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A CNN video piece on our first U.S. tour.
TIME OT NEW YORK talks about our USA tour.
MTV IGGY talk about our first US tour. They also review our very first show in the USA, with photos and all…
Popcast with lead singers Yang Hai Song and Shouwang, from P.K.14 & Carsick Cars.
BROOKLYN VEGAN featured our tour on their very-influential blog.
The VILLAGE VOICE

Columbia
http://cuarts.com/artsglobal/chineseunderground

Economist Blog
http://www.moreintelligentlife.com/blog/erin-dejesus/nary-zither-nor-lute

Village Voice
http://www.villagevoice.com/events/carsick-cars-1461077/

Gallery opening of the week – Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/05/AR2009110501847.html

Nightlife Agenda – Washington Post
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/goingoutgurus/2009/11/nightlife_agenda_83.html

Cool Hunting
http://www.coolhunting.com/archives/2009/11/sound_kapital.php

Express Night Out
http://www.expressnightout.com/content/2009/11/sound-kapital-govinda.php

China Exports Rock and Roll – CNN
http://edition.cnn.com/video/#/video/showbiz/2009/11/05/chang.china.exports.rock.roll.cnn

Maybe Mars in NYC – SmartShanghai.com
http://www.smartshanghai.com/blog/1467/Maybe_Mars_in_NYC.html

Weekly Popcast: Wale, P.K. 14 and Carsick Cars

http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/11/12/weekly-popcast-wale-pk14-and-carsick-cars/?scp=1&sq=carsick%20cars&st=cse

Maybe Mars Presents: A Showcase of the Chinese Underground

“Carsick Cars and P.K. 14 represent two of China’s most visceral new acts” – THE GUARDIAN

“The Ten Best Classical-Music Performances of 2008: the brilliant young guitarist-composer Zhang Shouwang (Carsick Cars & White) casting a minimalist spell in a Beijing rock club” – THE NEW YORKER

“Asia’s Best Bands, 5 Asian Acts to Watch in 2008: P.K. 14” – TIME MAGAZINE

“Just as the 100 Club and CBGB fostered punk movements in London and New York City, Beijing’s D-22 nightclub serves as the epicentre for its burgeoning alternative music scene.” – THE ECONOMIST

“D-22 and Maybe Mars… now the center of new music in Beijing, are also home to the city’s expanding counterculture…” – WALL STREET JOURNAL

Maybe Mars Presents: A Showcase of the Chinese Underground. A formidable new wave of musicians has taken China’s music underground by storm. Working well outside government-controlled media channels they have, in the process, turned the ears of the international music community towards Beijing.

Maybe Mars and its sister club, D-22, have found themselves at the center of the burgeoning scene. The artists signed to Maybe Mars represent a fresh, independent voice in a country renowned for creative conformity and saccharine Cantopop. For now, China remains in a tense state between the socialist idealism of old and a drive for wealth spurred by free-market reforms. These contradictions tear at the country’s social fabric, while simultaneously provoking and inspiring younger generations to greater artistic heights, especially in the realm of music.

Given the brutal industrialization, destruction and reconstruction of China’s rapidly changing urban landscapes it is probably no surprise that Beijing musicians are heavily influenced by the no-wave sounds of New York in the late 1970s and early 1980s. They have nonetheless reconfigured this vocabulary to fit with Chinese opera’s traditional delight with textural experimentation and a centuries-long history of infatuation with shimmering melodic structures. With the sound of broken-down machines cranking out lovely pop songs, the unique sound emerging from China’s music underground aggressively questions the moral and social basis of the fragile modernity on which it subsists.

Maybe Mars is the youngest of the two leading Chinese independent music labels. It was started by musicians who had found a home at D-22, the rock club that is credited with giving crucial exposure and support to Beijing’s exploding music scene. In its two years of existence, it has already signed 24 folk, rock, experimental and noise musicians and bands, including most of the artists at the forefront of China’s music underground.

For the first time, three Maybe Mars artists – P.K. 14, Carsick Cars, & Xiao He – will appear on American shores.

