在不久的将来,会有一个新的音乐组织象音乐公社一样再一次把广州的地下音乐人团结起来, 而它应该会比音乐公社更成功。

via: Music Heaven

 

 

【2016艺象声音现场艺术节】声音艺术家介绍 ABOUT ARTISTS

深圳,一个充满活力的城市,同时也是各种变化与刷新率极高的地方,不少新兴艺术都发生在此地,特别是在新媒体艺术发展的时代,这座城市将一直扮演着国际化艺术前沿的角色。

此次首届艺象声音艺术节,重点突出在艺术现场的实验性与即兴性,都是体现在艺术家们经验的现时表现力与感染力上,艺术区特别邀请了国内外八位声音艺术家的参与,著名的珊寇Sainkho(图瓦/奥地利)、著名的“美妍 & 朴” Miyeon & Park(韩国双人组)、著名的实验声音艺术家奥拉夫·豪赫兹Olaf Hochherz(德国)、世界实验声音圈最活跃的声音艺术家李劲松Dickson Dee(香港)、著名聲音藝術家陳伯達以及两位深圳本土的声音艺术家沈丕基、陆正Zen lu。在两天的艺术节中,既有各位艺术家独立的表演又有各种的即兴互动,以及24号晚19:30开始的集体,23号下午16:00,还将有一场别开生面的“Sainkho Namchylak Food Art”珊寇唱作展。

除了音乐人声音实验、音乐演出外,艺术节增加行为艺术与声音艺术的实验性互动,在第十届“谷雨行动”行为艺术节举办的同时,两个艺术节同时同地发生,几十位国际性艺术家尝试艺术互动的另一种可能性,这将是为其两天精彩的艺术现场出现,为深圳艺术爱好者提供了一次充满现场感的艺术盛宴。

美妍 & 朴 ” Miyeon & Park” (韩国)


由钢琴手美妍和打击乐器演奏者朴在千组成的双人“美妍 & 朴”, 在数年期间成为代表韩国以及亚洲的最高的即兴音乐演奏组合。他们的融合了自由爵士乐、国乐、现代古典、摇滚乐核心的音乐在过去10多年期间通过许多表演成功地表现了21世纪型即兴音乐的全新代案。这在美国的爵士乐与亚洲的独特而深沉, 以及非常直观的精神世界结合而成的令人惊叹的崭新形态的艺术。

“美妍 & 朴”的演奏具有可以用构成即兴的语法来形容的最高水准的音乐性。以明了的旋律和接近为基础的他们的音乐展现了与众不同的独创主题, 通过令人惊叹的演奏力和丰富的表现力促使其高效地发展。

“美妍 & 朴”DUO的最终目标之一是将韩国音乐的传统融入他们的作品中。这并非单纯地意味着将爵士乐和韩国音乐混合在一起。虽然“美妍&朴”DUO既不是爵士乐, 也不是国乐, 但是兼具两者之美德的全新风格的音乐。

“Sainkho Namchylak FoodArt” 珊寇唱作展

(图瓦/奥地利)


Sainkho Namchylak,中国铁杆都叫她“珊寇”,作为全球顶尖的声音艺术家,在声音艺术领域里是很多人膜拜的偶像,而且是神仙级的,大家并不陌生。

生于图瓦共和国,祖先是游牧民族,自小学习歌唱,曾组过民谣摇滚乐团。长大后远赴莫斯科学习声乐,除学习图瓦传统的双声唱法,也包括喇嘛与萨满巫教的传统声乐技巧。从 1989年起,Sainkho开始跨足欧洲前卫即兴乐界,学习更多元化的发声技巧,并致力挖掘双声唱法与其他音乐风格融合的可能性。

这次展览是Sainkho在环保健康的题材上,进行的朴素尝试,所有的画作均以100%的食材原料作为绘画的笔墨,作品将在4月23日展出,大家可以看到Sainkho的画作就像Sainkho的声音表达一样信马由缰,一发不可收。每幅作品都能感受到Sainkho饱满的创造力和古老的神秘感,所有这些,都让你觉得很先锋,很实验,很情景。

此外, “Sainkho with her friends”即兴声音演出,是Sainkho “Food Art唱作展”的一部分。届时,Sainkho和她的朋友香港著名声音艺术家李劲松,将为现场观众一起带来全球顶尖的真正发烧的声音体验。Sainkho 出神入化的演唱技巧让人惊艳,结合图瓦传统双声唱法、喇嘛与萨满巫教的传统声乐与当代发声技巧,时而像歌剧男高音般清亮,时而像鸟鸣、孩童撒娇、深沉的低吟,人们不免拿她跟Bjork、Zap Mama、Patti Smith、Nina Hagen或者Maja Ratkje相提并论。

2002年由德国女导演Erika von Moeller执导的纪录片《Sainkho》正式面世,让世人对Sainkho的生活有更深层的了解,同年Sainkho更获家乡图瓦颁发“二十世纪图瓦最具创意成就奖”。

归根到底,奠定Sainkho在当今乐坛的特殊地位以及赋予她的音乐跨乐种、跨文化吸引力的,却是她一直坚持的实验精神。从她每张专辑都试图破格,把别具一格的演唱结合西方前卫爵士、即兴音乐、各地传统乐以致电子乐,加上诗化歌词,Sainkho成功塑造出一种特别强调声音技巧表现、而兼具许多不同国家传统的世界音乐。著名音乐杂志《The Wire》这样形容Sainkho的音乐:运用打击效果的喘息、啧舌声与高音域尖叫作为表情,在流行与传统音乐之外独树一帜,立足于完全不同的境界:一个纯人类、受此纪律驱动而超凡的境界。

奧拉夫 · 豪赫兹 Olaf Hochherz(柏林)

声音艺术家暨实验音乐演奏家,除了以自制电子器材即兴创作和电脑程序作曲的演出,他也致力于发展自己搭建声音结构的创作。借由声音作品探讨环境和器材的关系、或抽象声音与其联系之关系,或电子声音与其他种类声音的关系。过去于不同的艺术节场合发表其电子作曲的作品,而装置表演作品持续于欧洲及亚洲各国巡回演出。

他对不稳定的系统有高度兴趣,并致力于开发相关领域,而非只是足以掌握机械的能力。而此相关领域能让他融合音乐及其他声音经验。对他而言,声音有自己的生命,而他则尽力保持其活力。

李劲松 Dickosn Dee  (中國香港)

李劲松是世界实验音乐圈最活跃的香港人,从事音乐事业已超过25年。创办“亚洲传声”,这间在华人地区独立音乐场景中最重要的唱片公司作为起点,李劲松在20多年的时间里,参与和从事过包括独立音乐的唱片发行和代理、音乐创作、出版、版权代理、媒体宣传、演出组织等工作。

1996年,李劲松首张个人专辑《PAST》在JohnZorn的Tzadik唱片公司出版。从此他便踏上音乐创作的道路。他的音乐风格多样,从Avant Garde到具象、新古典到工业噪音、跳舞音乐或电声民族爵士皆广泛涉猎。李劲松拥有多个创作代号并与不同的音乐家组成乐队或组合。例如DJ Dee用以创作实验电子,Li ChinSung则专注具象和Avant Garde,PNF则是专为创作工业噪音而设,KhoomiSound Machine,则是他开始电声民族爵士的尝试的又一新的代号,在这队融合了蒙古长调、自由爵士和实验电子的乐团里,李劲松负责电子原音、采样、唱盘等声响的设计。

多年来,与李劲松合作过的音乐家或艺术家,足够写成一幅当代音乐场景的地图。

除了亚洲传声,李劲松新开设了一个厂牌DicksoniaAudio,专注于自己创作作品的出版和发行。这也有助于他拓展个人在创作上的自由度。频繁出席在世界各地的音乐节或演出的李劲松,也在一些艺术学院和大学举行讲座,和世界各地的朋友分享他在创作或音乐工作的经验,希望让听众能拓宽思维去接受和看待艺术和音乐。

李劲松也参与包括中国独立电影和现代舞的配乐创作,他的配乐作品包括导演朱文的《小东西》、《火星纪事乐队》,《三元里》, 著名编舞家桑吉加的《Pa I Ethos》、《Pathos》、 《NotHere/Not Ever》、《重置》、《那一年,这一天》、《前定的暗色》、《无以名状》、编舞家刘琦的《临池》、《The CityRace》、《临池舞墨》,编舞家侯莹的《Burning》,《Tang andSong》,和參加了一些重要艺朮或音乐节如意大利威尼斯双年展和佛罗伦萨FabbricaEuroppa艺术节(2008,2014,2015),德国科隆三年音乐节,日本横浜三年展和北九洲双年展,瑞典Clandestino音乐节,香港新視野艺术节(2006,2010),波兰MovingCloser 艺术节,韩国现代和民俗艺术节,台北城市艺术节,广州电影节,星加坡華艺艺术节,深圳建築双年展(2006,2008,2010),上海国际艺术节(2013,2015),城市游牧艺术节在乌兰巴托,城市游牧艺术节在柏林,哥斯达黎加国际艺术节,香港國際詩歌之夜,香港艺术节等等。

