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Feature image of B-side China Podcast: Underground Music and Social Ritual

B-side China Podcast: Underground Music and Social Ritual

2 mins read

2 mins read

Feature image of B-side China Podcast: Underground Music and Social Ritual

B-Side China is a bi-weekly podcast monitoring the flip side of cultural stories in the PRC, initiated by Josh Feola for RADII

Beijing is a city of both “radical possibility” and “radical uncertainty,” in the words of one of today’s guests. This year especially, Beijing’s top-level ideological tightening has been felt even in areas of underground culture — art and music, especially — that are used to developing in a gray area of benign neglect.

Today I’m joined by Krish Raghav, an organizer of the annual Concrete & Grass music festival, and Becky Davis, a Beijing-based reporter for French paper AFP who has recently covered Jinan black metal band Zuriaake (pictured above). Rebecca has also been on the front lines of some of Beijing’s recent turbulence, reporting on the RYB Kindergarten scandal and migrant evictions, among other sobering topics.

Public

David Boring

On the podcast, we discuss to what extent music can be used as a form of social activism in greater China, including a special mention of the exemplary, unnerving output of Hong Kong’s David Boring, a band that stuck out to all three of us this year.

We also talk about the nature of the newswire business as it relates to cultural reporting on China, what Black Metal iconography has in common with ancient Chinese aesthetics, and how Beijing’s “radically uncertain” urban schemes are shaping creative production today.

Opening/closing track: David Boring – “Machine#1”

Find more episodes of B-Side China here, more RADII podcasts here, and a list of artists mentioned below the Soundcloud embed (VPN on):

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Feature image of B-side China Podcast: Underground Music and Social Ritual

B-side China Podcast: Underground Music and Social Ritual

2 mins read

B-Side China is a bi-weekly podcast monitoring the flip side of cultural stories in the PRC, initiated by Josh Feola for RADII

Beijing is a city of both “radical possibility” and “radical uncertainty,” in the words of one of today’s guests. This year especially, Beijing’s top-level ideological tightening has been felt even in areas of underground culture — art and music, especially — that are used to developing in a gray area of benign neglect.

Today I’m joined by Krish Raghav, an organizer of the annual Concrete & Grass music festival, and Becky Davis, a Beijing-based reporter for French paper AFP who has recently covered Jinan black metal band Zuriaake (pictured above). Rebecca has also been on the front lines of some of Beijing’s recent turbulence, reporting on the RYB Kindergarten scandal and migrant evictions, among other sobering topics.

Public

David Boring

On the podcast, we discuss to what extent music can be used as a form of social activism in greater China, including a special mention of the exemplary, unnerving output of Hong Kong’s David Boring, a band that stuck out to all three of us this year.

We also talk about the nature of the newswire business as it relates to cultural reporting on China, what Black Metal iconography has in common with ancient Chinese aesthetics, and how Beijing’s “radically uncertain” urban schemes are shaping creative production today.

Opening/closing track: David Boring – “Machine#1”

Find more episodes of B-Side China here, more RADII podcasts here, and a list of artists mentioned below the Soundcloud embed (VPN on):

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

NEWSLETTER

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Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

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Feature image of B-side China Podcast: Underground Music and Social Ritual

B-side China Podcast: Underground Music and Social Ritual

2 mins read

2 mins read

Feature image of B-side China Podcast: Underground Music and Social Ritual

B-Side China is a bi-weekly podcast monitoring the flip side of cultural stories in the PRC, initiated by Josh Feola for RADII

Beijing is a city of both “radical possibility” and “radical uncertainty,” in the words of one of today’s guests. This year especially, Beijing’s top-level ideological tightening has been felt even in areas of underground culture — art and music, especially — that are used to developing in a gray area of benign neglect.

Today I’m joined by Krish Raghav, an organizer of the annual Concrete & Grass music festival, and Becky Davis, a Beijing-based reporter for French paper AFP who has recently covered Jinan black metal band Zuriaake (pictured above). Rebecca has also been on the front lines of some of Beijing’s recent turbulence, reporting on the RYB Kindergarten scandal and migrant evictions, among other sobering topics.

Public

David Boring

On the podcast, we discuss to what extent music can be used as a form of social activism in greater China, including a special mention of the exemplary, unnerving output of Hong Kong’s David Boring, a band that stuck out to all three of us this year.

We also talk about the nature of the newswire business as it relates to cultural reporting on China, what Black Metal iconography has in common with ancient Chinese aesthetics, and how Beijing’s “radically uncertain” urban schemes are shaping creative production today.

Opening/closing track: David Boring – “Machine#1”

Find more episodes of B-Side China here, more RADII podcasts here, and a list of artists mentioned below the Soundcloud embed (VPN on):

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

RADII NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox

Feature image of B-side China Podcast: Underground Music and Social Ritual

B-side China Podcast: Underground Music and Social Ritual

2 mins read

B-Side China is a bi-weekly podcast monitoring the flip side of cultural stories in the PRC, initiated by Josh Feola for RADII

Beijing is a city of both “radical possibility” and “radical uncertainty,” in the words of one of today’s guests. This year especially, Beijing’s top-level ideological tightening has been felt even in areas of underground culture — art and music, especially — that are used to developing in a gray area of benign neglect.

Today I’m joined by Krish Raghav, an organizer of the annual Concrete & Grass music festival, and Becky Davis, a Beijing-based reporter for French paper AFP who has recently covered Jinan black metal band Zuriaake (pictured above). Rebecca has also been on the front lines of some of Beijing’s recent turbulence, reporting on the RYB Kindergarten scandal and migrant evictions, among other sobering topics.

Public

David Boring

On the podcast, we discuss to what extent music can be used as a form of social activism in greater China, including a special mention of the exemplary, unnerving output of Hong Kong’s David Boring, a band that stuck out to all three of us this year.

We also talk about the nature of the newswire business as it relates to cultural reporting on China, what Black Metal iconography has in common with ancient Chinese aesthetics, and how Beijing’s “radically uncertain” urban schemes are shaping creative production today.

Opening/closing track: David Boring – “Machine#1”

Find more episodes of B-Side China here, more RADII podcasts here, and a list of artists mentioned below the Soundcloud embed (VPN on):

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

RADII NEWSLETTER

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Fascinating stories to send your spirits high

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Titillate your taste buds with coverage of the best food and drink trends from China and beyond

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An insider’s look at the intersection of fashion, art, and design

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Unpacking Chinese youth culture through coverage of nightlife, film, sports, celebrities, and the hottest new music

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