Postiljonen’s Ethereal Dream Pop Magic Live Again

Scandinavian dream pop trio Postiljonen – Norwegian singer Mia Bøe  and two Swedish dudes Daniel Sjörs and Joel Nyström Holm – return to Hong Kong for a gig at MOM Livehouse on 21 November 2018.

Since 2011 the trio’s ethereal vocals interwoven with ambient and dreamy melodies have entranced fans across the globe and seen the release of two albums Skyler and Reverie. Ahead of their upcoming show bc spoke to Postiljonen about life as musicians.

https://youtu.be/DBCOPwDGrj8

In today’s era of instant gratification how does it feel as a band to have been around for almost a decade? What has kept you together?
It feels like a natural part of our lives now, just something that’s there and always will be. I think maybe we’re still a band cause were just such good friends privately, it doesn’t really feel like it’s a ”career”.

How do you think your music has changed over time? Has it been an evolving process or have you made deliberate choices in music style/ direction?
Not sure actually. You grow as a person and I think the music influences and inspirations grows with you.

Growing up who were the artists you listened to, were inspired by and why? Who do you listen to now?
Mia listens to alot of folkie stuff, like Cat Power and Jeff Buckley. Joel’s into hip hop and Daniel’s into a lot of 90’s shoe-gaze stuff like Cocteau Twins and Galaxie 500 etc. Maybe the combinations of them makes our sound.

How does it feel to be a band that influences and inspires other musicians
It’s only fun! You get proud.

Of the many songs you’ve written do each of you have a favourite and why?
It’s always changing I guess, but I think we’re very proud of All That We Had Is Lost. Or The Open Road.

As a band which song would you most like to cover?
Hm don’t know. Maybe Rocket Man by Elton John could be fun to cover.

Do you find writing new songs a very organic process with the music and lyrics coming together smoothly or do you find one easier than the other?
It’s always a non linear process when making a song. The lyrics, music and especially production always comes hand in hand. The production and soundscape is such an important part of our songs.

Have you found the creative process easier or harder over the years?
It’s always changing, inspiration comes and goes. I think many artists can agree on that.

When you write songs are they written and structured to be open for interpretation live or do you think fans want to hear it as it’s recorded?
It depends on what kind of show we’re doing. Sometimes we strip them down to the core and just focus on the melody and lyrics, but often we’d like to keep the production and sound when doing a live show.

After so many live shows how do you keep that raw honesty and intensity that make your gigs an amazing experience for the audience?
Just focusing on those people that actually are in the room. They’ve paid to experience something, and you want to deliver that to them.

Do you have a favourite song to play live, which is it and why?
Not sure.. Plastic Panorama? Or Atlantis, when the song reaches climax.

Does it frustrate you at gigs seeing people watching you through their phone screens rather than enjoying the real event in front of their eyes?They want to create memories, so I don’t think it really doesn’t matter.

What can readers and fans expect from the new tour?
A lot of dancing, love and dreamyness. Come as you are. And some new material!

Postiljonen
Date: 8pm, 21 November, 2018
Venue: MOM Livehouse
Tickets: $240, $220 from Ticketflap
More info:
http://postiljonenmusic.com
https://soundcloud.com/postiljonen
www.facebook.com/POSTILJONEN

APTBS Moments on the Edge

“Those moments when you lose control and are barely hanging on is when your body reacts without thinking, those are always the best”

New York’s ‘loudest band’ A Place to Bury Strangers return to Hong Kong this month for a concert at MOM Livehouse on 16 December. More commonly known by their initials APTBS currently are Oliver Ackermann (guitar/vocals, bass), Dion Lunadon (bass guitar, guitar) and Lia Simone Braswell (drums). Their atmospheric wall of sound-influenced blend of psychedelic rock, shoegaze and rock sounds good on record, live APTBS they are quite unique. bc spoke to Ackermann ahead of the gig.