陳柏達 Wilmer Chan(中國香港)

演奏低音大提琴的理念背弃传统支援乐队节奏与和声的岗位,转移集中于探索乐器特异的音质,奏出融合于环境氛围的声音。

2012年于美国威斯康辛州的劳轮斯大学读取作曲系学士,现活跃于即兴音乐创作。除了近年来参与香港西九文化区管理局数码艺术项目<拾年>,多媒体剧场<1984>、<掌心的鱼>的创作和演出外,比较重要的经验分别是和乐手OlafHochherz、 Nelson Hiu、丰住芳三郎 ;作曲家 MartijnTellinga 和 The Deep Listening Band 的合作。

陸正 Zen Lu (深圳)

陆正,电子音乐家、声音艺术家、We Play! Records及Neo Sound(离骚)新艺术团体和艺术活动创办人,中国和波兰跨国音乐交流项目”ChoP”发起人之一,N2新媒体艺术小组成员,生活、工作于深圳。

2007年初主持创立深圳独立音乐厂牌We Play! Records,组织策划演出,与来自世界各地的艺术家演出和交流。陆正也为戏剧及电影创作配乐,他的数字声音和音乐倾向于绵密、细致和简约的风格。

曾参加香港SAND Festival(2006)、香港新视野艺术节(2006)、瑞典ClandestinoFestival(2007)、波兰Moving Closer International New Media Festival(2007)以及ChineseSound Art in Poland(2007)、大声展(2007) 、深圳-香港城市/建筑双城双年展(2005、2007)、多伦多SoundReach(2009)、香港建筑是艺术节(2009)、华沙电子音乐节(2010)、ChoP ontour in Poland(2010)、上海世博会德国馆”都市未来之声”(2010)、第八届上海双年展(2010)、ChoP Tourin Europe(2011)、ChoP中国巡演(2011)、北京国际设计周(2012)、德-中爵士即兴音乐节(2012,2013)、ChoP音乐节(2012, 2013)、CO-SOUND 艺术节 (2013)、ChoP+Moss 欧洲联合巡演(2013)、声闻系列(2014)、re:source音乐节(2014)、Polyphonia音乐节(2014)、BOK戏剧艺术节(2015)。

沈丕基  Shen Piji (深圳)

独立艺术家 声音艺术家

1971年出生于福建闽南书画之乡诏安的书香门第,自幼承习中国传统书画与民间音乐。1985年开始学习吉他,1988年进入福州大学厦门工艺美术学院主修现代漆画,1993年工作生活于深圳,成为深圳九十年代至今先锋音乐和当代艺术的代表人物之一。1997年组建地下摇滚乐队“向日葵乐队”任主唱与主音吉他,活跃于当时中国的地下摇滚界与朋克音乐领域,曾为国内各知名娱乐场所空间设计师,后又转入对纯粹声音实验以至先锋视觉艺术的创作与实践。古琴广陵派第十三代传人,并对传统古琴的传承与当代古琴实验性做出了一定尝试,深圳梧桐琴社创始人。


沈丕基作品涉及装置、影像、行为、绘画、音乐、声音、诗歌等形式,个人深受西方思潮影响并与东方禅宗精神相融合形成自己的艺术语言系统,长期坚持以即兴方式将声音、视觉与行动的交互为介质切入对当代艺术的表现。创作动机与个人生活联系紧密,跨界性作品多呈现为对现代城市的快速发展变化的关注与感受,并对自然万物的思考领悟做出了一定艺术再现,同时策划了各类国际性新媒体艺术展,也是国内行为艺术与声音艺术的重要推动者。主张倡导魏晋时期自由精神观念,传达出东方艺术思想理念国际化的重要性,结合新媒体艺术语境做出开创性的思考与呈现。

现场演出方面,上世纪九十年代年曾和日本废墟乐队、空中飞鱼乐队、美国硬HIMSA,以及国内多次全国巡演,也和国内及香港各大朋克乐队一起如盘古乐队、生命之饼乐队、荔枝王乐队等一起同台。2000年之后偏向于实验声音的现场,把声音与装置、行为等方式作品如:《生活·压力》声音实验系列,深港城市建筑双城双年展(2005、2007)、“独闲·散拍”个人实验音乐会(2010)、CHOP音乐节(2012,2013)、德-中爵士即兴音乐节(2015)、香港诗歌艺术节(2015),以及近年来的一些艺术展的实验声音表演开幕式等。

via: 艺象iDTOWN

Neil Young Says “Goodbye Starbucks” In Angry Open Letter

An angry post on Neil Young’s official site entitled “GOODBYE STARBUCKS!!!” explains why Young is boycotting the coffee chain and urging others to do the same. The iconic folk-rocker notes that Starbucks has aligned itself with the genetically engineered food company Monsanto in a lawsuit against the state of Vermont. (UPDATE: Starbucks isn’t actually involved with the lawsuit, so Young’s ire is misplaced; see below.) As the Genetic Literacy Project explains, “Last spring, Vermont passed a law that will require all products containing GMOs to be properly labeled by July 1, 2016, with the exception of dairy products, meat, alcohol and food served in restaurants.” Young compared Vermont vs. Monsanto to David vs. Goliath and said he’s disappointed Starbucks is teaming up with “the biggest villain of them all” after staking out a progressive position on other issues. Here’s the full text of Young’s post, which borrows heavily from a recent petition at the website SumOfUs:

NY

“I used to line up and get my latte everyday, but yesterday was my last one.
Starbucks has teamed up with Monsanto to sue Vermont, and stop accurate food labeling.
Tell Starbucks to withdraw support for the lawsuit — we have a right to know what we put in our mouths.

Starbucks doesn’t think you have the right to know what’s in your coffee. So it’s teamed up with Monsanto to sue the small U.S. state of Vermont to stop you from finding out.
Hiding behind the shadowy “Grocery Manufacturers Association,” Starbucks is supporting a lawsuit that’s aiming to block a landmark law that requires genetically-modified ingredients be labeled. Amazingly, it claims that the law is an assault on corporations’ right to free speech.
Monsanto might not care what we think — but as a public-facing company, Starbucks does. If we can generate enough attention, we can push Starbucks to withdraw its support for the lawsuit, and then pressure other companies to do the same.

Vermont is a small, entirely rural state with just 600,000 people. It’s a classic David and Goliath fight between Vermont and Monsanto. Considering that Starbucks has been progressive on LGBT and labor issues in the past, it’s disappointing that it is working with the biggest villain of them all, Monsanto. Monsanto Logo

There’s much more at stake here than just whether GMO foods will be labeled in a single U.S. state. Vermont is the very first state in the U.S. to require labeling. Dozens of other states have said that they will follow this path — in order to encourage this, we need to ensure that Vermont’s law stands strong.

That’s why Monsanto and its new allies are fighting so hard to kill GMO labeling in Vermont.
But whatever you think of GMOs, corporations should not be using massive lawsuits to overturn legitimate, democratic decisions with strong public backing.

SumOfUs is already fighting back — they helped Vermont raise almost a quarter of a million dollars to defend themselves against Monsanto’s bullying! Help them by going to SumOfUs and registering to donate or sign a petition. The next strategic step is to pressure and call out members of the Grocery Manufacturers Association, the shadowy body leading the lawsuit. Your backing can help.
Add your voice now. Tell Starbucks to stop supporting the lawsuit against Vermont.
Thanks for caring!
Neil Young
Nov 9, 2014
Vancouver BC Canada ”

UPDATE: Starbucks says they’re not affiliated with the lawsuit Young is so upset about. Here’s the company’s official statement:

“Starbucks is not a part of any lawsuit pertaining to GMO labeling nor have we provided funding for any campaign. And Starbucks is not aligned with Monsanto to stop food labeling or block Vermont State law.

The petition claiming that Starbucks is part of this litigation is completely false and we have asked the petitioners to correct their description of our position.

