Hong Kong Considers Reducing Liquor Tax, a Move that Could Revitalize Tourism

Hong Kong has one of the highest alcohol taxes in the world, with a 100% excise tax (an indirect tax charged by the government on certain goods that may be linked to health issues) on spirits with an alcohol content over 30%. The special administrative region surpasses its closest competitor, the Micronesian Island of Kiribati, where taxes on spirits are at 93.53%, as well as Norway, where the tax is set at 88.87%.

However, this high alcohol tax could soon change. In the upcoming policy address on October 16, Hong Kong Chief Executive John Lee is expected to announce a reduction in liquor tax. 

Commentators and industry professionals speculate that the move may be aimed at revitalizing the city’s struggling tourism sector, particularly its nightlife, which is vital for its economy. Hong Kong’s tourism industry has struggled in recent years, especially after the pandemic. People who are familiar with Hong Kong’s nightlife scene may not be surprised by this measure. In 2008, Hong Kong abolished the excise tax on non-spirits, leading to a surge in the wine trade, with the city becoming a global center for wine auctions and fine dining. 

Joe Milner, Managing Director at alcohol beverage supplier Milestone Beverages HK commented, “The government and industry have been talking about a reduction in spirits tax for decades now with no avail, and it’s great to see that it’s really going to happen this time.”

“Like with the abolishment of the wine tax and the global trend of spirits consumption, it’s great to see that Hong Kong could become the spirits trading hub of the APAC region,” he added.

In 2024, Hong Kong had nine entries in Asia’s 50 Best Bars, with Bar Leone ranked first. Image via Bar Leone

Currently, Hong Kong faces growing competition from nightlife hubs like Tokyo and Singapore, especially in the wake of the pandemic and as the Chinese mainland’s economic slowdown impacts tourism. 

With nine entries in Asia’s 50 Best Bars in 2024 — including the number one pick, Bar Leone — Hong Kong is clearly known for its high quality drinking establishments. Reducing liquor taxes could further strengthen its night-time economy, attracting more visitors and supporting its hospitality industry, crucial for sustaining its global nightlife appeal.

Milner noted, “Most of this tax reduction will benefit premium and luxury spirits, which will be great for the city, consumers, and distributors.” 

As the Managing Director explained, if one currently pays 1,600 HKD for a bottle of the whiskey Johnnie Walker Blue Label, that price could potentially drop by 25%. This reduction would encourage tourists to purchase more high-end spirits in Hong Kong instead of opting for lower-tax markets like Japan, Singapore, and Taiwan. 

Banner image via Concrete Playground.

“All-connected-ness”: An Interview with Artist Julian Junyuan Feng

Artist, writer, and curator Julian Junyuan Feng’s Instagram handle is philipglasswasataxidriver, a sobriquet that’s memorable enough that I’ve heard people use it to refer to him offline. After all, it’s a factually accurate reminder that even artists need a reliable way to pay the rent. If that was already the case for a major minimalist composer in the much-mythologized ungentrified New York of the 1970s, it applies even more now. Artists in any medium not only need to create work and worry about financial stability, but also constantly serve as their own advocates and promoters (hence the Instagram account).

It’s a delicate balance, one that Feng (who was born in Sichuan province in 1991) is navigating from Zhuhai in Guangdong province, having recently relocated from Shanghai to take a position as a senior lecturer in film and new media at BNU-HKBU International College. While Feng began his artistic career creating essays films that traced out hidden linkages between technology, Cold War intrigue, and facets of online pop culture, he’s since moved into producing physical objects (sculptures, prints of computer-generated imagery, and more) that explore similar themes — and occasionally imply an interest in medieval armor.

RADII caught with Feng over email to learn more about his practice, touching upon work-life (and art) balance, granular synthesis, and nostalgia for 90s globalism along the way.

The following interview has been edited for clarity and length.

Jester’s Angst, 2022, cotton fabric, beeswax, linseed oil, low-carbon steel, stainless steel, hare hide, leather, 60 x 34 x 108 cm. Courtesy the artist.

