免费αv片在线观看,国产欧洲在线观看,日本国产在线专区,十八禁拍拍拍网站

--- SEARCH ---
WEATHER
CHINA
INTERNATIONAL
BUSINESS
CULTURE
GOVERNMENT
SCI-TECH
ENVIRONMENT
SPORTS
LIFE
PEOPLE
TRAVEL
WEEKLY REVIEW
Chinese Women
Film in China
War on Poverty
Learning Chinese
Learn to Cook Chinese Dishes
Exchange Rates
Hotel Service
China Calendar


Hot Links
China Development Gateway
Chinese Embassies
China Knowledge

Rock'n'roll Pioneers Eye Second Coming

It is better to burn out than to fade away.

So sang Canadian Neil Young in his 1979 hit "My, My, Hey Hey."

In China, rock'n'roll, the voice of youth in the 1980s and early 1990s, is losing its once-dominant position to hip-hop, R&B and Korean ballads.

Diehard fans in the country are entering their 40s, and because the younger generation have little interest in the genre, the superstars of a decade ago have almost lost their glamour.

As these older fans celebrate the 20th anniversary of the public debut of rock music on the Chinese mainland, they not only enjoy looking back, but also expect a renaissance.

"If we are given another 20 years," Cui Jian, the "godfather" of Chinese rock, told China Daily, "we will work harder to create an even more brilliant history of Chinese rock, and we will never lose ourselves in decadence and wavering."

Cui and his rock comrades are organizing a series of events to celebrate the anniversary, including performances at a few clubs in Beijing such as the pioneering Get Lucky Bar in the city's emerging nightspot Nuren Jie (Lady Street).

They will also stage a three-day party starting June 16 in Shenyang, capital of Northeast China's Liaoning Province. Almost all the performers who have etched their names on the development of Chinese rock will appear, and a dozen new-generation bands featuring much younger people will play their latest songs.

Some fans say they expect the party to be another "Woodstock."

The legendary Woodstock Music and Art Fair in August 1969 drew more than 450,000 people to a muddy pasture in the northern part of New York City, providing many people with a once-in-a-lifetime cultural experience.

But others doubt the potential of the Shenyang event. In their eyes, rock singers were able to make an impact a decade ago thanks to the uniqueness of the time they were in. But, the critics say, that time is long past.

Rock's emergence

It was a time with no Sanlitun, no Houhai bar area, and virtually no nightlife whatsoever. China had just opened its doors to the rest of the world, and the people were getting their first taste of outside cultural influences, finding some to be refreshing and others unacceptable.

"In the early and mid-'80s, young people who would go to nightclubs today met frequently in the open air at a few places in Beijing, preferably at the small square at Xizhimen on the western Second Ring Road," recalled Li Song, a freelance writer and diehard rock fan in his late 30s.

These youngsters could be identified by the guitars they were holding and the green army suits they were wearing. In local slang they called their meetings "cha qin," meaning "competing in guitar playing."

The songs they played were mainly the soft, sweet, polished love songs of Deng Lijun (Teresa Teng) from Taiwan. She made an enormous impact in the early '80s as one of the first singers from outside the mainland to become popular.

In the meantime, expatriates, especially an increasing number of foreign students who were studying Chinese in Beijing, made an impact on the cultural scene through their contacts with their Chinese contemporaries, who borrowed tapes of the Beatles, the Eagles, the Beach Boys, and Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel amongst others.

The foreigners also held parties at the International Club and at Maxim's de Paris, a major French restaurant in the city. Against this background, it was not surprising that the first Chinese rock bands were supposedly established around 1981 at the Beijing Language Institute, which is the Beijing Language and Culture University today. A few other rock bands had cropped up by 1985, attracting both foreigners and Chinese students.

But the event that was widely recognized as the start of Chinese rock didn't happen until May 1986, when Cui Jian walked onto the stage at the Workers' Stadium in Beijing. Wearing a green army suit and playing a guitar, Cui sang "I Have Nothing" ("Yi Wu Suo You") for the audience and TV cameras broadcasting the concert. It was one of about a dozen songs that were performed.

"I was a high school student when I saw the show on TV," said Wang Feng, one of the most important rock singers of the 1990s. "I was stunned. I had no idea a song could be sung like that! That was the turning point of my life."

Cui, a trumpet player and amateur singer at a local State-sponsored theatrical troupe, rose to fame, closely followed by such rock bands as the Black Panthers (Hei Bao), Breathing (Hu Xi), Cobra (Yan Jing She), and Tang Dynasty (Tang Chao).