Starbucks has not taken a position on the issue of GMO labeling. As a company with stores and a product presence in every state, we prefer a national solution.”

via: http://www.stereogum.com/

more related info:

Starbucks & Green Mountain Coffee — don’t support the lawsuit against Vermont
http://action.sumofus.org/a/starbucks-gmo-gma/

Starbucks Response to Questions and Litigation Regarding GMO Labeling
http://news.starbucks.com/views/starbucks-response-to-questions-and-litigation-regarding-gmo-labeling

寫給霍夫曼的遺囑

精神科學醫師/作家沃格特(Walter Vogt)
所書寫給霍夫曼的遺囑︰

1969 沃格特大夫的最新遺囑

我希望沒有特別的葬禮,只有昂貴而俗麗的蘭花,
數不清的小鳥有著歡樂的名字,
沒有裸體的舞者,但有著迷幻藥的衣裳。
高音喇叭掛在每個角落,只有披頭四的唱片《Abbey Road》,
千遍萬遍唱著,為所欲為的<Blind Faith>,
在永不終結的歌曲裡,不過是受歡迎的耶穌,
戴著真金的光環,和令人敬仰的追悼者。
體內注滿了酸液(Acid),直到他們走向天堂,
一二三四五六七,
在那裡我們或許再相遇。
—獻給Albert Hofmann博士,1971年春

I'mPULSE Clandestino: 4th Asia-Europe Music Camp

 flyer clndstn

I’mPULSE Clandestino: 4th Asia-Europe Music Camp

I’mPULSE is an initiative by the Asia-Europe Foundation (ASEF) to nurture the development of innovative methods and practices in music through the empowerment of young musicians from Asia and Europe, and the encouragement of continuous dialogue amongst them.

I’mPULSE began as an Asia-Europe music workshop in the Philippines in 2005, connecting traditional musicians from Asia with classical musicians from Europe. At the end of that year, I’mPULSE also gathered traditional singers in Ireland. In 2006, ASEF co-organised a programme for Asian and European DJ’s in Beijing, focusing on comprehensive digital music experimentation. I’mPULSE continues to be a unique platform for multilateral artistic exchanges between musicians of both regions.

This year’s I’mPULSE, focused on dub music, is co-organised by ASEF and the Clandestino Festival. Both organisations share the goal of encouraging dialogue and enhancing collaboration and facilitating experimentation opportunities for artists. I’mPULSE brings together 25 professionals (young artists, VJ’s, lecturers and curators) from 16 countries in Asia and Europe for a series of closed-door workshops and rehearsals. Participants of I’mPULSE will then bring the fusion of ideas and their musical exploration to the public through performances during the Clandestino Festival.

http://www.myspace.com/clandestinofestival 

http://www.asef.org/

18000018018018401 [SWEDEN]

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18000018018018401 describes herself as an experimental musical illiterate with a great fascination for music as a concept. The way a construction of percussive language and sound fragments can be combined into units is a highly spiritual and intellectually stimulating process. Her composing is steered by the affection of creating visual patterns of sound components. The eye is as important as the ear. The music could be defined as industrial dub electronica wave – somehow club related. She is also part of the audiovisual art concept The Konference, promoting sustainable evolution, and collaborates more in depth with electronica producer hab.

Dub Terror [ITALY]

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Dub Terror is a London-based music project specialised in bass-heavy dubs and futuristic electronic music production. It’s conceived and operated by Italian producer Simone Lombardi and signed to Zion Train’s Deep RootUniversal Egg label. After joining the local music scene in his native town, Turin, Simone realised how big the crave for creative spaces was among the youth, as big as the social discomfort towards the institutions. The struggle towards a grey and impersonal society became the leading force behind his determination in becoming a successful music producer and plays a central role in establishing his musical identity. His approach to making music is freeform and instinctive, usually preparing multi-tracks, recording several versions and only then choosing the one that his instinct leads him towards, in the style of the dub pioneers. He plays with the mixing desk as if it was part of the music, like a director, and produces the final track as creating a story. He sees each instrument as a different character, bringing its own personality to interact with other instruments, as actors do in a play.

Genys [LITHUANIA]

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As a child Jevgenijus Konstantinovas spent nine year at a music school. In 1995 he started working as a MC in UZI, a hip hop group that dominated the charts in his country Lithuania. During his experimental period DJ Genys started collecting jazzy hip hop, dance hall, soul, broken beat, ragga, roots reggae, ska and dub. As one of Lithuania’s biggest VD’s, he performed his own favourite music from the Baltic coast, and organized parties for hungry ears all around the country. DJ Genys LP:s have also been played in Berlin, Belgium, Russia, Latvia and Sweden. Two years ago, Geny started the electronica project Dublicate, a co-operation with Paulius Kilbauskas. The band has performed live together with big names such as Rhythms and Sound, St. Paul Hilaire, Roni Size, MC Dynamate, Togetha Brotha Soundsystem. He participated in the Rotterdam film festival in 2006 och at the Baltic electronica festival in Dortmund in 2007.

Jethro Joaquin [THE PHILIPPINES]

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Jethro Joaquin is a sound designer, educated at the acting studio of the University of Phillipines, whose sound art has been performed at the Prague Quadrennial and World Stage Design in Toronto. He shapes sound landscapes and works with derivations of already existing pieces. He also runs the company Sound Bay Recording Studio, and works with different theatre projects. Joaquin also produces music outside the theatre, where he creates dub inspired electronica pieces by using the inherent sound caracteristica of maximalized every day sounds, such as rain, traffic and thunder. He has toured around Europe and North America with these compositions dealing with the dub landscape of acting.

Manucher [AUSTRIA]

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Manucher is a music producer involved in various projects, and a DJ and organizer, resident in Vienna. The aim of his different music projects is to show the necessity of global co-existence. Manucher is himself influenced by contemporary music created through meetings caused by modern migraton. His work has through the years resulted in many interesting co-operations with artists such as Roots Manuva, Asian Dub Foundation and State of Bengal. In 2006 he started the label 01 Recording, that produces eastern influenced experimental electronica.

Masanori Amakura [JAPAN]

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Masanori Amakura is one of the prominent figures of the new generation of progressive Japanese musicians. As a percussionist he is inspired by different kind of music, including jazz, African rhytms and Japanese techno pop. His musical width provided him with the opportunity to combine drums, percussion and computers in a unique way. Masanoris homemade instruments, produced by junk, scrap and kitchen utentils are also a peculiar part of his sound image. Masanori was born i Hiroshima, but moved to New York at the age of twenty.

Mel Gray [IRELAND]

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Mel Gray, a.k.a Eating Betty, is originally from Irland, but is now resident in New York. His occupation is to try and find the perfect rhythm and to develop the ultimate dub, through both digital and analogue means. He is inspired by the dub artists of the Jamaican 70’s, and combines the traditional elements of dub with modern instruments and recording techniques with the aim to create a music that sounds at the same time retro and progressive.

Molecule [FRANCE]

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The French artist Molecule is among others influenced by Basic Channel and Scape Productions and mixes dub vibrations with minimalist electronic sounds and hip hop experiments. He performs on stages around France, and is inspired by Pink Floyd as well as Debussy and uses both bass and Indian sitar as musical instruments. In co-operation with artists such as Jamalski, Leeroy (Saïn Supa Crew), HoneyChild and Webbafield, Molecule has composed music for visual art. In March his album In Dub V1.0. was released.

Nuphlo [UK]

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Nuphlo’s DJ carrier began at a local pirate radio station in Leeds, where he played a range of eastern influenced electronic music. Through friends he was given the opportunity to experiment with music production, which led to a shift of focus from DJ:ing, and the interest in production itself flourished. After a few years of sending out demos to labels, he caught the eye of Nasha Records in London, who started getting involved in his musical development. The co-operation has recently led to his participation with some dubstep and drum’n’bass tracks on their forthcoming LP.

Rachel Saraswati [INDONESIA]

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The Indonesian musician Rachel Saraswati combines classical pop, blues and jazz with traditional Javanese and Balinese dancing. She is one of the founders of Next to Kin, a group which is behind the performance project Rhymes of Passage och mixes different art forms with the aim to overcome the cleavage between popular culture and high culture. She has earlier participated as a vocalist in the percussion group Gebuin, and she also experiments with modern and classical song in her music production.

Slimmah Sound [THE NETHERLANDS]

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Slimmah Sound is Tim Baumgarten from the Netherlands. Over the past few years he has been producing roots reggea. He has participated on the LP Dub Shoe, Episode One, released by the German label Dub Flash. He has played at festivals and on bigger stages around the Netherlands, and in 2007 the record Love Fire Burning, a musical co-operation with the singer Jah Melodie, will be released at the Dutch label Bush and Shadow.

Sweet Susie [AUSTRIA]

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Sweet Susie has been an active DJ for almost fifteen years, and is regularly hired by clubs all around Europe. She is based in Vienna, where she also works as an artist and hosts the legendary Dub Club. The club, which has existed for twenty years, mixes dub with hip hop, jungle, break beat and brazil, and has been visited by icons such as Mad Professor, Jungle Brothers and Gangster. Sweet Susie is also herself a musician and an artist. During the last three years she has had a close co-operation with Mani Montana and the duo is at present producing an album where pop, dub and jazz is combined.

