12-Girl Band
While Chinese
music still maintains its gentle and elegant flavor after thousands of years of
cultural heritage, the emergence of a new genre in Beijing
has made its mark. Twelve young, attractive Chinese women clad in trendy
clothing present "New Folk Music" of various Chinese traditional instruments.
Dubbed the
12-Girl Band, the group presents traditional Chinese music mixed with modern
pop, jazz and rock. The band's birth and rapid development is not accidental.
According to the band's engineer and builder Wang Xiaojing reforms must be made
to make Chinese folk music more enjoyable and to help it enter the international
market. As a result, the 12-Girl Band, which incorporates China's traditional
musical characteristics with western skills, was formed with Wang's impulse and
vision.
The idea of
forming a musical group like the 12-Girl Band had long been brewing in Wang's
mind, although it wasn't until June 2001 that the band was officially
established. The recruitment phase was full of bustle and excitement. A great
number of campus students and graduates from three major professional musical
academies -- the Central Conservatory of Music, China Conservatory of Music
and Central University for Nationalities -- participated in the
competition. But the 12 young women emerged triumphant.
All of the
members of 12-Girl Band grew up in musical families and began practicing
traditional Chinese music at the ages of six or seven. Having graduated from the
top arts universities in Beijing, all of them have won musical awards in various
instrumental competitions. The women not only excel in traditional music
instruments like the gu zheng, pi pa, er hu and yang qin, but can
also master some less familiar instruments like the du xian qin, tu liang
and ju chi qin. Wang also noted that besides musical skills and
accomplishments, another important requirement for recruitment was style and
charisma. The 12-Girl Band not only provides audiences with modern Chinese folk
music, but also emanates visual appeal.
The band's stage
presence diverges greatly from that of traditional Chinese musicians, as well.
Traditionally, performers played various instruments while seated; the women,
however, stand tall and use their body language to emit a strong atmosphere of
youthful vigor.
The musical
production team is composed of the leading domestic musical producers. The
adapted folk music incorporates the percussion and electronic music from the
West, which makes the traditional Chinese vibes more rhythmic and enthusiastic.
Chinese national music, woven with elements of western pop music, has made the
band very popular, especially among young people everywhere. The band cooperated
with a Japanese company to debut their first album on July 24, 2003, which had
already sold 1.8 million copies, winning a great honor for China's national
music.
The band has
delicately combined traditional Chinese sounds with modern popular elements,
creating a kind of new folk music that surpasses boundaries yet still maintains
the flavor of the Orient. This brand-new musical form and its unique stage
manner and charm have made the band a new emerging star in music
circles.
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