Their music represented a strong, provocative image of the Chinese mainland and showed a strong Western influence. Their lyrics were socially critical, said Luo Luo, a veteran music critic and producer from the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region.

It was not until 1987 that these rockers began to use the phrase "yao gun," a literal translation of rock and roll.

In the eyes of veteran rock fan Li Song, the golden age of Chinese rock started with the release of Cui's first album, "Rock on the Road of the New Long March" and his famous concert of the same name at the theatre of the Beijing Exhibition Hall in 1989.

"I saw the concert on tape," Li said. People were allowed to carry video recorders into the theatre at that time, and there were thousands and thousands of tapes of that concert circulating among young people in Beijing.

"The first tapes were in colour, but they had been copied so many times that the ones my friends and I got had all turned into black and white."

It was one of the only two times in his life that Li, a man with a tough look, admits that he cried while listening to music. The other time was when he heard Bruce Springsteen's "Born in the USA."

On into the '90s

Like many other rebellious young people of his time, Li identified himself as a rock fan. When he entered college to study astronomy in 1990 in Beijing, he spent a lot of time looking for tapes of Western rock music, and going to rock concerts. Many of the domestic bands were still semi-underground, and only on university campuses.

"I copied a friend's tape of U2, the album was 'Joshua Tree,'" he said. "It was just the kind of music I wanted to make."

He was one of the first young men to wear long hair - then the symbol of rebellious youth.

There were hundreds of rock bands in Beijing at the turn of the '90s, and about 50 of them produced well-written songs, Li said.

It was the prime time of rock. In the early 1990s, studios and publishers in China's big cities started to sign bands.

Music producers outside the mainland also became interested in Chinese rock bands. EMI signed Cui Jian, and the mainland Division of the Taiwan record company Rock Records, named Magic Stone Culture, signed Dou Wei, the former Black Panthers' lead singer, as well as He Yong and Zhang Chu. The three became known as "Mo Yan San Jie," or "the Three Talents of the Magic Stone."

After graduating in 1994, Li joined an information technology company in Zhongguancun in Beijing, but quickly quit the job as he was too busy writing music reviews.

But from around 1996, young people began to lose their interest in rock rapidly. China was opening more to the rest of the world, and its people were having more and more choice in the genres of music they could listen to.

"It is good that people have a variety of choices," Cui Jian said. "At any period of time, it is always one genre of music that has a dominance over others in the market, and rock is certainly not the one now.

"But who cares? A real artist will never take potential buyers into consideration when he is creating something. As rockers, we have devoted our lives to music."

Former rock stars were often reported to have difficulty in making both ends meet. Dou Wei, for instance, was detained by police last month because he allegedly tried to attack a reporter who he said wrote about his financial situation and divorce in a malicious way.

Fewer and fewer magazines are writing about rock, as well. Li said he was going through the toughest stage as a freelance writer.

Most "rebellious youths" of Li's era are more fortunate. Ding Lin, working as a senior engineer at one multinational IT company in Beijing, has recently bought a second apartment in the central business district. He and his wife, who is also a computer engineer, are planning to start a family.

But when he drives his Bora, a popular Volkswagen car, he usually plays MP3 recordings of old rock songs such as "I Have Nothing."

"The fans have got old as well as the rockers," Li said, "but they never abandoned the music."

Cui Jian said he has great expectations for the dozens of new rock bands, some members of which are no more than 20 years old.

These bands, represented by the Second-Hand Rose, perform mainly in nightclubs. They are growing away from Western rock and roll's influence and developing their own styles, Cui said.

"Believe me, rock will never die," godfather Cui said. "It will come back some day because it is the most tolerant music."

(China Daily June 8, 2006)