Tri Minh [VIETNAM]

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Since the beginning of the 90s, after graduating from the Hanoi music conservatoire, Tri Minh has played jazz at different places in Hanoi together with other young musicians. After a period of jazz improvisation, he started exploring his own territory within the electronical music. In 1999 this resulted in solo performances on various scenes. Tri Minh has established himself as the first true electro music artist in Vietnam. His ability to combine electro sounds with classical Vietnamese music has made him famous as an avant-garde musician and sound artist.

Variam [SWEDEN]

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Mariam Wallentin, a.k.a. Variam, is from Örebro and has sang everything from pop to soul to jazz. Besides her own projects under the name Variam, she sings in many different groups such as, Wildbirds and Peacedrums, Backdrop, Sinclair/Wallentin duo Lindblad StudioShowcase, and XiaoHe, and has also guest stared artists such as Papa Dee and Laakso. At the moment she is studying at the Individual Improvisational Performance program at the University of Gothenburg. She has participated in different art projects and has co-operated with film creators and dancers such as Marta Dauluite, Moa Matilda Sahlin och Ylva Henriksson. In the autumn of 2006 she lived in Beijing to study the musical scene of China.

Vidya [SWEDEN]

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Vidya has been described as a mix of Björk, Ella Fitzgerald and Pippi Longstocking, but only identifies with the last-mentioned. She workes with improvisation and transcendent stage art, mostly alternating between singing, talking och telling poetry, and uses her own made-up language. She can be seen in different artistic contexts, has perfomed at the biggest Swedish scenes and co-operated with musicians of different genres. She currently works with the design and art collective Thekonference, a project for a more durable world.

ZenLu [CHINA]

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ZenLu is an experimental musician and sound artist, who lives in Chinese Shenzhen. In 2002 he founded the post-rock group Conciousness, and two years later he joined the group YOUNG CRAZY. He has a great interest in experimental electronica and industrial noise, and in April 2006 he started the band Zen Bobo, which completely focuses on minimalist ambient music.

Mad Professor & Blonddub Sexy Sound [UK]

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Blonddub Sexy Sound is the name of the Israeli producer, singer and songwriter Orly Frinder, who mixes dub with dancehall and electro on her debut EP Blonddub Sexy Sound. She is a former member of the world music group Auru and has cooperated with Sir Larsi, Dub Rogue and Yossi Fine. On her record she combines echo effect and percussion, and her satirical lyrics often speak about the role of woman in society. Her next record, with the title God Save the Empress, will include numerous musical co-operations. Together with Mad Professor (see artists) she will hold a workshop.

Dr Das [UK]

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Dr Das is a bass player, programmer and producer, and one of the founders of Asian Dub Foundation, developed through the workshops he ran in London during the 90s. Recently his first solo album Emergency Basslines was released; an instrumental record that puts the emphasis on melody and driving basslines, mixed with distorted Indian och Arabic percussion loops. He defines his music as dubnoise, and is at the moment engaged in preparing his second solo album SUDAMALA VOL 1. Dr Das has also been involved in two other records and in numerous co-operations, productions and remix projects.

Dickson Dee [CHINA]

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Dickson Dee has been involved in the music business in Hong Kong, China och Taiwan for more than twenty years, and has had a great influence on the development of Chinese underground culture. He started his career as an importer of European independent music and has ever since been active as a producer, composer and curator, and has also started a label under the name Dicksonia Audio. Dee performs under several names depending on what he plays, such as Li Chin Sung, DJ Dee and Koomi Soundmachine. The music can be described as aborderland of electronica, art music, avant-garde jazz och industrial noise.

Daito Manabe [JAPAN]

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The producer Daito Manabe’s goal is to constantly redefine existing media by attacking it from new angles. He creates sounds, lights och images by analysing and converting numerical data from sensors and various recording instruments. Daito’s background as a mathematician and programmer makes it possible for him to constantly be at the cutting edge of the development of electronic culture. He has co-operated with dancers, designers, artists, performance artists and fashion producers all around the world, the last time was with Ryichi Sakamoto.

 

Steve Barker [UK]

Steve Barker has been braodcasting on the BBC for almost thirty years, his On The Wire show (www.onthewire.uk.com) was first broadcast in 1984 with Adrian Sherwood as special guest on the first programme, the show is still running today. Over the years Stev has interviewed many of the reggae great including Augustus Pablo, Burning Spear, Dennis Brown, Joe Hill from Culture and Lee “Scracth” Perry. Steve has been an associate of both On U Sounds and Pressure Sounds record labels, writing sleevenotes, reseaching samples and performing an ad hoc A&R role. For the past ten years he has writtent the dub column for the Wire magazine. He has lived in Beijing, China for the last five years and plays the occasional DJ for the Upstepper Crew or Beijing Home Town Hi Fi, appearing as DJ Lao Lao Shu (DJ Old Rat!)

 

VJ Milosh [POLAND]

VJ Milosh

The visual intermedia artist, video director, performance artist and painter Milosz Luczynski has lived and worked in Paris since 2001. After having studied anthropology at the university and art at the art school of Cracow, he then moved on to study in communucation and multimedia at the art school of Tolouse. The passion for music and performance opened new doors within the electronic culture. He started working as a VJ at raves i Cracow in 1996, and shortly afterwards he entered the electronic scene in Germany. At the same time as he was VJ:ing on scenes in Berlin, he produced videos and installations. Milosz projects are characterized by a mix of images, sound and texts. He co-operates a great deal with musicians in electronica, composers in contemporary music, poets, writers, and visual artist. Since 1995 he has performed his projects more than 300 times in several countries, on three continents.

VJ Mo-P [Sweden]

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Miguel-Oliver Pissarra, born in the 70’s on the other side of the equator, is a multi-disciplinary designer & audiovisual artist who, fascinated by the effect symbols have on the conscious and subconscious, started working professionally with graphic design back in 1996. Over the years he has furthered his exploration on the impact of visual culture in a myriad of other mediums such as photography, film & 2D / 3D animation tools to convey a message, tell a story or simply create a reaction within …

PARTICIPANTS I’mPULSE Clandestino:

Manucher Raschidy (a.k.a Manucher, Austria)
www.myspace.com/manucher

Susanne Rogenhofer (a.k.a Sweet Susie, Austria)
www.myspace.com/dubclubvienna

Lu Zheng (China)
www.zenlu.com
www.weplayrec.cn

Delahaye-Serafini Romain (a.k.a Molecule, France)
www.myspace.com/moleculeproject

Mel Gray (a.k.a Eating Betty, Ireland)
www.acetonestudio.com/eatingbetty.html

Simone Lombardi (a.k.a Dub Terror, Italy)
www.myspace.com/dubterror

Jevgenijus Konst

antinovas (Genys, Dublicate, Lithuania)
www.myspace.com/dublicate

Milosh Luczynski (a.k.a VJ Milosh, Poland)
www.vjmilosh.com

Tim Baumgarten (Slimmahsound Dub System, The Netherlands)
www.myspace.com/slimmahsounddubsystem

Mariam Wallentin (Sweden)
www.wildbirdsandpeacedrums.com
www.myspace.com/wildbirdsandpeacedrums
www.myspace.com/mariamwallentin

Vidya-Liselotte Sundberg (Sweden)
www.myspace.com/vidyalise

Karin Holmgren (a.k.a 18000018018018401,
Sweden)
www.myspace.com/18000018018018401

Miguel-Oliver Pissarra (a.k.a VJ M-OP,
Sweden)
www.myspace.com/supremefidelity

Manjinder Sandhu (a.k.a Nuphlo,
United Kingdom)
www.myspace.com/nuphlomusic

Thang Doan Huu (a.k.a Tri Minh,
Vietnam)

www.em411.com/triminh
www.soundclick.com/electrovn
www.myspace.com/triminh05

LECTURERS I’mPULSE Clandestino:
Neil Fraser (a.k.a Mad Professor)

www.myspace.com/madprofessordub

Aniruddha Das (a.k.a Dr.Das)
www.myspace.com/drdas

Orly Frider (a.k.a Blondub Sexy Sound)
www.myspace.com/blondubsexysound

Daito Manabe
www.daito.ws/

Dickson Dee (a.k.a Li Chin Sung)
www.myspace.com/dicksondee
http://blog.dicksondee.com/?page_id=9

Steve Barker (On the Wire/BBC Radio)
www.onthewire.uk.com

 

07大声展参展艺术家名单公布

http://www.getitlouder.com/

按作品类别:

建筑
Benjamin Beller
Chan Studio (何京蕴+何颖雅+長岡法秀+谢婷婷)
陈海亮+ 傅宗文
多相工作室 (陈龙+陆翔+胡宪+贾莲娜)
冯果川+ Aaron Robin + Laura Belevica
谷巍
Andrew Lazorchak + Wu Lan + People’s Architecture
刘宇扬
刘密+马斌 (Brendan McGetrick)
嗯工作室 (朱晔+徐浪+魏皓严)
qT Studio (胡倩+高桥邦明)
上海偏建设计 (成美芬+黄向军+周易昕)
施国平 (纯粹设计)
在场建筑 (钟文凯+徐千禾+刘宏伟)
下划线工作室
王晖 (有限设计)
未名空间 (李静晖+杨帆+胡罡)
朱涛+ Olympia Kazi
祝晓峰 (山水秀)