In today’s era of instant gratification how does it feel as a band to have been around for 15 years? What has kept you together?
I think I will always write music. It is one of the things I absolutely love to do. One thing we have focused on is not listening to other people and just create the music we would love to hear. I think this is true with anything that you do. If you are passionate about it, it becomes really easy to do and push yourself because there is a hunger driving you and you are happy and satisfied with what you do. We are just lucky that other people enjoy what we want to do. We aren’t going to stop doing what we want.

How do you think your music has changed over time? Has it been an evolving process or have you made deliberate choices in music style/ direction?
The music has definitely changed very much over time. It has been a natural progression but we are always working on doing something new and that we have never done before. It makes things very interesting. Recently we have been writing a lot of songs right on the spot at a show or during practice and it really sends you through time at a faster pace making the universe of perceivable music larger and larger. The only real deliberate choice we make for our music is to make it with real instruments and not computer based equipment. The band is voice, bass, drums and guitar.

Which bands/musicians have influenced and inspired you over the years and why?
Early punk music was a big influence on me. I remember my brother once drove me around when he got his license and put in a Dead Kennedys tape and cranked it all the way up. I had never heard anything like that before. The energy and excitement was so heavy to me and completely off the wall insane. There was also a depth to the music that brought it up to even a higher place for me.

There was a point. I really love something that is beautiful and cool sounding but if it has a point then that can really touch. Also a big turning point for me was going to Art School in Providence RI in the late 90s. There were all of these really incredible shows going on all the time. Lightning Bolt was a big one for me. They would start playing from the back of the room right when the band before them ended. It was so intense and unique! They were like fuck the format. This is what a show should be and I love that.

How does it feel to be a band that influences and inspires other musicians So many bands have inspired and influences me and so I push myself as far as I can to represent everything I have ever been impressed with and inspired by in every performance and record I make.

Looking back at your early releases, do you have the urge as some bands have done to re-record/re-interpret them and release them again – or do you just leave that for the live shows?
Nah, I don’t think that has really ever been good. Usually for song writing the best time you are going to play something is while you are writing it. You are connected to the exact pure feeling only at that time when you are in that moment.

That is part of the reason I like to record our own music. It is us who gets to use the sounds and elements of song craft to get our message across. We know it better than anyone else would and all of the elements are important to he homogeneous.

For the live shows we do get to reinterpret our past works but it starts to take on a whole different feeling and is directly responsive to what is going on in whichever venue we are at. The interaction with the crowd can change the narrative of a song and they get readapted in real time. That keeps it fresh and new and in the actual moment we are in at that time. It makes music better than anything you could ever plan. We are hanging on for dear life and the music is being played by some sort of pure raw energy.

You’ve only released four albums in fifteen years, is writing new songs an organic process with the music and lyrics coming together smoothly or do you find creating new songs hard?
We record so much music all the time but also do a lot of other things. There has to be inspiration for good songs to get written I think. But to write new songs all you have to do is actually just do it. If you are reading this write a song right when you are done.

You’re quoted as saying that your live shows are about emotion. After so many years and shows how do you keep that raw intensity and passion that make your gigs so intense and memorable?
I just personally try to push myself further than I have ever gone every single time I play. It can’t necessarily be measured like how high am I going to jump at a show but it involves being creative with what you hear and is around you and spotting an opportunity to do something different or potentially scary and just going for it.

Do you have a favourite song to play live, which is it and why?
You would have to ask me after we play them at a particular show. Usually something I am not expecting to be my favorite ends up being for the night. Also usually whichever songs get really messed up tend to be my favorite.

Those moments when you lose control and are barely hanging on is when your body reacts without thinking and those are always the best moments. I often try to destroy the situation we are in so that we have to build it back and reconstruct it as something. And at that moment, what comes is better.

Does it frustrate you at gigs seeing so many people watching you through their phone screens rather than enjoying the real event in front of their eyes?
I am not usually really paying attention with my eyes at shows so much so I can’t really tell. I am so focused on the sound and the visual aspect can shut down. I think it is really just their loss. Most shows are best experienced with the body rather than the cyborg flesh, at least for now.

