Club with a mission (Beijing Weekend) Updated: 2006-05-26 09:00 The headline act, Hang on the Box, is on, but looking at the crowd you
could never tell. Sparsely populated with a mix of foreign and Chinese
customers, people at the back chat as the band's friends, as is so often the
case at such venues, form a line of solidarity at the front and whoop and cheer
no matter what garbage flies out the amps.
D-22 is the capital's newest live music venue and bets are still being taken
as to whether it will last longer than the Hawaiian theme bar that used to
reside at the same address. The setup is in place that's for sure, with a
gallery viewing area, musicians' room, lounge area and of course the stage. With
its dark walls and slightly dingy atmosphere, there's a touch, just a touch, of
the old Marquee in London.
However, Beijing lacks the originality, talent and crowds for D-22 to emulate
even a smidgen of the legendary London club's success. Despite being
strategically placed in the university area of Wudaokou, Hang on the Box, one of
Beijing's more well known acts, failed to pull them in on a Friday night, with
the entry fee of 30 yuan probably proving prohibitive for many of the students
in the area.
If the owners, Charles and Mike, want to get the place jumping, then perhaps
a favourable pricing policy for indigenous students might be the answer. But who
knows, perhaps the students of Wudaokou are past saving as they shoot up lethal
doses of bump and grind served up by the R&B men at Propaganda et al. D-22's
mission of bringing real music to the people is indeed a noble one, but it's
location might just well be the death of it. I hope it isn't.
Location: 13 Chengfu Lu, Wudaokou, (between Wudakou subway and Peking
University), Tel: 010-62653177
|