Ólafur Arnalds @ Grappa’s Cellar – 8pm, 16 September, 2013

Fragile and emotional neoclassical are perhaps the best terms to describe Ólafur Arnalds music, a man who over the past 5 years by combining classical instrumentation with an ambient aesthetic has established himself as one of the most interesting musicians to emerge from Iceland’s vibrant music scene. His sorrowful neoclassical pieces evoked the stark minimalism of Sigur Rós, combined with the simple ambience explored by Brian Eno. Through these influences and others, Arnalds has created a simple, short-form take on modern classical music that has enough crossover appeal to be enjoyed by fans of post-rock, ambient, and even pop music genres – but Arnalds by mixing strings and piano with loops, ambiance, electronics and beats is sculpting his own epic, string-laden compositions.

Only 26 years of age, Arnalds returns to Hong Kong (after a sold out show in 2010) hard on the heels of his well-liked soundtrack to Broadchurch and in support of his ‘major label’ debut For Now I Am Winter which sees Arnalds adding an impressive amount of variety into what is already a well-established formula, what will be interesting is how the vocal embellishments to some of the new album’s tracks come across live?
To find out more have a listen https://soundcloud.com/olafur-arnalds

What: Ólafur Arnalds
When: 8pm, 16 September, 2013
Where: Grappa’s Cellar, Basement Jardine House, 1 Connaught Place, Hong Kong
How Much: $300 from http://olafurarnalds.ticketflap.com
Ólafur Arnalds @ Grappa's Cellar – 8pm, 16 September, 2013

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


The Voice of China @ The Venetian Macao – 7pm, 14 March 2013

The Voice of China @ The Venetian Macao – 7pm, 14 March 2013
Reality TV talent show The Voice of China returns to The Venetian Macao on March 14, 2013 for a grand finale to Season 1. The four competing teams have been on a 12 city tour to build on the shows popularity with fans – the numbers would have any Western film/TV company drooling with half a million people attending the live shows and hundreds of millions watching on TV.

The four teams going head-to-head March 14 to earn the right to be called ‘the best of the best’ from Season 1 are:

  • Liu Huan team: Liu Yue, Wang Naien, Yuan Yawei “Tia”, Quan Zhendong and Li Daimo
  • Na Ying team: Huang Yong, Zhang Wei, Duo Liang, Zhang Hexuan and Zhao Lu
  • Harlem Yu team: Jin Chi, Mochou “Momo” Wu, Da Shan, Chu Qiao and Wang Ke
  • Yang Kun team: Jin Zhiwen, Ping An, Ding Ding, Zou Hongyu and Zhou Lihu

The Voice of China Final Tour
7 pm, 14March 2013
CotaiArena, The Venetian Macao
Tickets: $80 from 2882 8818 www.cotaiticketing.com

The Voice of China @ The Venetian Macao – 7pm, 14 March 2013
The Voice of China @ The Venetian Macao – 7pm, 14 March 2013

The Beach Boys live @ Hong Kong Sevens!

The Beach Boys live @ Hong Kong Sevens!
In a first for the Hong Kong Sevens, Rock & Roll hall of fame artists the Beach Boys will entertain the fans with a short set on-event. The Beach Boys will perform immediately following the March Past on Saturday, March 23 at 14.30 on a temporary stage set-up along the North Stand.
Also performing live as part of the opening ceremony will be the London Welsh Rugby Club Choir along with the Hong Kong Welsh Male Voice Choir.
Hong Kong Sevens – 22-24, March 2013
Hong Kong Stadium
www.hksevens.com

The Beach Boys live @ Hong Kong Sevens! - 23 March 2013
The Beach Boys live @ Hong Kong Sevens! – 23 March 2013

 

Kraftwerk 3-D @ Star Hall, KITEC – 4 May, 2013

Kraftwerk 3-D vision @ Star Hall, KITEC – 4 May, 2013
The enigma that is Kraftwerk have provided a soundtrack to the computer world for over 40 years. More theatre than concert, the synchronized visual projections, lights and robotics accentuate Kraftwerk’s antiseptic yet compelling melodies and hypnotic lyrics – which reveal a deadpan humor and an appreciation of the absurd.