With music having fully embraced digital distribution do you get the same sense of completion from releasing a digital only release, or is there a more satisfying feeling from having a physical release in your hand and seeing people buy a cd/cassette of your music? Or does the satisfaction and pleasure come solely from the live shows?
There are different kinds of satisfaction I get from all of those things. I think it is cool to have a record or a cassette because I grew up with them and they meant so much to e when I was younger.

Now it is a different age and I do listen to a ton of digital music. I like it and it is interesting but nothing is like going to a live show. Everyone must experience it over and over again. It has transformed my life and made me who I am today and I love life.

What’s next for A Place To Bury Strangers after this tour?
We have a record coming out on Dead Oceans next year and there will be many tours to come.

A Place to Bury Strangers
Support: So It Goes
Date: 8pm, 16 December, 2017
Venue: MOM Livehouse
Tickets: $350, $290 from Ticketflap

Photos: APTBS, Selt-Titled Mag

EmptyBottles In Complete Sentences

Cha Siu Bao, Thomas and Lok are not dishes at a cha chaan teng, but ingredients that combined are Emptybottles. The local three-piece are about to release a second EP In Complete Sentences at Focal Fair on the 19 August and bc caught up with Lok to find out more.

Some of our readers may not have heard of Emptybottles, could you tell us a little about the band and it’s music.
The band began in 2013 when the three of us met in university. The type of music we play sways between mid-west emo, math-rock and post-rock but we generally stick to the music we’ve written. We believe in the DIY-ethos and had been fortunate enough to tour Taiwan and China in recent years.

The new EP In Complete Sentences, where did the inspiration for the songs come from?
Some of the songs were written in 2016 or earlier but the overall sound was determined after the tour in China last year with Taipei indie-punk band Touming Magazine. We were listening to some jazzier bands such as Shark Keeps Moving and Colossal at the time, which impacted the way we wrote our music – more space and openness.

Was it a hard EP to record or was the process very organic with the music and lyrics coming together smoothly?
Recording the EP was easier as we’ve gained studio experiences after making our first EP. The writing itself was also very organic and not in anyway forceful. The hardest part was finding time to go into studio and track the music – our guitarist is a med student and that complicated things. Our engineer Wilmer was very understanding and flexible and the EP would not have came together without his help.

Live, will the songs be as on the EP, or are they written and structured to be open for interpretation live?
We did some dubbing on the EP but in general I think the sound is very close to what we do live.

How do you feel Emptybottles’s music has evolved since your debut release?
I think there is more spaces and silences in the newer songs – instead of a barrage of riffs to pack the songs. I feel the dynamics between the intense and calm parts came together more naturally in this second EP.

With music having fully embraced digital distribution do you get the same sense of completion from releasing a digital only release, or is there a more satisfying feeling from having a physical release in your hand and seeing people buy a cd/cassette?
I also run the label Sweaty & Cramped and its a definite yes – It is a huge difference seeing someone pick up a physical copy of any music. Digital releases are somewhat incomplete and intangible, but an actual CD is complete with artwork and inserts. It is much more satisfying as an audience to be able to go through the liner notes than read off of a screen, I feel.

Live music venues locally have been having some problems recently, what could our new Chief Executive do to boost the local live music scene.
My answer, as always, is just do nothing – leave the musicians alone, let us work with the limited space we’ve found in the deserted buildings in deserted corners of the city.

What next for Emptybottles?
We will likely take a break from playing live after August to focus on other things in life, but you can still catch what we do via Sweaty & Cramped.

Emptybottles new EP In Complete Sentences is out now on Bandcamp or you can buy a physical copy at the CD release gig at Focal Fair on 19 August when Hurok and Chinese Football will be in support.

Emptybottles – In Complete Sentences EP Launch
Support: Chinese Football, Hurok
Date: 7:30pm, 19 August, 2017
Venue: Focal Fair
Tickets: $280, $200 (Advance)

 

Dagger Release Debut EP

Earlier this month on their facebook page, Riz Farooqi officially announced the break-up of iconic local hardcore band King Ly Chee after 17 years of gigs, tours and albums. You might not be into hardcore music, but the band not only entertained it’s fans it inspired many across all music genres about what a Hong Kong band could achieve.

