New Breed Live In Hong Kong 2013 @ Hang Out – 7pm, 16 August 2013

The 18th CityU BandSoc Presents: New Breed Live In Hong Kong 2013 featuring – The Twisted Habour Town, Maniac, 門生, 意色樓 from 7pm at Hang Out in Sai Wan Ho

What: New Breed Live In Hong Kong 2013
When: 7pm, 16 August 2013
Where: Hang Out, Youth Outreach Jockey Club Building, 2 Holy Cross Path, Sai Wan Ho, Hong Kong.
How Much: $120 (Advance), $160 (Door) – reserve tickets by email: [email protected]
New Breed Live In Hong Kong 2013 @ Hang Out - 7pm, 16 August 2013

Pulitzer Writer Series @ City University – 20, 26 July 2013

Summer in Hong Kong offers many interesting events, among these is City University’s Pulitzer Writer Series which this month presents two free lectures from poet Rae Armantrout and novelist Adam Johnson who will give readings, speak in conversation and sign books. Both events will be introduced by Xu Xi, Writer in Residence, on behalf of the Department of English.

Biographies:
Rae Armantrout is an American poet generally associated with the Language poets. Armantrout was born in Vallejo, California but grew up in San Diego. She has published ten books of poetry and has also been featured in a number of major anthologies. Armantrout currently teaches at the University of California, San Diego, where she is Professor of Poetry and Poetics. On March 11, 2010, Armantrout was awarded the 2009 National Book Critics Circle Award for her book of poetryVersed published by the Wesleyan University Press, which had also been nominated for the National Book Award. The book later earned the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. Armantrout’s most recent collection, Just Saying, was published in February 2013. She is the recipient of numerous other awards for her poetry, including an award in poetry from the Foundation for Contemporary Arts in 2007 and a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2008.

Adam Johnson was born in South Dakota and raised in Arizona. He earned a BA in Journalism from Arizona State University in 1992; a MFA from the writing program at McNeese State University, where he was a classmate of the writer Neil Connelly, in 1996; and a PhD in English from Florida State University in 2000. Johnson is currently a San Francisco writer and associate professor in creative writing at Stanford University. He founded the Stanford Graphic Novel Project and was named ‘one of the nation’s most influential and imaginative college professors’ by Playboy Magazine. Johnson is the author of the novel The Orphan Master’s Son (2012), which Michiko Kakutani, writing in The New York Times, has called, ‘a daring and remarkable novel, a novel that not only opens a frightening window on the mysterious kingdom of North Korea, but one that also excavates the very meaning of love and sacrifice.’ Johnson also wrote the short-story collection Emporium and the novel Parasites Like Us, which won a California Book Award in 2003. His work has been published in Esquire, Harper’s Magazine, Tin House and The Paris Review, as well as Best New American Voices and The Best American Short Stories.

What: Rae Armantrout in conversation with poet Ravi Shankar
When: 7pm, 20 July, 2013
Where: Lecture Theatre M3017, Level 3, Run Run Shaw Creative Media Centre, 18 Tat Hong Avenue, City University of Hong Kong.
How Much: Free with registration www.english.cityu.edu.hk/pulitzer

What: Adam Johnson in conversation with novelist Sybil Baker
When: 7pm, 26 July, 2013
Where: Lecture Theatre M3017, Level 3, Run Run Shaw Creative Media Centre, 18 Tat Hong Avenue, City University of Hong Kong.
How Much: Free with registration www.english.cityu.edu.hk/pulitzer

 

Justin Bieber’s Believe Tour @ Venetian CotaiArena – 8pm, 12 October, 2013

Just when you thought your pet monkey was safe, Justin Bieber arrives in Macau on the 12 October as part of his Believe Tour. While many Bieber fans – known as Beliebers – are open in their adoration for all things Justin and willing swell his bank balance by buying everything ‘Bieber’, having the final concert of his Asian tour in Macau allows for many closet Beliebers (not me) to attend. A word of warning to parents bringing young Beliebers as cover for their own adoration ‘The Justin’ has been late on stage to many of his concerts so perhaps book a room to avoid any bieber-trums. Tickets go on sale July 10, 2013 at 10 am from CotaiTicketing

