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View Full Version : 12 Girls Band - These Girls Are HOT!!!


sandra
01-18-2004, 08:19 PM
i'm so obsessed with this band =p this makes me wonder what other areas of our culture we can incorporate into modern life to make it more appealing to today's youth...

12 Girls Band puts a new spin on old tunes

http://www.chinasprout.com/store/media/MCT030.jpg
Shenzhen Daily


Dressed identically in black sleeveless suits and high heels, the 12 females on stage appeared modern and fashionable. However, they weren't models, but traditional Chinese musicians.
Dubbed the 12 Girls Band, they presented traditional Chinese music mixed with modern pop, rock and jazz at the Shenzhen Grand Theater on Wednesday.

The show began with Miracle, a piece played with erhu, pipa, Chinese zither, Chinese dulcimer and flutes.

Passionate and rhythmic, the audience came to realize that these traditional instruments could also be used for hip-hop and rock.

The 12 Girls also put a Chinese twist to the jazz classics Five Beats and Seven Beats, gave a unique twist to Beethoven's Fate, and performed Liu Sanjie, an adaptation of a Guangxi folk song played with a single string fiddle.

An elderly man said after the show: "They are talented. They interpret Chinese music with a groove, and play foreign songs with a strong Chinese flavor."

The combination of spirited music, flawless performance, creative adaptation and feminine glamor have not only appealed to Chinese audiences but also won the band numerous fans overseas, especially in Japan.

More than 1.5 million CDs had been sold in Japan, since the band released its first album Miracle in July. That's a first for a Chinese album in a foreign country.

Wang Xiaojing, the group's founder, attributed the success to a blend of traditional and modern music, and the graceful but vigorous performers.

"Opinions within music circles are divided on whether it's good or not to modify traditional instrumental music with modern methods, or whether play popular music with Chinese instruments.

"However, the success of the band proves that people love the new style. Foreigners enjoy the performance and recognize the Chinese music," Wang said.

The 12 young musicians look beautiful and sophisticated. They were selected for the band from top students at the Central Conservatory of Music in 2001. Since then, they performed extensively in China and other countries and became well recognized, despite being publicity-shy.

One of the 12, Zhong Bao loves Nicole Kidman and jazz and plays the pipa. She said: "We all cherish the chance to perform as a team and to try a new artistic form. We've just got to keep improving and creating good music, otherwise we'll lose our appeal."

SunWuKong
01-18-2004, 10:11 PM
丁菲飛 (Ding Fei Fei) (http://www.boxup.com/big5/music/singeralbum/2/singeralbum92_1.htm) has been doing this for a while now with her er hu. she has an electric one and she can really play. but her music just never got too popular. it's probably because she doesn't have mass marketting.

Napoleon Chynamite
01-19-2004, 01:13 PM
I think I kinda remember reading about them somewhere someplace sometime...but I forgot where or when.

amietron
01-20-2004, 06:57 PM
what's a pipa? never mind. found it. traditional chinese lute (http://www.philmultic.com/pipa/).

listen to it here (http://www.philmultic.com/liufang/MP3/music/yidance1.mp3).

sandra
01-26-2004, 05:25 PM
ten ren tea is another example of traditional chinese culture incorporated into today's culture :)

AliBabaIncorporated
01-26-2004, 09:01 PM
Opinions within music circles are divided on whether it's good or not to modify traditional instrumental music with modern methods
Duh ... in a closed system, entropy remains constant or increases, until you reach the point where nothing more of value can be done, at which point your system is worthless. Or in less thermodynamic terms, closed inbred circles of assholes which refuse fresh thinking and exclude those who espouse it, decline in quality very quickly. True not just for science, but art, philosophy, and ethnic groups as well, at a macro or micro scale.

I for one fervently hope Chinese traditional instruments don't decline into museum pieces, but if they're only used to play songs as old as everything else in the museum, that's precisely what's gonna happen.

Green_Circle
01-26-2004, 09:50 PM
I just saw their video at one of those Sanrio type shops a couple days ago. They sound really good.

SunWuKong
01-28-2004, 11:56 PM
Duh ... in a closed system, entropy remains constant or increases, until you reach the point where nothing more of value can be done, at which point your system is worthless. Or in less thermodynamic terms, closed inbred circles of assholes which refuse fresh thinking and exclude those who espouse it, decline in quality very quickly. True not just for science, but art, philosophy, and ethnic groups as well, at a macro or micro scale.

well, it's very Confucian to maintain the old ways and eschew the new. i don't think they're being assholes. they're just conservative.

ellsworth81
01-29-2004, 05:44 AM
hmmm ... fusion music ... that sounds questionable.

so when are they going to appear in maxim?

kchen
04-18-2007, 06:00 PM
Wow, I heard about them, never knew what their music sounded like till now. Pretty good.

raacluse
04-18-2007, 08:56 PM
I'm afraid sex sells.

Hate to be a spoilsport but I find their stuff a mixed bag. Some is fine. Some is down-right schlock.

I hope they break out into smaller projects, and get away from galloping big productions.

Or maybe if they commissioned pieces by some of the well-known Chinese composers based in the U.S. like Chen Yi, Zhou Long, Bright Sheng, Tan Dun, etc.

So how long will they maintain their sex appeal?

Will they eventually be replaced by younger women, in the years to come?

Meanwhile, I'd imagine there must be 12 girls band fanzines and fansites that cover gossip like favorite foods, who has the most boyfriends, their blood types.

(It's only a matter of time before we find out some have experimented with drugs, entertained certain Communist officials in compromising situations, and remodeled their kitchens to look like Buckingham Palace.)

Call me cynical, but I foresee tragedies down the road. It may have a short term affect of bumping up ringtone sales, but eventually the music will suffer. Anyone who's seen "Behind the Music" knows all to well, what I'm talking about.

Gordman
08-03-2007, 05:59 AM
I think 12 is a little too much for my taste...