Singing the Beijing Blues

Updated: 2011-07-28 14:01

By Mark Huges (chinadaily.com.cn)

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A Beijing bar is hosting a three-day Blues festival starting Friday night featuring a dozen bands and soloists from around the world.

Cafe CD Blues, on the Third Ring Road near the Agricultural Exhibition Center, and at its previous location a few blocks further south, has been home to the city's alternative music scene since the 1980s.

It has been owned for nearly two years year by veteran R&B singer and bass player "Big" John Zhang Ling.

Playing tonight from 7pm are Chinese band Little Inn, the USA's Peter Muchinson Band, Bobo Stump from Japan, Matt Cooper (featuring Swiss Werner Fischer on guitar) and Defy, a Chinese rockabilly group. The night finishes at 1 am.

Singing the Beijing Blues

On Saturday, Joseph J. Johanna from New Zealand will perform folk blues from 3:30 pm, followed by Chinese band Out of Control, then Fernando Fidanza, the Peter Muchinson band again, Zhang Di and Lucy in an East meets West performance, and then the Big John Blues Band led by the bar's owner. The evening will finish with a Blues jamming session from about 11:15 pm.

Fernando Fidanza will kick things off from 2:30 pm on Sunday with his Italian Blues. He'll be followed with a harp clinic and harmonica competition until 5 pm. Starting at 4:30 pm outside will be another set by Joseph J. Johanna, then Hong Kong's Chit Chat band, Hoochie Coochie Gentlemen, Bobo Stump and finally, The Chinese Hell Cats from 10:30 pm.

The cost of admission is 150 yuan, including a free drink, for each day or 400 yuan, including a free drink every day, for all three days.

Singing the Beijing Blues

Singing the Beijing Blues

Beijing will have seen nothing like it," said one of the event's promoters, Beijing-based US businessman Craig Quick.

"This is a brilliant line-up of extremely talented musicians who know and love the Blues inside out. It's going to be a tremendous occasion."

In the early 1980s, as bassist for Chinese rock legend Cui Jian, Zhang Lin developed a deep understanding of the development of modern music in China when Western music was considered "capitalist". He used to listen to Beatles tracks smuggled in from the US.

Zhang studied bass in Australia and returned to China to collaborate with some of the top blues and jazz artists in the country, creating in 1995 China's first jazz fusion band, Tien Square. In 1996, he joined his old band mate, Cui, and International Monetary Fund Vice-President John Anderson to form the first blues band in China, The Rhythm Dogs. He released his first solo album, Nu Ren De Ge (A Woman's Song), in 2008, and also runs a musician booking agency.

Many of the world's jazz greats have visited or performed at the CD Blues Cafe and Bar, including Wynton Masalis, Kenny Garrett and Herbie Hancock's band.

Blues evolved from the unaccompanied vocal music and oral traditions of slaves imported from West Africa and rural blacks into a wide variety of styles and subgenres, with regional variations across the United States. Blues can be seen as a musical style based on both European harmonic structure and the African call-and-response tradition, transformed into an interplay of voice and guitar.

The musical forms and styles that are now considered the "Blues" as well as modern "country music" arose in the same regions during the 19th century in the southern United States. Recorded blues and country can be found from as far back as the 1920s.

Further details of this weekend's event can be found at www.cdbluescafe.cn/event_bluesfest.html.