产品
(BY) 林柏叶+苗微微
蔡凯
郭晓+张丽妍
何薇薇
李明
吕永中
石川@广州
吴明伦

时装
朱宝君
高欣
何艳
Masha Ma
Matchbox (徐燕辉+ 丁宁)
破壳 (窝窝/金宁宁+早/司玮)
邱昊

视觉
223 (林志鹏)
白小刺 (沈晓鸣)
曹斐
常锦超
陈曼
巧克力橙子 (乔成)
戴耘
DN (唐彦)
耿鹏
广煜+潘攀
黄炜东
大婴 (任亦)
Charlie Koolhass
林海东
Ling (高灵)
刘治治
陆国贤
路路 (李心路)
麦永曦
孟瑾+方二 (廖方瑜)
More (蒋振华+顾佳艳)
My Little Dead Dick (马蒂/朱薇+Patrick Tsai)
彭&陈 (彭杨军+陈皎皎)
乔小刀 (乔西)
Rex Koo
尚盈
田园
魏超+吴永红+陈飞波
肖华
小马哥+橙子 (马慧敏+郭承成)
薛问问
周蓓丽
Ziboy (温凌)
子杰 (李俊)

电影
甘小二
高文东
许学文
李红旗
凌宇瀚
彭磊
陈翠梅
王笠人
卫铁
吴明金
杨恒
应亮
张跃东
赵晔

声音
718 (孙雷)
Alok
B6 (楼南立)
白天
陈志鹏
李劲松 (Dickson Dee )
Fathmount (李庆贤)
Frishzelle
洪启乐
欢庆
黄锦
iLoop (罗浩)
积木 (蒋竹韵)+石川@杭州
李戴果
李剑鸿+ Vavabond (韦玮)
李琨
林其蔚
麻沸散
me:mo (翟瑞新)
No One Pulse
Sin:Ned (黄仲辉)
Sulumi (孙大威)
顶楼的马戏团
虐待护士 (Torturing Nurse)
王凡
许雅筑
杨韬+ aaajiao (徐文恺)
Zafka (张安定)
Zenlu (陆正)

英国专题
Åbäke
Assa Ashuach
Marloes Ten Bhomer
Danny Brown
Sam Buxton
Celine Condorelli + Gavin Wade
Shezad Dawood
D-Fuse
Martino Gamper
Simon Heijdens
Julia Lohmann
Neil Rock + Newbetter
Troika
Wokmedia

日本专题
福山正紘
近藤聡乃
さわひらき (Hiraki Sawa)
辻川幸一郎

LEGO Project
Atelier Bow-wow
艾未未
Sean Godsell
Bernard Khoury
李兴钢
马清运
Map Office (Laurent Gutierrez + Valerie Portefaix)
都市实践

讲座
Kyong Park

The Next Cultural Revolution

The Chinese don’t get creativity, right? Sure, they can stamp out a widget, or knock off a DVD, but when it comes to imagination, they just don’t have the gene. Well, keep telling yourself that.

From: Fast Company Issue 116 | June 2007 | Page 64 | By: Aric Chen | Photographs By: Andrew Rowat

Arriving for breakfast on a recent morning in Beijing, Jennifer Wen Ma looks as self-assured as the glittering new buildings rising around her. Her eyes convey a kind of benign ferocity, a flicker of knowingness that’s jarring in a 33-year-old. But then again, for all her youth, Ma is carrying an unlikely burden: the aspirations of 1.3 billion people.

A Beijing-born, New York-seasoned artist, Ma is part of the seven-member creative team masterminding China’s great coming out party–the opening ceremony of next year’s Beijing Olympics. Leading her group is acclaimed filmmaker Zhang Yimou (Hero, House of Flying Daggers, Curse of the Golden Flower); celebrated artist Cai Guo-Qiang (New York’s Museum of Modern Art, London’s Tate Modern, an upcoming retrospective at the Guggenheim) is also on board. But, younger than her colleagues by a generation or so–and with an artist’s résumé that includes a video work, projected onto a tousled bed, of a woman engaged in what she politely calls "self-comfort"–Ma is emblematic of a newer, edgier China. The opening ceremony will no doubt be a G-rated affair, but when the Olympic torch finally arrives in Beijing next year, Ma wants to smoke out your clichéd ideas about her country–and those of your 4 billion fellow viewers–right along with it. "We’re going to try to keep the ribbon dancing to a minimum," she says. "Whatever we end up doing, the bottom line is to showcase the innovation of the Chinese people. Everyone wants to project a very modern image–one that will stun the world."

China is not content to serve as factory to the globe. Call it economic foresight, or cultural pride, but despite the stratospheric growth of its economy–10.7% last year–China knows that cheap labor alone can’t sustain the boom. While a flurry of activity (and, yes, a government five-year plan) has stressed scientific and technological innovation, look a little closer and you’ll see that creativity in art and industry–in design, fashion, media, and the like–is fast becoming a driving national mission.

Look past the behemoth Three Gorges Dam, past a highway system that will be larger than America’s by 2020, and China is building a creative infrastructure, too, at breakneck speed. You can sense it in the trendy restaurants and slick boutiques popping up in major cities–and in the gritty ex-warehouse and factory districts where imagination-driven companies are joining the cafés and art galleries that first settled in. Newsstands are brimming with glossies such as Vision, Urban, and Modern Weekly that, joined by online counterparts like Coldtea, feature international trends alongside promising local talents. China’s answers to YouTube (Tudou and Yoqoo) and social-networking sites (Douban)–along with an estimated 34 million (and skyrocketing) blogs–are bringing in digital reinforcements on a national scale.

Combine all of that with a counterdiaspora and reverse brain drain of talent, and the overall result is a kind of primordial soup thick with the building blocks of creative enterprise. Emerging from it is an army–small, but growing–that’s working to reinvent how China thinks and works.

Of course, that process has been under way for some time. Homegrown corporate giants such as Lenovo (OTC:LNVGY), which swallowed up IBM’s personal-computing unit in 2005, and the appliance maker Haier, have made notable strides in design and innovation. The Sonys (NYSE:SNE) and GMs (NYSE:GM) of the world are starting to get real mileage out of their Chinese design studios. Veteran filmmakers such as Zhang and Chen Kaige (Farewell My Concubine, Temptress Moon) and stars like Ziyi Zhang (click here) are producing work that competes internationally while fashion designers Vivienne Tam and Han Feng (both long based in New York) have earned global followings as well. Judging by the country’s Olympics plans–expect some of the most radical architecture the world has ever seen–even the old-guard bureaucrats seem to be getting the idea.

But does China have what it takes to become a creative superpower? At first glance, even the Chinese seem unsure. "We asked a thousand 15- to 35-year-olds in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou to rank the 20 or 25 words that best describe China," says P.T. Black, an American-born partner of Jigsaw International, a Shanghai-based trend-forecasting firm that counts major multinationals as clients. And "’creative’ placed close to last."

Still, for those raised with the economic reforms initiated by Deng Xiaoping, the world of Communist Youth Leagues and Little Red Books doesn’t figure into the equation anymore–it’s all about the Internet, new media, and MTV (NYSE:VIA). China’s overall population may be aging faster than almost any on earth, but its younger generations benefit from one creative staple long denied their elders: a sense of possibility. "These are people who have seen nothing but growth," Black says, "nothing but China getting the Olympics, Yao Ming going to the NBA, nothing but optimism." And, for some, nothing but the tantalizing proximity of a vast new affluence: By one count, the average age of China’s 400 richest people stands at 46.5, versus 65.7 in the United States–bringing a 25-year-old in China a full generation closer to the average gazillionaire. "There’s a sense that creativity is where you make money," Black continues. "People are getting rewarded for it, and that’s only going to inspire more."

If anyone could be called Great Leader in this new countercultural revolution, it’s Ou Ning. Originally from the southern province of Guangdong but now based in Beijing, Ou, 37, is typical of the kind of frenetic multitasker you’re liable to run into here these days: A writer, filmmaker, music promoter, and graphic designer, he has founded several alternative magazines to boot. His latest project is Get It Louder, a roving biennial exhibition of young creatives that’s billed as the first of its kind in China–a road show for the country’s grooviest generation that, this spring and summer, is having its second run in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou. "In Chinese society, it’s always the old people who have power," says Ou, who’s dressed in a pair of pea-green Nikes (NYSE:NKE) to complement his austere eyewear and uniform of black. "We want to create a platform for young people to speak their own voice."