**段落連接xy不支持link_para**

The Rolling Stones to Make China Debut in April
Long-awaited Debut
Music Festival Adds Spice to Holiday
Rock Singer Storms Newspaper Office
人民日報
中央電視臺
中國新聞社
中國林業科研網
中國林業科學研究院
林業局科技司
中國環境保護網
中國生態研究網
中國商務
環境與發展信息網
外交部
中國綠色時報
荒漠化信息網
中國留學信息網
聯合國防治荒漠化公約秘書處
國家留學基金委員會
聯合國氣候變化框架協定
公安部
中國駐美大使館教育處
生物多樣性協定
中國社會科學院
北京大學
國務院發展研究中心
國土資源部
中國人民銀行
國家外匯管理局
農業部
財政部
勞動和社會保障部
國家發展計劃委員會
教育部
國家教育部考試中心
中國教育信息網
中國基礎教育網
中國農業銀行
國家經濟貿易委員會
信息產業部
中國通信信息網
中國電子商務協會
國家旅游局
中國科學院
文化部
清華大學
對外經濟貿易合作部
中國人民大學
外交部
中國經濟學科研教育網
科學技術部
中國國際航空公司
國防科學技術工業委員會
中國民用航空總局
龍脈
中國外資網
中國財經信息網
北京留學網
廈門大學
全國政協辦公廳
中國共青團
廣東省人民政府
中國上海
天津信息網
首都之窗
中關村
交通部
國家計劃生育委員會
衛生部
水利部
交通部
鐵道部
建設部
國家民族事務委員會
中華全國工商業聯合會
中華工商網
中國電力商務網
最高人民檢察院
國家文物局
國家廣播電影電視總局
中國外資信息網
國家藥品監督管理局
國家知識產權局
民政部
中國科學院
湖北大學
中國旅游綜合信息網
中國外資網
中國鄉鎮企業信息網
中國通信信息網
國家圖書館
海關總署
國家統計局
重慶市政府
遼寧省政府
海南省政府
福建省政府上網工程
浙江省人民政府
江蘇省政府上網工程
國家體育總局
中國四川
西安市人民政府
外交部駐港特派員公署
中國科學技術協會
珠海信息網
云南新聞網
吉林省外資信息網
一汽集團公司
廣西人民政府公眾信息網
廣西外商投資促進委員會辦公室
安徽經貿信息網
安徽省對外經濟貿易委員會
甘肅省人民政府
中國工商銀行
吉林大學
新疆信息化工作領導黨小組辦公室
烏魯木齊之窗
蘭州大學
中國東方航空公司
敦煌研究院
吉林省經濟信息網
武漢大學
內蒙古自治區計劃委員會
福建省人民政府網
青海省政府
青海經濟信息網
中國石油天然氣集團總公司
杭州市人民政府信息網
浙江大學
北京2008年奧運會申辦委員會
廈門市人民政府
溫州市人民政府
寧波市人民政府
福建外資信息網
福建省漳州市政府
廣東省中山市信息網
廣東經貿信息網
廣東省發展計劃委員會
青島市政府
暨南大學
北京市公安局
中國駐德國大使館
重慶市政府公共信息網
汕頭市人民政府信息網
汕頭經貿信息網
南京市人民政府
中國蘇州
中國昆山
吳江市人民政府
無錫市人民政府
華僑大學
中國留學人才信息網
桂林市人民政府
桂林熱線
中國駐印度尼西亞大使館
中國駐美國大使館
福州市人民政府
中華全國總工會
天津大學
全國婦聯
中國國際圖書貿易總公司
濟南市政府信息公眾網
中國廣州
廣州市人民政府信息網
廣州市人民政府公眾信息網
常州市外經貿委
中國民營企業網
中國民營企業網
海口市人民政府
中國廣西對外廣播電臺
海南省人民政府
海南省人民政府
新華書店
中國駐日本使館
中國常駐聯合國代表團
中國駐紐約總領事館
深圳信息網
中國大連
大連信息網
中國旅行社總社
網上山東
中國證券監督管理委員會
中國銀行
中國科學技術大學
福建師范大學
The People's Bank of China
中關村科技園區海淀園管理委員會
廣東公安網
中國青少年發展基金會
中國駐法國使館
網上浦東
復旦大學
中華全國青年聯合會
中國駐悉尼總領館
中國泉州
西北工業大學
上海市徐匯區人民政府
中國駐荷蘭大使館
中國太倉
中國國際貿易促進委員會
全國工商聯信息網
蕪湖市人民政府
State Tobacco Monopoly Adminsitration
揭陽信息網
中國駐舊金山總領事館
華中科技大學
湖北省人民政府
武漢對外經濟貿易信息網
江門政府之窗
中國駐澳大利亞使館
中國駐休斯敦總領事館
中國太倉
東南大學
煙臺經濟技術開發區
煙臺留學人員創業園區
中國駐加拿大使館
中國駐南非大使館
中國駐瑞典大使館
中國駐韓國大使館
國家出入境檢驗檢疫局
南開大學
中國電信集團公司
國家知識產權局
北京工業大學
黑龍江省人民政府
哈爾濱市人民政府
西藏自治區旅游局
抗美援朝紀念館
中國石油化工股份有限公司
泉州市人民政府
沈陽市人民政府
武漢市人民政府
中國婦幼網
中華婦幼網
中國社會科學院人口研究所