Justin Bieber’s Believe Tour
When: 8pm 12 October 2013
Where: CotaiArena, Venetian, Macau
How Much: MOP$1,680, MOP$1,280, MOP$980, MOP$680, MOP$380 from Cotaiticketing.com
Tickets go on sale July 10, 2013 at 10 a.m
Justin Bieber’s Believe Tour @ Macau - 12 October, 2013

Rihanna Diamonds World Tour @ The Venetian – 13, 14 September 2013

For those who like her, Rihanna – the “No. 1 Person On Facebook” with over 63 million fans – is bringing her Diamonds World Tour to the stage at The Venetian on September 13 and 14, with tickets on sale June 7 through CotaiTicketing

What: Rihanna Diamonds World Tour
Where: CotaiArena, The Venetian
When: 8pm, 13 September, 2013
How Much: $1780, $1580, $1280, $1080, $880, $680, $480, $380, $280 from www.cotaiticketing.com

Rihanna Diamonds World Tour @ The Venetian – 13, 14 September 2013

Cheung Chau Bun Festival 12-18 May 2013

Cheung Chau Bun Festival 12-18 May 2013
Who to believe? Some say the Cheung Chau Bun Festival is held every year to placate the ghosts of the victims of pirates who used the dumbbell-shaped island as their lair, while others maintain it a commemorates the liberation of the island’s residents from a plague some 200 years Cheung Chau Bun Festivalago. What pretty much everyone is agreed on, though, is that it’s a time for one big party!   Officially the Cheung Chau Bun Festival falls on the fifth to the ninth days of the fourth lunar month – this year’s festivities go from May 12 to 18, with a Chinese Opera performance every night to May 21 at Pak Tai Temple, starting at 7:30pm. But the festival’s undoubted highlight will be a spectacular parade from 2-4pm and a midnight ‘bun snatching’ competition on 17 May centred around the Pak Tai Temple Plaza and adjacent Football Court.

 

The complete event schedule is as follows:

Date Time Activities Location
12 May Noon to 6pm Climbing Carnival
• Climbing demonstrations
• Game stalls
• Variety shows
Soccer Pitch of Pak Tai Temple Playground
14 May 10am to 9pm • Ceremony inviting deities to Pak Tai Temple
• Ritual marking start of Bun Festival
Pak Tai Temple Plaza
14 – 21 May 7:30pm to 11pm • Chinese opera performances Pak Tai Temple Plaza
16 May 2:30pm to 3:15pm 3:45pm • Lion and Unicorn Dances
• Ritual and Chinese Acrobatic Performances
Pak Tai Temple Plaza
17 May 10:30am
2pm
Midnight
• Unicorn and Kung Fu Performance
• Bun Festival Parade
• Bun Scrambling Competition*
Pak Tai Temple Plaza
18 May 2pm • Ceremony to send the deities back to their temples Pak Tai Temple Plaza

 

Cold Cave Live in Hong Kong @ Saffron on the Peak – 9pm, 18 May 2013

Cold Cave Live in Hong Kong @ Saffron on the Peak – 9pm, 18 May 2013
Wesley Eisold, the man behind Philadelphia’s Cold Cave, is the former frontman for hardcore bands like Some Girls, American Nightmare, and Give Up the Ghost. He was also involved in a plagiarism controversy with Pete Wentz and receives a songwriting credit on a Fall Out Boy album. Not exactly the first person you’d expect to be making beautiful, experimental synthpop.

Cold Cave weaves incomprehensibly distorted vocals with bits of synthetic feedback. But songs like “Love Comes Close”, “Life Magazine” and “Confetti” also come bearing serious hooks. That mixture of postpunk unease and fluid bleep would’ve made Cold Cave fit right in on the early-80s Factory Records roster alongside Section 25 or the Durutti Column.