Packed with everything from animation and illustration to architecture, fashion, and (almost literally) the kitchen sink, the first iteration of Get It Louder in 2005 was a designer-palooza that showcased 100 mostly Chinese up-and-comers–half from the mainland, with an average age of 25. Thousands came to check out the punk and skater graphics; sound, video, and art installations; and enough cool T-shirts to outfit New York’s Williamsburg, L.A.’s Silver Lake, and London’s East End combined. And then there were the parties. "A lot of people drank so much they just crashed on the sofas," Ou recalls, "which is how I think exhibitions should be."

It might sound like Sino-slacker anarchy, but Ou and his cadre are on the international business radar–and getting bigger. At the inaugural Get It Louder, the German faucet maker Grohe was so impressed by Shanghai architect Chen Xudong’s "Water Corridor" installation that the company asked him to come up with some new product concepts. And Chivas tapped another participant, a collective
called Unmask, to design whiskey and cocktail glasses for its sponsored events. "The most interesting work is coming from advertising, PR, and marketing, because they have the money," says Shaway Yeh, the editorial director of the Shanghai-based publication Modern Weekly. Pulling out a boxed set of 13 books, sponsored by Rémy Martin’s Louis XIII cognac, she flips through a tour de force of sophisticated layouts, pull-out postcards, origami-like pages, and photographs that can be rearranged as in a scrapbook. Each book pays homage to one of China’s cultural movers and shakers; all are the work of Les Suen, a 31-year-old Shanghai design whiz.

The massive influx of foreign multinationals, and the growth of their Chinese competitors, has given local talents new chances to stretch and prove themselves at home. More significant, those talents are starting to find demand overseas. Last November, the People’s Daily proudly announced that China had become the world’s third-largest exporter of creative services and products. Granted, how creativity was defined–and how much of the country’s $969.1 billion in 2006 exports was "creative"–seems a bit unclear. Still, "the last 20 years have been about the West moving East," says Philip Dodd, a consultant and BBC radio host whose London-based firm, Made in China, is helping Chinese cities develop their creative industries. "But the next 20 years will be about the East moving West."

Dodd, who’s at work on everything from an electronic-arts biennial in Shanghai to an animation festival in Beijing, isn’t just talking about Haier washing machines at Best Buy (NYSE:BBY) or Chinese herbal remedies at Whole Foods (NASDAQ:WFMI). He means culture, too. He points to a contemporary rendition of the ancient tale of The Monkey King, directed by a Chinese theater impresario–and set to a score by Blur frontman Damon Albarn–that will headline the inaugural Manchester International Festival in England this month. And Dodd could have gone on: Not long ago, Cao Qiang, a young Chinese fashion designer, won the grand prize at an international competition–sponsored in part by the lofty French body that designates haute couture. From Germany to Japan, Chinese industrial-design students are also starting to rack up awards. Guest-edited by two Chinese artists, the latest issue of the global-culture quarterly Colors pays homage to the country’s emerging creative gusto. And products by young designers like Lin Jing and Eddie Yip are making the cut at choosy retailers such as Milanese style mecca 10 Corso Como and "urban vinyl" phenomenon Kidrobot in the United States.

On a more monumental scale, three Beijing architects erupted onto the international stage last year when they clinched the competition to design a condo high-rise outside Toronto. Their winning scheme, set to begin construction this year with an estimated $114 million price tag, is a dramatic 56-story tower that spirals and undulates like a giant ergonomic barbell. And the units were such a hit that these young architects–who call their firm MAD Design–have since been asked to build a second tower next to the first, while other commissions have been flooding in from Denmark to Inner Mongolia. China, known as the playground for the world’s most adventurous architects, is now exporting some flash-forward designs of its own.

"The young generation in China is unbelievably strong," says Stefano Boeri, who, as editor of the Italian design bible Domus (he’s now at Abitare), oversaw the launch of the magazine’s Chinese edition last year. Boeri is referring to China’s emerging architects, but his words resonate more broadly: "They still need to metabolize," he continues, "but in a few years, they’ll produce something new. Of this I’m absolutely sure."

Meanwhile, don’t overlook that other Chinese characteristic: determination. "Recently," says Ou, the Get It Louder founder, "there was a series of television documentaries explaining the rise of empires. Everyone here watched it very closely." They were, he says, looking for pointers.

To get a sense of how Chinese creativity might evolve, just look across the East China Sea. "The Chinese see Japan as a role model, because it was able to modernize without losing its visceral culture," says Amy Gendler, who runs the AIGA’s Chinese outpost–the design organization’s only presence outside of the United States. Indeed, those who once dismissed Japan as a backwater of the imagination eventually ate those words as the nation became a global force in fashion, design, architecture, and pop culture–not to mention cars and consumer electronics.

Likewise, "there’s a strong desire in China to become internationally relevant while maintaining a Chineseness," says Gendler, who also teaches graphic design at Beijing’s top-notch Central Academy of Fine Arts. She’s not talking about dragons and phoenixes. She’s talking about people like Li Weiran. A soft-spoken 31-year-old, Li graduated from the prestigious Beijing Film Academy and went on to make TV commercials in China for the likes of Nike, Pepsi (NYSE:PEP), and Google (NASDAQ:GOOG). With a keen cinematic eye and brilliant wit, Li’s ads spoof hackneyed scenes from Chinese life: a generations-old family feud, complete with a flying chicken (don’t ask), that’s finally resolved over a bottle of Master Kong green tea. Or an unwitting utility worker, perched high on a telephone pole, turned into a human basketball hoop by a group of teens slam-dunking his workman’s bag. (It was part of a series for Nike called "Anytime.")

"I like to get my creativity from real life," Li says, sipping a coffee at a trendy bar overlooking Beijing’s Houhai Lake. "Most of my ads are localized, about experiences the Chinese can relate to, while maybe borrowing some Western ideas," he continues. Li started off with a bang when, at just 25, he directed a television commercial for UNICEF, which won China’s first-ever Gold award at advertising’s career-making One Show in New York. "It was an extraordinary ad that I remember well," One Club president Kevin Swanepoel recalls six years later. "As good as any I’ve seen." Apparently, Sony agrees; it just hired Li to help produce some new ads for the domestic markets in China, Japan, and Korea.

In other words, as China’s influence expands, and its young creatives refine their export-grade material, the notion of Chineseness is expanding along with it. After all, you wouldn’t think of MAD’s Toronto towers as being typically Chinese. But "there’s a reason we hid the buildings’ structure," explains firm partner Qun Dang, referring to their torqued, sinuous exteriors. "China didn’t have an industrial revolution like in the West, so the structure isn’t the main concern. Instead, it’s about the beauty of the natural form, a more eastern philosophical or Chinese way of thinking." In light of the current infatuation with expressive architectural gestures–think Frank Gehry or Zaha Hadid–it’s tempting to argue that the world is catching up with China.

Not that China doesn’t have some work to do. Overall, its education system still does little to inspire. And then there’s the weight of government censorship (a heavily redacted Internet, for example), red tape, and all that nagging piracy–though Beijing is working on a national design policy that promises, officially at least, to better protect intellectual property rights while promoting new education initiatives. What’s more, while the country has spectacularly leapfrogged into contemporaneity, the flip side, many Chinese will tell you, is that there’s not much of a pop- or sub-culture foundation to build on.

Even here, however, the vacuum is filling fast. "Street culture is becoming the biggest influence in China," says a hip and prolific Shanghai designe

r who goes by the name Ji Ji. His branding and identity clients already include Nike, L’Oréal, and Shu Uemura, but the 35-year-old also has five stores: four for Shirt Flag, his T-shirt line known for ironic takes on Mao-era graphics, and one for Under Oath, a more architectural and conceptual fashion collection. "Right now, we’re following the Western world, but we don’t want to copy," he says. "I think we’ll have our own street culture soon."

Or consider Da>Space. A year-old gallery and store in a former factory building in Shanghai, it has hosted everything from a life-size, apocalyptic take on an army tank to an extravaganza, called "I, China," that got more than 80 emerging artists and designers to personalize a speciallycommissionedtoyfigure. Da>Space is entirely self-funded–no corporate sponsors allowed–which makes it an anomaly in this cash-hungry milieu. Sponsors tend to want to take over, explains Lin Lin Mai,oneofDa>Space’s four 35-and-under partners, and while her design firm, Jellymon/JMGS, has counted Nike and ad giant Wieden+Kennedy as clients, she and her cohorts want to "go more slowly here," she says. "It takes time to develop a subculture before it gets latched onto the mainstream."