It wasn’t an end though, rather the beginning of something new. Dagger – a new more metallic hardcore band formed by Riz and former King Ly Chee bandmate Ivan with James and To – who released their debut EP Dagger on Bandcamp this week. bc spoke to Riz about Dagger.

Best start with the obvious one from many fans will King Ly Chee return, the band has after all undergone many lineup changes over the years?
No – I can’t imagine the band will ever play shows again. Originally in January we decided to take a break. Right around that time I was already getting the itch to play guitar in a band again which was the whole catalyst for Dagger. So King Ly Chee was most definitely put on the back burner to be revisited again maybe at the end of the year or even next year.

I started Dagger with the current King Ly Chee drummer Ivan so it kinda left the other three guys in this weird kinda place where they didn’t know what was going to happen. Eventually those guys decided they didn’t want to be left in limbo and made the announcement that they were leaving.

Once they did that there was NO way I was going to put myself through searching for THREE people! That’s just insane…plus these three guys aren’t replaceable. These are all guys who’ve put in a LOT of time, effort and heart into the band. How do I just ignore that and “replace” them? It just doesn’t work that way… So when they made that announcement I was at peace to just end it.

We’ve done everything that we possibly could do with the band over the 17 years we’ve been around. We’ve released albums that have impacted Hong Kong and our scene of heavy bands here. We’ve toured Asia countless times. We’ve played in the States opening for our heroes Sick of it All on their 30 year anniversary!

How do we top any of this? If anything – I might record the demos that I had written for what was going to be the next King Ly Chee album and put it up for free download or something. But for now the band’s done. We had a good run. It wasn’t easy ever that entire time. But we were able to accomplish some great shit…

Why a new band, rather than a side project / collaboration?
Well it was supposed to just be a side project. Then when King Ly Chee ended it became my main band.

What do you want/need to say with Dagger that you felt you couldn’t do with King Ly Chee?
Lyrically it’s all on the same wave length. With Dagger the focus is certainly more on riffs and musicality. I wouldn’t say lyrics are a second thought – but it’s certainly the music that is the driving force in this band.

Long time fans are going to see ghosts of the past, how are you going to get people to see Dagger for what it is something different?
People already see it as a different beast because our EP is up and they can hear that the music is completely different, not to mention that I’m not the main vocalist. The music is just much heavier.

The response for the EP has been beyond our expectations because to be a new band in 2017 it’s pretty much impossible to get people’s attentions cause there are millions of bands in existence. But people have been giving it their attention and it’s unbelievable that it actually resonates with people! That’s insane to me…

Where did the name Dagger come from?
No real back story…just searching for a one word name that was short. I was considering how the name would look on merch. 17 years of trying to lay out “King Ly Chee” across a variety of merch has taught me to never use a long name again Hahahaha

The new EP Dagger, tell us about it?
The band started in January and I already had a couple demos just to get the ball rolling. But once the four of us got together it was easy to get more ideas out and change parts, rewrite parts, start new songs, move parts around etc. It all came together super quick.

The actual idea was to release a demo of these tracks. But as we started talking about recording and how high our standards were for even the quality of the demos…we realized that with the amount of money we’re throwing into this, the demos really are more like an EP. The tracks were all mixed and mastered in the US so this isn’t really a “demo” by any means. That’s it…things have moved at a quick pace. Now we’re ready to play a bunch of shows and start working on brand new tracks for our debut full length.

689’s disdain for the arts reached absurd levels recently with riot police deployed to prevent a gig taking place and international bands detained at the border. What would you like incoming Chief Executive Carrie Lam to do to support local music and especially live music in Hong Kong?
I don’t know what expectations I have for her or any CE coming in. The CCP continues to force the idea that we are not autonomous – they will always be the masters. So what can any CE really do when they’ve been hand selected by the masters? All they can do is follow their orders.

My only wish is for the CCP to one day see Hong Kong for what it is, a city with a strong set of values for right and wrong. A city that doesn’t accept nor follow blind worship of any specific political system nor party. A city that doesn’t need nationalism shoved down our throats to keep people in line.