中國社會科學院
自然之友
中國電力新聞網
明鏡
國家稅務總局
APEC秘書處
APEC工商咨詢理事會
APEC中國企業聯席會議
中國APEC
外交部
外經貿部
國家經貿委
中國北京
中國上海
中國煙臺
中國大連
中國蘇州
中國天津
中國深圳
西藏
中國西藏
海峽兩岸
中國西藏雜志
西藏旅游
新華網
人民網
中國日報網
中國國際臺網
央視國際
中青網
中國臺灣
北京周報
今日中國
人民畫報
人民中國
中國報道
中國與非洲
中國譯協
其它網站
中華全國歸國華僑聯合會
青島臺辦
北京市臺辦
中國和平統一促進會
中華全國臺灣同胞聯誼會
山東與臺灣
臺灣民主自治同盟
中國臺灣
國務院新聞辦記者招待會網上直播
IAAF 國際業余田徑聯合會
FIBA 國際籃球聯合會
FIFA 國際足球聯合會
FIG 國際體操聯合會
FIE 擊劍聯合會
IJF 國際柔道聯合會
FINA 國際游泳聯合會
ITF 國際網球聯合會
ITTF 國際乒乓球聯合會
FIVB 國際排球聯合會
大運會官方網站
國際大學生體育聯合會
中國銀行
中國保險網
中國人民銀行
中國證券報
中國證券網
國家開發銀行
中國進出口銀行
天津
北京
河北
山西
遼寧
黑龍江
江蘇
浙江
安徽
福建
山東
河南
湖北
湖南
廣東
廣西
海南
重慶
四川
貴州
云南
甘肅
青海
上海
天津
山西
中國期貨網
中國工商銀行
中國建設銀行
中國農業銀行
中國交通銀行
China's UN Mission
China's UN Mission
China University of Geosciences
Tibet Information Network.
Chinese Literature
The Network of Foundations and Nonprofit Organizations
Ministry of Finance
State Intellectual Property Office
國際奧委會
國家計生委
國際足聯
國際籃聯
國際排聯
國際乒聯
國際羽聯
歐洲足聯
NBA官方網站
中國足協
北京奧申委
國家林業局
綠色學校網
中國環境報
中國環境保護網
中國國際環保網
自然之友
中國綠色時報
荒漠化信息網
中國生態研究網
中國林業科研網
國家衛生部
中國人口信息網
中國婦女網
中國扶貧基金會
人口世界
中國婦女發展基金會
中國女性網盟
中國婦女研究
中國扶貧信息網
女性健康之友
中華女性
上海女性
中華全國婦女聯合會
中華婦幼網
女性天地
中國農業信息網
國家藥品監管局
國家中醫藥管理局
中國醫藥信息網
家庭醫生
national institute of mental health 
中國醫藥大聯網
人民健康網
Civil Aviation Administration of China
中國民族證券網
中華美食網
國際滑雪產業合作論壇
中國旅游網
聯合國工發組織
瑞典滑雪協會
亞布力滑雪中心
龍珠二龍山滑雪場
黑龍江旅游網
中國龍游網
上交所
深交所
香港交易所
中華人民共和國財政部
中國保險監督管理委員會
香港交易所
紐約證券交易所
中國酒店網
四川旅游網
桂林旅游網
云南旅游網
深圳旅游網
廣東旅游網
北京旅游網
中國旅游報
國家旅游局
國家旅游局
中華人民共和國教育部
中華人民共和國人事部
北京市人事考試網
中國留學網
教育部考試中心
北京市教委
中國教育和科研計算機網
浙江大學圓綠園
中國發展門戶網
新浪網
學子網校
E民醫藥網
無憂雅思網
中華學習網
新加坡中國學生網
吉隆欣足彩預測
終身教育網
終身教育網
21CN體育
婦女與環境
網上北語
國務院臺灣事務辦公室
中華人民共和國商務部
中華人民共和國國家發展和改革委員會
中國人才市場
環球企業家
中法文化年網站
內地與香港關于建立更緊密經貿關系的安排
中國國際教育網
37℃醫學網
科技之光
中國銀行業監督管理委員會
中國生殖健康網
《家庭醫藥》雜志
國際醫療在線
康易健康醫學醫藥
國際醫療在線
千龍健康
東方健康
艾滋病信息資源中心
違法和不良信息舉報中心
人民網健康
中共中央對外聯絡部
中華人民共和國公安部
中國環境新聞網
世界客屬第19屆懇親大會
人才市場公共信息網
中國國家人才網
公車改革
中國金融網
公車改革
公車改革
新華美通
Print This Page
|
" class="tt" target="_blank">Email This Page
About Us SiteMap Feedback
Copyright ? China Internet Information Center. All Rights Reserved
E-mail: webmaster@china.org.cn Tel: 86-10-88828000
" target="_blank">