As with their ancestors, for Cold Cave the synthesizer is as much about mayhem as it is melody. It is a means of conveying, via dissonance, ideas about disturbance and decay as effectively as the harshest guitar rock. Cold Cave strive for balance, between the ugly and the beautiful, between rupture and rapture. The songs on Cold Cave’s albums have an immediacy that belies their sometimes thought-provoking titles like “The Laurels of Erotomania” and “The Trees Grew Emotions And Died”. In this way they look to mark that transitional moment when synthesizer music went from a subversive device for sound collagists to a serious commercial force. They are cerebral and savage, yet sweet and seductive.

And their mainman Wesley Eisold is an absolute new young god of nihilism and despair. His interviews include quotes such as, “I couldn’t understand why people were wearing watches, because they seemed like hourglasses of death, keeping track of how much time was running out”. He talks of his “absolute fixation with nostalgia and the idea of people and loves that never happened, so much that I can’t function properly with the people in my actual life”. And in two pithy sentences – “I dread clubs but I love the music they play in them,” and “I find it all so disheartening, what we hope to find when we leave our homes,” – he strives to capture Cold Cave’s aesthetic: the Morrissey of “How Soon Is Now” wailing over Nitzer Ebb beats.

According to Eisold, if anything, their music reflects what it feels like to live in the present. Eisold, whose baritone is as rich and resonating as that of Phil Oakey, Nick Cave or Iggy Pop, says “Of course we love the lineage of the genre, early experiments with machines to convey human emotion; the marriage between pop and industrial music. At the time it was documenting the early stages of a new world, and we are recording what it feels like to be alive in that world.”

When asked whether there is a set of guiding principles at work here, a Cold Cave aesthetic that runs from the artwork to the music, he answers: “We spend a lot of thought choosing what we do. The artwork is as imperative as the music. It is the only imagery attached to the recording. We judge books by covers everyday and it is my hope to have the sleeves represent the emotion, or lack of, in the music.”

Cold Cave Live in Hong Kong, support Laura Palmer
9pm, 18 May 2013
Saffron on the Peak, 100 Peak Road, Dairy Farm Building
Tickets: $280, ($300 on the door) on sale 3 May from –

White Noise Records, Room 1901, 19/F, 21 Yiu Wa Street, Causeway Bay,
Zoo Records, 3/F. Sai Yeung Choi St South, Prince Edward
The Globe, 45 Graham Street, Soho 
Saffron on The Peak
Cold Cave Live in Hong Kong @ Saffron on the Peak - 9pm, 18 May 2013


BollyGood Movie @ Makumba – 8pm, 11 May 2013

BollyGood Movie @ Makumba – 8pm, 11 May 2013
In celebration of World Belly Dance Day Klub Raks is organising a BollyGood Movie charity night featuring the People’s Liberation Improv in a comedy night enhanced with some great belly dancing… In truth we really don’t know what’s going to happen but the contributors individually are great so combined it should be fun and an excuse for a dance and a laugh. If you’re feeling adventurous, then dress up as well!

BollyGood Movie
$200 inc a drink and snacks
8-11pm, 11 May, 2013
Makumba
2/F Ho lee Commercial Building
38-44 D’Aguilar Street, Lan Kwai Fong
Tel: 2810 5300, 9028 7064
www.klubraks.com
BollyGood Movie - 8pm, 11 May, 2012

The Philadelphia Orchestra, Fortieth Anniversary Tour @ The Venetian Theatre – 8-9 June 2013

The Philadelphia Orchestra, Fortieth Anniversary Tour @ The Venetian Theatre – 8-9 June 2013
The Philadelphia Orchestra marks its historical legacy as the first U.S. orchestra to visit China in 1973 with a commemorative Fortieth Anniversary Tour. The tour combined with the launch of an innovative residency programme Tour of China, will be conducted by Donald Runnicles and features seven concerts in Hangzhou, Shanghai, Tianjin, Beijing, and Macao. The details of the Macau concerts have yet to be released. www.philorch.org.

The Philadelphia Orchestra, Fortieth Anniversary Tour @ The Venetian Theatre - 8-9 June 2013