Hong Kong has always been an international city. All this stupid talk about putting more ethnic Chinese people in places of power such as the judiciary, the government and police force (as if that already isn’t the case!!!) sets this city down a very dangerous path where we will lose all its international character.

We’re only years away from seeing all our signs with traditional Chinese characters being replaced with simplified characters, you’ll hear more Mandarin on the streets, there’ll be more of those stupid red propaganda banners along the roads…

So all of this is deeper then just the woes of us musicians. The character and beauty of the real Hong Kong is at stake.

The SAR turns 20 at the end of the month, what are your personal musical highlights of those twenty years?
20 years is a long time to talk about…off the top of my head seeing Metallica, Megadeth and Sick of it All on our shores was simply unbelievable…

The bands that I grew up listening to while walking the streets with big ass headphones and my Walkman trying to make sense of my place as a Pakistani kid in a Chinese society…for the bands who provided the soundtrack for that part of my life to finally play here in Hong Kong was unbelievable.

In the words of Taylor Young at California’s The Pit who remixed Dagger’s debut EP “RIP King Ly Chee, long live Dagger!”

Dagger’s debut 6 track EP is out now on Bandcamp and will be released on cassette at Dagger’s debut gig – the Unite Asia Showcase on the 1 July at Focal Fair

Photo: Mike Sakas

Vishal Nanda: Writer, Game Designer and Peel Street Poet

vishalnanda_0061

Vishal Nanda is a writer and spoken word performer, as well as an indie game designer, teacher, and editor. He spends his time writing poetry, scripts, screen plays, plays, short stories, novels and the like, as he cannot quite help himself.

Recently, he hosted an event with acclaimed novelist Omar Musa during Hong Kong’s Literary Festival and his poetry has been published in the literary journal Asia Cha. He has performed spoken word poetry at a variety of events, including TEDx Wanchai, comedy shows, fundraisers and on RTHK Radio Three. He can usually be found nervously performing In Lan Kwai Fong most Wednesdays at Orange Peel with the other Peel Street Poets.

How long have you been involved in poetry?
I’ve been writing sort of poetry since I was thirteen, if you could call what I used to write ‘poetry’. It would be more accurate to say that I was trying to write poetry. I am hesitant to call what I write poetry, or to call myself a poet.

It’s quite a grandiose declaration because for good or ill ‘poetry’ still has pretentious connotations. If we had another word for it in English, with the sense that you’re part of a rather large group of aspiring writers maybe in training, that could excise the pretence from the term, like writing ‘pooms’, then that would be more accurate.

Writing pooms was a solo thing for a long time, completely devoid of connection to a larger community, till I ‘joined’ Peel Street. Since then I’ve been writing far more than I have in the past, with far more opportunities to get read or listened to, so in terms of dedicating more time to poetry, I would have to say since joining Peel, which was about three years ago. Since then I’ve been lucky to have more opportunities to write and perform, and it all started with Peel.

Where do you get the inspiration for your writing?
This is a crazy question. It would be hard enough to answer if you were referring to one specific piece I’ve written, let alone for writing as a whole. What was I thinking at the time? What series of events throughout my entire life, my childhood, all the media I have ever consumed, led to me producing that piece of work? How did I have the time to do it? What was I feeling back when I wrote it?

There’s a way to bypass the question entirely, and the assumption behind it, of the creator having agency in the cause. People are computers who take input, all the input our gloriously unique minds are capable of taking as the most powerful processing machines in the known universe, and then output something, like dick in the box, or Game of Thrones, or poetry. Although we have agency in the process we are far from objective observers of that process.

That said, if I had to give a tidier answer then I would abide by something Neil Gaiman said, which I paraphrase as ‘You walk by a dozen stories everyday. A writer notices at least five of them.’ In other words, there are stories and ideas everywhere, and it’s a matter of observation both internally and externally to recognise them.

And although I’m saying there is a lack of agency I don’t think there is a lack of craft. I use Evernote for everything, which means I can write on my phone, my Ipad, my desktop, whatever, it all goes to the same place, and if I have an idea I write it down, I file it away, whether I’m walking or sitting at home. I think there are two extremes for me when it comes to how I end up writing something, with a lot in the middle. I want to emphasise that I’m an amateur.