That’s it: time. China just needs time. Yet in a country where everything is happening at warp speed, where neighborhoods and even skylines are transformed overnight, waiting around isn’t an option. And so, from the grassroots to the very top, young Chinese are ramping up. Just think of Jennifer Wen Ma, as she spends her days and nights contemplating how to project an ascendant China at the Olympics next year. "It’s a heavy burden–not only to show the world a new side of China, but the Chinese people are expecting a lot too," she says. "Everyone, it seems, is ready for a renaissance of creativity." They won’t have long to wait.

Aric Chen is a contributing editor for I.D., Surface, and Interior Design magazines and regularly writes for The New York Times, Art + Auction, and other publications.

A dynamic business-savvy generation is poised to redefine product design, architecture, fashion, and entertainment in China. Meet the nine innovators who are building the country’s creative infrastructure–and making the world take notice:

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The founder of adFunture, an edgy vinyl toy line, Eddie Yip is also a partner in Da>Space, a Shanghai gallery that showcases China’s emerging street culture. His designs have made the cut at "urban vinyl" phenomenon Kidrobot in the United States.

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The youngest member of the seven-person committee planning next year’s Olympic opening ceremony, Jennifer Wen Ma, 33, hopes to roll out a whole new look for China at the inauguration of the games. Working under legendary film director Zhang Yimou, she promises a radical departure–and a minimum of ribbon dancing.

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China’s creatives often wear many hats, but Ou Ning, 37, has more than most. He’s a writer, filmmaker, music promoter, and designer–not to mention founder of several magazines. But it is Ou’s roving art, culture, and design biennial, Get It Louder, that has really put him on the hipster map.

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Lin Jing’s live-work loft in Beijing’s 798 gallery district contains everything from curvaceous wooden stools to porcelain flashlight/lamps that would make Claes Oldenburg proud. Lin, 33, studied art in Beijing and Belgium, and her organically shaped teapots have won coveted shelf space at 10 Corso Como, the Milanese fashion emporium.

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Ma Yansong and Qun Dang are two of the three partners of MAD Design, an architectural firm that beat out the international competition to design a condo high-rise outside Toronto. MAD’s 56-story Absolute Tower spirals and undulates like a giant ergonomic barbell.

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Fed up with music in China–he recalls meeting kids who thought hip-hop came from Korea–Gary Wang did something about it: He helped create Lab, a graffiti-splattered hip-hop venue in his native Shanghai. Now, DJs come in from abroad to teach the craft (anyone can use Lab’s equipment for free) and Wang, who hones his skills in Japan’s underground has even taken local turntabilists to compete in London’s DMC World DJ Championships.

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A fixture on the Shanghai design circuit, Ji Ji has done brand identity work for clients such as L’Oreal and Nike–and has opened five stores in Shanghai and Beijing, to sell his own clothing designs.

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After leaving London’s storied Central Saint Martins, fashion designer Qui Hao, 29, took a leap of faith in opening his eponymous Shanghai boutique last October. There, in what was once a tea shop that fronted a pirated-DVD operation, he produces designs that could pass the high-concept test anywhere, including coats that evoke the "wool blankets that all Chinese had growing up."

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China has found its muse in actress Ziyi Zhang. A one-in-a-billion brand, Zhang looks to use that success to drive the already remarkable growth of the national film industry. She consistently ranks at the top of Forbes China’s annual China’s Top Celebrities list; in the 2007 survey, she was 18th in income and fourth in social influence, giving her the top ranking for a woman.

以上文章及图片转自:http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/116/features-the-next-cultural-revolution.html

Asia-Europe Foundation-ASEF's music programme " I'mPULSE2007"

In 2007 I’mPULSE, ASEF’s music programme, will focus on dub music. In partnership with Clandestino Festival, I’mPULSE Clandestino will be held in Gothenburg, Sweden in June 2007, and is calling for participants until the 20th February 2007. The 4th edition of the ASEF flagship music program I’mPULSE, it will bring together up to 20 young artists from Asia and Europe to take part in workshops and seminars on dub music.

I’mPULSE 2007 will be held in Gothenburg, Sweden, on 2-10 June and will have two phases. In the first phase (due to start in May 2007) participants will be getting to know each others productions and skills through a virtual communication platform made up for the program where they will be able to share audio files and documents. During the second phase, the participants will come together for a series of workshops, rehearsals and finally be given opportunities to perform at the 5th Clandestino Festival 7-10 June.

Participants in the I’mPulse 2007 can be either:

  • young composers/producers of dub music in some of its forms,
  • young vocalists including classical singers, poets, MCs and toaster
  • young musicians playing percussion, drums, horns, bass, instruments that are not traditionally used in the genre, etc.

The participants must have professional experience of music production within the dub scene in a broad sense, covering everything from traditional forms of dub to contemporary interpretations such as dub step, experimental and progressive dub.

more info see below: 

http://www.asef.org/index.php?option=com_project&task=view&id=1018

http://www.clandestinofestival.org

 

《三元里》及其它:在D-LAB上的发言

《三元里》及其它:在D-LAB上的发言
[ 2005-12-29 23:46:03 | 作者Author: OUNING ]
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2004年12月24日上午,应侯瀚如的邀请在广东美术馆举办的第二届广州三年展“三角洲实验室”(D-LAB)上介绍自己的工作。以下谈话由馆方整理,出版于《三角洲实验室1》(岭南美术出版社,2005年11月),我在这里作了一些修订:

《三元里》是我对“城中村”这个现象进行研究和记录的一个计划。我们选择了其中很有代表性一个村子,叫三元里,是广州老的白云机场旁边的一个村子,来作为一个样本切片来进行研究的。那么“城中村”的概念是什么样的呢?我要从各个方面来解释一下。像三元里这样一个地方,在80年代还是广州的郊区,也就是广州最早的郊区模式。在80年代它还是一个农村,还有农田,还有村落的形态的东西。当时在80年代中期的时候,广东的改革开放已经到了一定的程度。广州的市区要向外扩张,所以他们就把扩张的方向放在郊区这边。所以政府要征用一些郊区的农田来做都市的发展。这样的话像三元里这样的村子,农民的地就被政府征用了。但是他们居住的宅基地没有征用,保留下来。在十几年前征地的时候,政府保留了宅基地征用了农田,但是没有解决农民的就业问题。这样农民就必须自己解决谋生的问题。慢慢的随着政府的规划逐渐完成,农田上都盖上了高楼大厦,这样周围的高楼大厦就把三元里的宅基地围起来,就形成了所谓的“城中村”。

因为政府没有把他们的户口转成城市户口,他们为了谋生只好在他们的宅基地上盖上高楼出租。为了争取更多的建筑面积可以出租,他们就会盖很多层楼。因为地是有限的,他们只能向空间发展。本来政府的规划两个楼之间的距离应该是五、六米左右,但是农民为了扩大他们的出租面积,盖到二楼的时候房子与房子之间就连到一块了。这样就形成了城中村的一种很特殊的建筑形态。城中村的出租屋经济是非常发达的,因为它的房租非常便宜,这样就吸引了大量从外面来的移民、民工到这里租房子住,所以它的人口构成就变得非常复杂,同时也带来了很多社会问题。比如说有人在这里吸毒、贩毒,还有地下的性工业特别发达,发廊特别多,抢劫、偷窃这些罪案也特别多。

到了九十年代后期,三元里就变成了一个非常可怕的、令政府非常头疼的地方,就出现了一个所谓“城中村”的现象。因为它带来了很多社会治安的问题,很大程度上会影响城市的形象,所以政府花了很大的力气来整治。“城中村”的形成其实还有更多的原因。刚才我们讲的是一个表面上的形成过程,其实它的形成还跟中国的土地制度有很大的关系。因为中国的社会主义革命很大程度上还是由农民来实现的,这样在新中国成立以后,制度的设立上,关于土地就设立了两种制度,一种是公有制,也就是说土地是国有,而为了回报农民在社会主义革命中的付出,又产生了集体所有制这样一种土地制度。也就是说三元里的农民他们有自己的地,不仅有耕地而且有宅基地。这样政府在做投资发展的时候,对国有的土地可以随便规划,但是对集体所有制的土地就必须用补偿的方式来征用。土地对农民来讲是非常重要的,因为没了土地农民是无法生存的。就像现在三元里村的农民,农田被征用了以后,宅基地就必须努力的保存下来,因为他们无以为生。中国土地的这种二元化结构其实是导致城中村现象出现的一个最重要的原因。

同时因为现在“城中村”大多处在市中心,就有一种所谓的影子地价。影子地价就是说这块土地的地理位置比较优越,处在市中心,如果按照经济学的角度来进行最优化的计算,可期待的地价是非常高的。在经济学上,这种地价就叫做影子地价。城中村就是这样一种地区,它的影子地价很高。但是上盖的建筑物的价值又非常低。这样一种现象其实呈现出政府、房地产商和农民三方的利益的争夺的结果。实际上在中国每一个城市的城市化进程中都会碰到三个利益集团的争夺,国家要征收农民的土地,一定要付给农民一定的补偿金。农民觉得他要出让这个土地,就必须跟政府谈判获得一个比较好的价钱,以便让他们以后的生活无忧。因为这一块影子地价比较高,对地产商的吸引力比较大,如果让地产商来发展这块地,他可以改变上盖物的价值,开发出一种新的建筑用来牟利,所以其实在城中村纠结着非常复杂的利益冲突。

