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On the Record is your guide to the past, present, and future of Beijing's music scene.
Stream: Bandcamp (Maybe Mars), Douban
Who are they: On the face of it, surf rock and post-punk should be at odds with each other. One basks in sun-drenched melodies and glistening leads while the other traffics in brooding, perforated beats with blistering bass lines. It’s the golden beaches of Los Angeles during the summer of ’66 versus the dreary back alleys of Manchester in 1979. To imagine a world in which surf rock and post-punk coexist is to imagine a world in which Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys and Joy Division’s Ian Curtis – aside from being equally visionary musicians – have anything in common. It’s an imaginative leap that’s seemingly out of reach, and yet on their 2018 debut Human Nature Architecture, Backspace sails across that chasm with proverbial flying colors.
That’s not to say you should expect Pet Sounds’ arrangements or anything as caustic as Unknown Pleasures, but you will find an aesthetic veneer that is pleasantly familiar while remaining utterly unique.
The manifesto that is Human Nature Architecture is basically written within the first 57 seconds of the record, as the band outlines in a bullet-point fashion of ten-second bursts their krautrock, surf rock, post-punk, and noise rock ideologies, before vocalist Zheng Dong quite literally gives voice to the cause. What follows is a 45 minute-long double exposure, in which that sunny Southern California aesthetic is superimposed over a foggy backwater town in the UK.
Images: courtesy of Backspace
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