On the grandscale of global writers I’m just another guy on the cliff hoping to make his way up, but I think there’s some value then in telling you my work ethic, of the method in attempting to climb the cliff because it’s probably similar to a lot of other people who are trying but haven’t quite made it. I write all my ideas down. Sometimes I’ll have an abstract idea that I need to craft into a story- I had one about how children and what might be considered ‘the delusional’ have a lot in common, but how do I contain that in an actual narrative?

So I try to build something, which sometimes takes time, it takes outlines and planning and experimentation and editing. Or I had one about a guy who was ‘time displaced’ and could feel the past of any place he was at and I run with the idea, I imagine being that character and I take the story to it’s logical conclusions.

I don’t believe in writer’s block, my rule is that if I can’t figure out a problem, I’m only allowed to quit if I’ve sat in front of a desk and stared at the page for half an hour to an hour and truly come up with nothing, which I honestly think is a rarity. I try to abide by that rule.

On the other hand, especially with poetry, I’ve found that moments where I’m really emotional, often negatively, at those times writing out a poem is therapy, an itch, I have to get it out there because I feel like I’m going crazy, it’s like taking the chaos of an unformed internal monologue and shaping it into something, and times like those are times where it just flows out in one go.

So it’s both extremes, but I believe in the end it’s consistent work and the determination to see an idea to it’s end, no matter how crap the product, with the faith that it’s still practice and it still counts.

How does Hong Kong influence your writing?
It upsets me. It’s not exactly an ideal place, though it is idolised when it comes to safety, or the MTR or cheap, delicious food. I think a lot of writing, especially in English, when it comes to Hong Kong, attempts to focus on defining the place with the awareness that it’s unique. So that enough readers not familiar with it will find it compelling, it’s like travel writing.

I don’t want to write like that. I think there is a lot of isolation, a lot of unhealthy relationships, toxicity and loneliness here and I think that this is far from limited to this city.

I try to find the universal in the specific, rather than denying what is universal by focusing on the specific. Hong Kong, in the context of us as a species, is a remarkable trailer of a future to come. It has one of the largest income gaps in the world, a disgusting amount of people living in poverty juxtaposed with stratospheric decadence, rampant pollution and corporate-timescale-level-thinking (that is, in quarters, which is somewhat problematic when it comes to climate change), the highest average IQ and life expectancy in the world, cutting edge technology harnessed to make you buy shit you do not need, and a disturbingly high suicide rate among children who don’t fit the requisite mould.

I grew up here and frankly it makes me angry. I also love it, it is my home, and I’ve written celebratory pieces about it too. This is too big of a question to answer; how does Hong Kong influence my writing? If I have to sum it up, I’d say as a living computer I am forced to process it in all it’s neon madness, and that I’d hate to write about fields full of sheep instead.

The amount of silence in such a noisy place is mind boggling. So few people have an actual voice, instead we are bombarded with manicured ads and artificial TV shows claiming to define our existence in Hong Kong. Everywhere you look in Hong Kong, on the walls, on buildings, on magazine covers everywhere, there are words telling you how to be or think, via telling you what to buy, or what is considered of value and this gets to people, this affects us.

In Hong Kong, I try to consider what isn’t being said, but from my very, very narrow perspective. There’s a hell of a lot of noise here. I think a lot of writing at the moment is focused on articulating a perspective that can then be cozily placed in a category like ‘culture’ or ‘gender’ or some space from which the consumer and creator can feel comfortable in being associated with.

What is lost in that movement is the attempt to discover the universal, or even admitting that the state of us as a globalised species, like our genes, is 99.5% similar and cultural fetishisation for the sake of it is a form of self-inflicted blindness.

Hong Kong as an influence, is a noisy place, which inspires me by refusing to keep things simple or quiet, even if most people are rendered silent by it. Mental health is a box I’d like to say I try to fit a lot of my writing into- the state of Hong Kong’s popular perception, treatment and education when it comes to mental health is an absolute disgrace.