Artist descriptions:

P.K 14 – Ask any of the younger bands about their influences and it is pretty obvious that P.K.14 has had the biggest impact of any local band on the growing Beijing scene. However, their artistic intensity and the care with which they write their songs do not keep them from completely rocking out, and their shows in China and abroad regularly receive critical acclaim. Often referred to as China’s best underground band, P.K.14, more than any other band, set the stage for the Beijing musical explosion.


Carsick Cars – One of the most widely admired bands in Beijing’s underground, Carsick Cars have played major festivals and concerts in China and abroad with the likes of Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr., Ex Models and These Are Powers. Employing the ferocious aural attack of one of China’s most brilliant guitarists and composers, Shouwang, they tear through their beautifully crafted songs in a thrilling but almost religious orgy of violence. Carsick Cars, whose “Zhong nan hai” is considered the anthem of Chinese countercultural youth, just released their second CD this summer, which was produced by Wharton Tiers, who also produced CDs for Sonic Youth, Glenn Branca, and Dinosaur Jr.


Xiao He – In recent years Xiao He started reaching deep into the surreal folk traditions of a fast-disappearing China in much the same way Tom Waits immersed himself in the apocalyptic Christian mythologies of the American Deep South. With his combination of southern Chinese mysticism and Beijing gruff he has created a strange, stirring vision of a 19th-century China crashing violently into a 21st-century China of boiling rivers and crumbling factories. Xiao He has released many CDs over the years but continues to astonish audiences, including one recently at the Barbican in London, with his progressively eclectic sound that draws upon traditional instrumentation and vocal arrangements looped within his live performances.



Music, bio, interviews, art and more available upon request.

Confirmed shows:

Day of week Dates City Venue Lineup
Weds 11/4/2009 Manhattan, NYC VON Xiao He & Shouwang (from Carsick Cars)
Thurs 11/5/2009 Brooklyn, NYC powerHouse Arena Xiao He & Carsick Cars & P.K. 14
Fri 11/6/2009 Brooklyn, NYC Glasslands MyOpenBar presents These Are Powers, Soft Circle, Carsick Cars, P.K.14 & Xiao He
Sat 11/7/2009 Manhattan, NYC WKCR: SOUNDS OF CHINA (10am) Xiao He (live).
Sat 11/7/2009 Manhattan, NYC SANTOS Party House P.K.14 , Carsick Cars, Antimagic, & BJ Rubin, Knyfe Hyts (TBC),
Tues 11/10/2009 Chapel Hill, NC UNC - Chapel Hill P.K.14 , Xiao He, & Carsick Cars
Weds 11/11/2009 Richmond, VA The Triple P.K.14 , Xiao He, & Carsick Cars
Thurs 11/12/2009 Philadelphia, PA Club Polaris / Starlight Ballroom Dance Club
460 N 9th Street
Philadelphia
PA
$10 / All Ages
P.K.14 , Xiao He, & Carsick Cars
Fri 11/13/2009 Washington, DC Velvet Lounge P.K.14 & Xiao He, & Pablonious
Fri 11/13/2009 Amherst, MA Hampshire College Carsick Cars, Pink Reason, & Pop. 1280
Sat 11/14/2009 Purchase, NY SUNY Purchase Carsick Cars, Pink Reason, & Pop. 1280
Sat 11/14/2009 Washington, DC Govinda Gallery Xiao He
Sun 11/15/2009 Pittsburgh, PA Garfield Arts PK-14, Xiao He, CSC & Surfer Blood
Tues 11/17/2009 Baltimore, MD Open Space

2720 Sisson St. Baltimore, MD 21211

PK-14, Xiao He, & Carsick Cars
Thurs 11/19/2009 Waterville, ME Colby College Carsick Cars, P.K.14 & Xiao He
Fri 11/20/2009 Manhattan, NYC Ding Dong Lounge Octagon, Carsick Cars, P.K.14 & Xiao He
Sat 11/21/2009 Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY Secret Project Robot Carsick Cars, P.K.14, Xiao He, Aa, Knyfe Hyts 81 & others…
Sun 11/22/2009 Manhattan, NYC PERFORMA’09, Grande Finale Shouwang, Xiao He, and many others…