现在对城中村的研究不仅是我们来做,还有大量的学者和艺术家来关注。对农村的研究在中国有很长的历史。最早的研究应该是费孝通,他在解放前30年代的时候就已经用社会调查方式,对江苏的一个农村进行了调查,最后他写出了一本书叫《江村经济》。他靠这个书在英国拿到了第一个社会学的学位,这本书还有费孝通对江苏村落的研究建立起一个非常有效的模式,对后来研究中国农村的学者都有一个很大的参考价值。

就在我们去年对三元里这个村子进行拍摄、记录和研究的同时,我们发现中国社会科学院社会研究所所长李培林也在写一本书,这本书因为去年SARS的影响推迟了出版,这本书今年初刚刚出来,叫做《村落的终结——羊城村的故事》,其实它是集中调研了广东30多个城中村,之后对这个数据进行分析所形成的一本著作。所谓“羊城村”是一个很宽泛的概念,其实他是借用了费孝通的乡村研究的那种模式,他用一个抽象的、泛指的概念来指称城中村的一种现象。也就是说“羊城村”就是三元里村、石牌村等等这种村的统称。在这本书中他采访了很多的村民,包括外地来的,在里面租房子住,还有那些开小卖部的人,还有土著居民、村干部等等。他跟我们做这个三元里的研究在很大程度上是非常接近的,只不过我们是用了影像的手段,更多的进行影像的纪录和研究。而且我们也没有采用社会学家那种建立一个模式、提出一个抽象的概念来进行论述,我们直接就是影像的纪录。

这个录像作品给大家呈现的是没有经过我们处理的、非常有现实的影像。不仅在中国有这种城中村的情况,在外国也有很多类似的社区。在外国都市村庄的形态跟中国的差别是比较大的。我最近在看社会学中芝加哥学派的一些书。他们在美国大都市文化之前作了一些研究。比如说对芝加哥和匹兹堡这两个大的工业城市的郊区所形成的这种波兰移民的村落,也就是对所谓郊区的贫民窟的研究。他们的研究对我们的启发也很大。因为在美国像芝加哥、匹兹堡这样大的工业城市,它需要大量的东欧农民的移民来到美国,把他们变成产业工人,这些产业工人他们的生活条件是非常差的,他们只能住在郊区或一个特定的社区里面。比如说在一个特定的社区里面全是波兰来的农民住的地方,或者说另一个社区全是意大利的贫民住的地方。芝加哥学派对贫民窟的研究给了我们很大的参考价值。他们最经典的一本书叫《身处欧美的波兰农民》。这本书非常有趣。他们收集了大量的波兰农民到美国、芝加哥之后跟在波兰的家里人的通信作为他们研究的最重要的证据。这些波兰人的家信是十分有意思的,他讲了他们移民到美国之后跟这边文化的冲突,又慢慢的怎样被同化了。因为这是跨地域的通信,所以令波兰原来的这种社会结构跟芝加哥、匹兹堡这样的大工业城市的社会结构形成一个有趣的对比。外国的这些社会学的研究对我们接下来做一些像三元里计划一样的,中国城中村的延伸计划,非常有参考价值。

接下来我们会把研究的重点放在北京。我们今年获得了德国联邦文化基金会的资助,去参加他们的一个研究项目,叫《北京现场》,他的副标题叫《高速发展的城市化文化》。这样一个研究的课题,是由德国七个艺术家和小组和三个中国的艺术家和小组来共同研究。我们报的研究课题是北京的城中村。随着2008年北京要举办奥运会,北京市政府对于北京120多个城中村也很感头疼。因为北京的城中村也像广州一样成为城市的突出的问题,脏、乱、差影响城市的形象,北京市政府下了很大的功夫对这些城中村进行改造。在这样一种情况下,我们把对三元里的研究方法挪移到北京,对北京的城中村进行一个类似的研究。我们选定的那个村子叫树村,在海淀区的一个村子。那么这个村子跟广州的三元里又有什么不一样呢?现在这个村子已经通过政府的协调交给一个房地产公司进行开发。那么在这之前,在90年代中期树村是中国摇滚乐队的聚居点。这个村里住了两百来个成名或者没成名的摇滚乐队。这个很有意思,也是它与广州不一样的地方。广州的城中村往往会发展成为犯罪的天堂,但是在北京却成为一个艺术家聚居的地方,成为一种带有乌托邦性质的、准共产主义的一种社区。这跟北京是以政治为中心的社会性质有很大的关系。我们也想把树村摇滚乐队聚居的这样一种研究延伸到原来的圆明园村、北京东村,这样一种艺术家聚居社区的研究。我们选择的这种研究不像今天的798工厂,充满了一种时尚化,带有商业色彩的社区。我们研究的树村、圆明园村、北京东村都是一些贫困的村落。我们想研究探讨一下同样一种形式的“城中村”,它在北京的流变、跟广州的区别在哪里。我们对树村的拍摄和研究会在明年七月份开始,之前我们要做大量的资料收集工作。(后来我们经过调研后把树村计划改为大栅栏计划。作者注)

在做完北京“城中村”的研究之后我们还想做上海。它有另外一种形态的村落。上海有一个村落叫曹阳新村,是中国在五十年代的时候建立的一个工人新村。就像今天的样板房那样,国家圈定一块地,从政府的角度去盖起标准化的住宅楼给50 年代的那些劳模,让他们从破旧的房子里搬进去。新中国成立以后它就成为一个样板,这个地方接待过超过十几万从外国和国内各个地方来参观的人,就变成一个旅游胜地一样的地方。这个地方也很有意思,它折射出一个社区怎样变成国家宣传机器的一部分。同时他还跟五、六十年代,明显带有社会主义特点的都市规划的一些形态。北京和上海的计划实际上就是2003年三元里计划的一个延伸。

刚才主要是讲到对题材的选择,接下来我想讲一讲我们选定题材以后用一种什么样的手段去做研究。影像是我们非常非常重要的手段。我们做的《三元里》其实是一个集体的作品,我们调动了大概有十几个人。每个星期他们都自带摄影机,去三元里和广州各个角落去拍摄。每个星期他们会去拍三四天,到周末把拍摄的素材拿回来我们开会一起研究,拍摄的素材哪些是可用的哪些是应该改进的,然后设定下一周的拍摄计划。

在社会学研究中,中国的社会学家似乎还没有意识到影像的威力。比如说我看李培林的这本写羊城村的书,他有一半的内容是对村民、外来者采访的笔录。我们看这个书主要是从文字这种媒体去看的,还要一定程度上借助我们的想象力,才能接触到城中村的现实,文字没有影像来的直接。像我们拍的这个片子,就可以直接感受到我们拍的城中村的建筑风格还有人的面貌,直接带来一种视觉上的冲击感,这种的力量肯定要比文字强大。接下来我们的计划还想发展出一种所谓社区影像的这样一种方法。现在很多纪录片都是个人或者导演或者纪录片艺术家用个人的方式去拍摄的,这样被拍摄的对象是非常被动的,其实正统的纪录片的拍摄都存在一个对被拍摄者剥削的问题。有些纪录片的导演强调他关注的是边缘社群、低下层的人的生活,实际上他们拍了以后就去各个电影节参展,去参加各个艺术展览,对所拍对象的生活处境一点帮助都没有。这个就是影像制作者对被拍摄者的剥削。

我们想发展的社区影像是什么样的呢?我们想下一步把摄影机交给我们的被拍摄对象,让他们自己记录自己的生活。让他们自己用摄影机和摄像机去记录他们平时的生活,去表达他们的政治诉求、经济诉求和文化上的诉求,也就是说我们是平等的,他们也是作品的导演,我们也是,是一种平等的关系,而不是拍与被拍的关系。社区影像在中国还处于起步阶段。我觉得做得比较好的是云之南纪录片节的郭净博士,他是最早采用这种方法去做村落研究的。他今年拿到福特基金会的赞助,在云南发展社区影像。我们觉得这种方法是非常有效的。在接下来北京、上海的项目中,我们都想使用这种社区影像的方法。社区影像和芝加哥学派中收集农民家书这样一种材料,是一种脉络上传承的东西。所以我们希望我们的拍摄是对被拍摄对象的各种诉求的一种非常有效的表达,而不仅仅是一个艺术作品。它应是一个有社会参与,有社会见证,跟社区的历史、政治、经济的发展有很密切关系的媒介。