Google the government website on mental health, there’s a questionnaire for depression and if you succeed, if you have symptoms that fulfil the requirements for a diagnoses, the website effectively tells you to ‘take it easy’. There’s barely any help. It’s an absolute disgrace, and it’s not the rich that are being let down, they can afford private treatment, it’s the larger majority that have to count on a government doctor with ten minutes every two weeks to see you and the popular stigma that you can’t talk about these things.

The social environment is, in many ways, psychologically toxic. That said I have it easy compared to most people, I’m aware of that, I try to stay aware of my privilege. But the BS is dripping from the walls.

Poem:

Things I wish were or that I could see in the city but don’t because the world is not moulded by the whims of my imagination.

Like when I stop,
Like when I pause, to give a beggar change,
Another hard-eyed walker strides towards us,
He’s from this mangled person’s mysterious past.
He’s got a deformed limb,
He’s engaging in disabled kung fu,
Flipping around on one functional leg,
And beating the shit out of this guy wearing a suit.

Is that as offensive as ignoring him?

At least in my fantasies I pretend to care.

Behind an office lady’s perfume trail,
I surf a happy wake- wish it was colored,
Maybe purple, so I can
Hmmm
Sniff the smell of happy.
It’s not stalking, going in the same direction,
It’s not like there’s any space on the escalator.
See the perfectly looking douchey guy in the suit,
See the way too sultry blouse wearing office girl,
See them engage in Mortal Kombat.

A look passes between them,
Sudden recognition,
Eyes flare
An accusatory YOUUU
One person kicks / the streets clear,
To form an orderly circle.
They pose,
I become one of those dudes in the backdrop,
Moving my hands up and down,
Like in the Super Street fighter backgrounds.

Outside the Landmark,
Fenced-in trees inhale car fumes,
Like hardened smokers talking shit to one another,
About how dumb humans are.
You know the waterfront used to be right by my roots.
Yeah thank the Sun they covered that stuff with concrete. Smelled horrific.

Sometimes on a skyway,
When a double decker passes so close,
I think of jumping, and rolling, then running on the roofs,

But I’d need something to escape from for it to make sense.
Like reality.
Or something to chase.
Like office ladys.

How about the neon signs,
Unravelling to become neon snakes,
They float through the sky like Doctor Who monsters,
Neon eels,
If they touch you, they either electrocute, or seduce,

And next thing you know you’re in a Wanchai strip club being choked to death
By the fairy lights.

I want a class one Tai Tai laden down with shopping bags,
Wearing Armani everything and sunglass occluded eyes,
To walk into HSBC,
Chill as fuck,
And from her shopping bags drop,
Two tommy guns.
With perfect diction, her lines would be:
Everyone be cool this is a robbery.
Any of you pricks move and I’ll execute every last mother fucking one of you.
In my fantasies I don’t bother not to plagiarise,
This is why copyright is unnatural,
Her lipstick is as red as the HSBC logo,
Or the dead kids those terrorists they accidentally funded killed.

Oops, too far, good thing none of this is real.

The Victoria Harbour channel monster would be unfathomable.
Doubly terrifying because of the layers of nasty that film the water,
Would make it invisible till it was a few feet from the surface,
Armoured in plastic bags, translucent scales that warp the image underneath,
Lovecrafted out of Vita Box cartons that inflate and deflate as it breathes,
It’s touch is asthma,
It’s straw appendages piercing skin to suck out all your dreams,
Right through your pupils,
You won’t be able to get a good night’s sleep again,
It will find you in every toilet bowl and stagnant puddle,
The urban mosquitos are it’s eyes.

Skyscrapers are secret spaceships,
Rocket boosters buried in the concrete,
Waiting for the signal,
They lift up all at once,
Hidden steel shutters locking down windows,
For the inevitable space exodus.

Inevitable, in my fantasies at least.

Maybe they are missiles,
Anti-alien weapons,
Filled with angry bankers coked up like Viking berserkers, unable to distinguish friend,
From the ignorant average person investing with them,
They take their ties off, tying to them stationary,
Wielding silken nunchucks against the bugger ships they board,
The antennas and weird spiral shit on roofs were always
Disguised ramming prows.