Some Media Mentions:

Turning Japanese heads to China: The Shanghai scene

Aug 4, 2009

Rocking Beijing: China’s underground music scene

July 24, 2009


Alex Ross: The Ten Best Classical- Music Performances of 2008

Dec 8, 2008

Beijing’s Revolution

Jul. 17, 2008

Symphony of Millions: Taking stock of the Chinese music boom.

July 7, 2008

Asia’s Best Bands: 5 Asian Acts to Watch in 2008

July, 2008

Daydream Nation

July 16, 2008

Destined: White

Jan, 2007

For All the Rock in China

Nov 25, 2007

China’s Underground Punks

October, 2009

Here are links to high-resolution publication-ready photos of all 3 bands:

http://www.mdnphoto.com/download/maybemars_carsickcars.zip
http://www.mdnphoto.com/download/maybemars_pk14.zip
http://www.mdnphoto.com/download/maybemars_xiaohe.zip

Please credit Matthew Niederhauser for all images or contact him at [email protected] if more photos are needed.

For all other enquiries, please contact:

Charles Saliba
U.S. mobile: +1.917.449.2431

October 25th, avant-garde folk musician Xiao He got married in Beijing. As one would expect at the wedding of one of China’s most admired and best-known performers, the cream of China’s folk and experimental scene was in attendance, including Zhao Yiran, Zhang Weiwei, Zhong Lifeng, Wan Xiaoli, Dongzi, Zhang Yingmei, Zhang Yuedong, Li Tieqiao, Xifu, Guo Long, Qiao Xiaodao, Song Yuzhe. Along with the musicians were other major figures in the underground scene, including music critic Zhang Xiaozhou and half of the team at Maybe Mars, Xiao He’s label.

In early 2009 after completing his first European tour, Xiao He signed with Maybe Mars and soon after released his sophomore album “Identity Performance”. This album is a double disc set. The first CD is a studio improvised recording. The second CD is a selection of previous live recordings, called “Personal Symphony”. The studio recording juxtaposes thousands of ways of combining vocal sounds with the sound of his guitar as he wrestles with and reinterprets his understanding of Minimalism.

After the wedding, Xiao He packed his bags to begin his three week tour of New York and the largest East Coast cities. Joining him on the 20 performances associated with the tour are label mates P.K. 14 and Carsick Cars.

this is TONIGHT: 24 Hours 1st album Release Party

Time: 16th Oct Fri 22:00
Artist:24 Hours,The Offset: Spectacles,Rustic
Price: 50 / 40 (students)

October 10th (10/10) marked 10’s Fourth Year Anniversary. Everyone at Maybe Mars wants to congratulate them on four great years! We want you to celebrate with us by listening to their song “Gajang“:

Get the Flash Player to see the wordTube Media Player.
and checking out their brand new music video for “Mimi, UA” off of the album ‘Kitsch’:

We recently helped bring Brooklyn Ghost-Punks, THESE ARE POWERS, to China. Upon their return to New York, there have been several articles about their trip, check them out:

We are excited that an extensive article in the Wall Street Journal talks all about the bustling music scene here in Beijing and China. They mention many of our bands, and also our little label…

During the just-released Chinese Music Media Awards, Carsick Cars’ second album “You Can Listen, You Can Talk” had the honor of becoming the only selected entry from mainland China’s underground rock world , other winners were Zhang Hanging, Chang Hui-Mei, and Karen Mok. These albums were selected as the Top Ten albums this summer.

Carsick Cars recorded their second album in November 2008 with well-known New York producer Wharton Tiers. Wharton Tiers has produced Sonic Youth, Swans, Dinosaur JR, Nick Cave and other well-known bands. “You Can Listen, You Can Talk” came out on June 26, 2009 to critical acclaim.