Kraftwerk 3-D Concert in Hong Kong
8pm, 4 May, 2013
Star Hall, KITEC
Tickets: $780 (Standing), $580 (Seated)
1 pair of complimentary 3-D glasses per ticket
Tel: 31-288-288 www.hkticketing.com

Kraftwerk 3-D @ Star Hall, KITEC - 4 May, 2013
Kraftwerk 3-D @ Star Hall, KITEC – 4 May, 2013

 

Maria Cordero + Danny Summer New Year Concert @ Venetian Macao’s Venetian Theatre – 7:45pm, 2 March 2013

Maria Cordero + Danny Summer New Year Concert @ Venetian Macao’s Venetian Theatre – 7:45pm, 2 March 2013
Two local legends together on stage, a songwriter and guitarist, Danny Summer’s popularity has extended from the 1980s until now. Considered the Father of Hong Kong rock and roll, Summer’s first album Childhood earned him the Most Promising New Artist Award in 1979. Macao-born Maria Cordero joined the Hong Kong music industry in 1987. Her powerful, versatile and original vocal style soon attracted the attention and admiration of the industry. Her career as a recording artist was launched two years later when she was singled out by the well known film director, Lam Ling Tung, to sing the theme song for the movie City On Fire. In 1988, the song “Beam of Friendship,” from Cordero’s debut album, won Hong Kong’s prestigious Top Ten Chinese Gold Songs Award.

Maria Cordero + Danny Summer New Year Concert @ Venetian Macao’s Venetian Theatre – 7:45pm, 2 March 2013
Venetian Theatre, Venetian Macao
HKD/MOP$580 (A Reserve), $380 (B Reserve) and $180 (C Reserve) from www.cotaiticketing.com

Maria Cordero + Danny Summer New Year Concert @ Venetian Macao’s Venetian Theatre - 7:25pm, 2 March 2013
Maria Cordero + Danny Summer New Year Concert @Venetian Macao’s Venetian Theatre – 7:45pm, 2 March 2013

Blur @ AsiaWorld Arena – 8pm, 6 May 2013

Blur @ AsiaWorld Arena – 8pm, 6 May 2013
The epitome of Cool Britannia, Britpop legends Blur haven’t released a new album since reforming for a series of concerts in 2009, but such is the strength of their discography that’s been largely irrelevant as the band have wowed their fans across the globe at gigs and festivals. Formed in London in 1988 as Seymour, the group consists of singer/keyboardist Damon Albarn, guitarist/singer Graham Coxon, bassist Alex James and drummer Dave Rowntree. Blur’s debut album Leisure (1991) incorporated the sounds of Madchester and shoegazing. Following a stylistic change influenced by English guitar pop groups such as The Kinks, The Beatles and XTC, Blur released Modern Life Is Rubbish (1993), Parklife (1994) and The Great Escape (1995). As a result, the band helped to popularise the Britpop genre and achieved global popularity, aided by a chart battle with rival band Oasis in 1995 dubbed “The Battle of Britpop”. In recording their follow-up, Blur (1997), the band underwent another reinvention, showing influence from the lo-fi style of American indie rock groups. “Song 2”, one of the album’s singles, brought Blur mainstream success in the United States. Their next album, 13 (1999) saw the band members experimenting with electronic and gospel music, and featured more personal lyrics from Albarn. In May 2002, Coxon left Blur during the recording of their seventh album Think Tank (2003). Containing electronic sounds and more minimal guitar work, the album was marked by Albarn’s growing interest in hip hop and African music. After a 2003 tour without Coxon, Blur did no studio work or touring as a band, as members engaged in other projects
The Hong Kong concert, part of Blur’s 2013 World Tour is currently the only non-festival gig announced by the band and tickets go on sale on 25 February

Blur @ AsiaWorld Arena – 8pm, 6 May 2013
Tickets: HK$880, $680 (standing and seated) and $480 (seated only) from www.hkticketing.com

Blur @ AsiaWorld Arena - 8pm, 6 May 2013
Blur @ AsiaWorld Arena – 8pm, 6 May 2013

 

Filastine @ Hidden Agenda – 8:30pm, 24 February 2013

Filastine + Pasha @ Hidden Agenda – 8:30pm, 24 February 2013
Hidden Agenda celebrates its 4th Anniversary with a series of concerts, the first of which features Filastine supported by Pasha.
Grey Filastine is an audio-visual artist born in Los Angeles, based in Barcelona, and often nomadic. He composes a dense transnational bass music that collides the lowest frequencies of dubstep with the highest-level beat science, acoustic strings, voices, and lofi street noises. The results are “Awesome and delicate… hybrids so fluent they defy classification.” -Pitchfork.

Filastine + Pasha @ Hidden Agenda – 8:30pm, 24 February 2013
8:30pm, 24 February 2013
牛頭角大業街15-17號永富工業大廈2樓A室
2A, Wing Fu Industrial Bldg, 15-17 Tai Yip Street, Kwun Tong
Tel: 9170 6073 (Kimi)
Tickets: $180(Advance), $200(Door) from www.ticketflap.com

Filastine + Pasha @ Hidden Agenda - 8:30pm, 24 February 2013
Filastine + Pasha @ Hidden Agenda – 8:30pm, 24 February 2013