If all the cars, lorrys and bus’s horned at once,
Would the sound blow out all the buildings glass?
If the PLA in admiralty took on the cops,
Would the triads decide a tie breaker?
I want a crazy brown guy to walk into a crystal shop,
With a tennis racket,
And systematically smash everything at once,
Then maybe buy it all afterwards,

Take that mainland billionaires.

I’m a fucked up patriot in my head.

I want to see ten thousand people take to the streets,
Yelling slogans from the 1970s,
I want to sit cross legged in the middle of the highway
While the Hong Kong police go full police state
And radical students are threatened with pepper spray,
Would be cool to feel a part of history,
Especially to be on the losing side.

I want graffiti on the government buildings,
And street art outside the IFC,
I want a declaration that anyone can be Batman,
Hanging from a skyway.
I want to see it again,
And pretend that a seven million strong city,
Educated and liberal,
Could field one hell of an army
For change.
For a change,
I want my fantasies to be real,

Also
I don’t think theres anything wrong with having an office girl fetish,
I mean I grew up in Hong Kong.
It’s not my fault.
That I want you
to give me
a raise.

Peel Street Poetry is an open mic poetry night at Orange Peel. It runs every Wednesday of the month except the first. The environment is friendly and they love new performers, so come share your poetry or just listen along to some of Hong Kong’s sharpest poetic talents.

Peel Street Poetry Open Mic
Date: 2nd, 3rd, 4th (and 5th) Wednesdays of the month
Venue: Orange Peel
Tickets: Free
More info:
www.peelstreetpoetry.com

Katrina Sutherland – New Zealand Winemaker

Katrina Sutherland has spent seventeen years making wine and is currently Production Winemaker and Quality Manager at Kim Crawford Wines in New Zealand. Katrina was in Hong Kong recently to promote her wines and bc asked her about the life of a winemaker.

Katrina Sutherland

I’m sure most of our readers think they know what / who a winemaker is, but how would you describe your job?
You need to be a little bit of a scientist, a little bit of an artist, be a little bit of a mechanic and have a little clown in you as no single day is the same!

What are the most challenging aspects for you of being a winemaker?
Working with a product that is subject to a variety of conditions is challenging; no matter how hard you work or prepare, nature will always send a curve ball. But for me that is also half the fun!

What gives you most pleasure (in winemaking terms)?
After all the hard work seeing someone at a restaurant or bottle shop buying your wine – in New Zealand, Shanghai and Hong Kong! There is a lot choice out there so that always gives me a buzz.

Working for a global wine producer, do you have much flexibility in what you produce and the changing flavours – or is more produce x of this, y of that with this flavour?
Working for a global producer allows me to make wines in a wide range of styles for markets all around the world and for people who are wine savvy as well as those who are just starting on their wine journey. We are able to make wines that may only make up 500 cases but can also able experiment a little with new product development and testing new concepts.

In Asia beyond the problems of fake wines there’s a lot of “love of a pretty bottle”, “It’s expensive, so it must be good”. As a winemaker what can you do to change these perceptions?
It is all about getting out and talking to people and challenging those concepts. Wine is a very individual thing and by giving people the confidence to make their own choices – by taking them first hand on my adventure and explaining what goes into the bottle, and how it came about is the best way to do that.

What does the future hold for New Zealand wine?
Continuing to develop the fantastic flavours that make our Sauvignon Blanc so exciting, and introducing people to other varieties that we make in New Zealand and that are as equally as distinctive as our Sauvignon Blancs such as Pinot Gris, Chardonnay and Riesling.

What trends would you personally like to see evolve within the wine industry over the next decade?
Getting rid of the pomp and circumstance, the snobbery and flowery language and breaking down the perception that you need to know a lot about wine to enjoy it. Wine should be accessible to everyone to enjoy without those barriers. Winemakers can help this by contributing to the rapid growth in practical wine education around the world.

www.kimcrawfordwines.com

www.kimcrawfordwines.com