Quintessenso Hulunbei’er Children Choir to make U.S. debut with Lang Lang

Children of the Hulunbei'er plains come to the U.S.

Everyone’s favorite Quintessenso Hulunbei’er Children Choir, including children from four different ethnic minorities of the Hulunbei’er Plains, will be debuting in a performance along with pianist Lang Lang at the Lincoln Center on January 24th this year.  Lang Lang will also be playing on the 18th through the 21st.  More information and tickets here.

The group was founded by Mongolian singer Burenbaya’er and his wife, Evenki singer Wurina . The two gained national fame for their performance of 吉祥三宝 on the Spring Festival Gala. Since then, the two has been doing some of the most wonderful jobs in promoting the cultural heritage of the region, including a gorgeous Evenki album, an Evenki dance troupe, and the formation of the choir.  The Children’s Choir itself has been featured on a variety of shows, including Hunan TV’s Happy Camp and Gelivable Sunday, Dragon TV’s China’s Got Talent, and Taiwanese variety show Kangxi Laile.

Thanks to Benji for bringing this event to my attention!

Ethnic minorities in Chinese entertainment

Does she look Chinese to you?

One of the most frustrating things about introducing new Chinese artists are the “they don’t look Chinese” comments. Considering China has 56 official ethnicities with their ancestral homes in China, and who knows how many unofficial ones, and 1.3 billion people, it’s unfair to homogenize any part of China (or of the world ). And according to wikipedia, minority populations are rising at 7 times the rate of the Han Chinese because the One Child Policy only applies to Han Chinese (no, China is not trying to eliminate its minorities via One Child).

Photographer Chen Haiwen recently paid a tribute to the diversity of China by producing a series of photos that captured this diversity. Along with a team of photographers, he traveled across China for a year to take photos of a family from each ethnic group. Those, along with thousands of other photos captured on the trip, were put on display in Beijing’s WangFuJing Street last month. zhouzhzh on youtube has a slideshow of all the photos.

Here’s a spot light on some, definitely not all, minority Chinese artists in pop culture.

Super Girl He Jie

our Yi-group
manager: Super Boy Ji Jie and brand manager for Bacardi
members: two powerful and tomboyish songstresses SM’s lost cause Zhang Liyin
and really lost cause Super Girl He Jie
and boyband Blue Bird Flying Fish‘s 70.
HuHu’s not Yi, but he’s there by association. Maybe Zhang Yunjing can join, too, by marriage. (more…)

Epic Post 2: No More Lip-Synching

miaoke-peiyi

Lin Miaoke and Yang Peiyi

This bit of news is really, really old and I was not going to post on this at all, but I began writing an introduction to another post that eventually evolved into its own long-winded post, and so here we are with me talking politics all over again because I couldn’t bear to just drop what I had already spent time on. Btw, Epic post basically means political post now.

China, as you may know from reading other sites, has recently decided to ban lip-synching from commercial performances, which in my opinion was a decision that came from older people in the industry frustrated by the recent flood of idol singers and not for other reasons that western news sources like to conjecture about, such as the lip-synching girl, Lin Maoke at the Olympics. Basically the first 3/4 of this post talks about why I am so pissed at how the articles that came out about this revelation (revealed by Chinese committe head himself) were so ridiculously flawed, as the articles often were during the Olympics, and I think it’s ridiculous that this is still being stated as truth, like the Variety article I linked to. The last 1/4 talks about the Chinese entertainment circle and how and whom the ban would affect. Beware, this is even longer than my Gong Li Epic Post. (more…)