Simon Frank: Since a lot of your work is computer-generated, I wanted to ask what your work process is like? Do you go from ideation and research directly into animation/imaging programs? Is there a stage of sketching or experimentation with raw materials?

Julian Junyuan Feng: Yes, there indeed exists a stage of sketching and noodling around in software with whatever raw material I can find. It’s funny that I completely lack the basic training of drawing, which means I usually can only do the very important pre-visualization stage in the 3D production software I use, and am limited and guide-railed by the specificities of the software. Needless to say, there’s often a huge gap between ideation/research and the final outcome, in a good or bad way, depending on the models, plugins, workflows, and tricks that I stumble upon. In the same vein, a lot of my ideas couldn’t come into fruition in a visual form, for the lack of certain know-how and realistic low-budget, one-person-crew solutions. I personally feel that everything after the ideation and research stage manifests itself as an engineering problem. Sometimes I enjoy solving them, but most often I don’t. It’s a pity that our ideas are almost infinitely malleable, but our material world is not.

Air Rage (video still), 2023, HD video, sound, color, 2’01”. Courtesy the artist.

Simon: As I understand, you started out making essay films, but recently have been working a bit with sculpture. What fuelled this exploration? Do you think it’s something you’ll continue?

Julian: In hindsight, making essay films seemed a natural inclination after being trained in art grad schools. When I look at practitioners a bit younger than me, I see a similar tendency. Art schools, at least the ones I went to, put a lot of emphasis on producing discursive works. Essay film in general is a budget-friendly way to put out discourses and the genre itself welcomes polemics and combativeness, which can be very desirable for young artists. Also, the production procedures can be fairly repeatable and integrated into something like an assembly line, with found footage, archival materials, voice-overs, a little bit of visual effects, so on and so forth. I stopped making essay films because I saw the segment of young moving-image artists in China became saturated with essay film aficionados, and the whole thing felt a little bit formulaic after just a few years. I started to make sculptures because it was the medium that I had zero training in and was most curious about. Although making sculptures always entails inevitable overheads — extra money, resources and logistic efforts — I still enjoy it and will continue to do so.

Breakwater #4, 2022, fiberglass, cement texture paint, electric air pump, anti-bedsore air mattress, 2022, 145 x 145 x 130 cm. Courtesy the artist.

Simon: It seems that much of your work examines issues people all over the world encounter as “global citizens” — global warming, macro-systems, encounters with non-places. What draws you to these topics, and what do you think is illuminating about observing them from China?

Julian: The appearance of “global” issues in my works may only be a side effect of something else. I don’t think I’m pursuing “globalness” per se when choosing topics to explore — even the word “global citizen” feels a little bit nostalgic these days […] I’m interested in something that literary scholar Emily Apter once dubbed “one-worlded-ness,” or, some others may call “all-connected-ness.” It is a specific paranoiac epistemology inherited from the Cold War and is still very much alive today, a view that spurs conspiracy theories and is hostile to forms of exchanges, be it cultural, material or bodily. Although extremely “weird,”  this paranoiac world view also holds a certain degree of truth in it. Remember the often-quoted Frederic Jameson line, conspiracy theories are “poor man’s cognitive mapping.” We are deprived of the right to know in the modern world, either because of the power institutions designed to keep us in the dark, or because the world system simply grew too big and too complex for a human mind to grasp. Sometimes the only walking stick left is our own imaginations, and in that case, it doesn’t matter anymore if the “knowledge” we get by reasoning through imaginary connections are factually sound or not.

Recently I was teaching a course on the history of computer graphics and my students were shocked to find out the military origin of their beloved 3D games and cute avatars. It all started from a research grant that the University of Utah got from the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). To give another example, not long ago I learned that the Black Panther members who were part of the delegation to Maoist China in the early 70s brought back a special ear acupuncture technique in order to detox their community and curb the ongoing heroin crisis. This was a vivid case of people’s medicine and South-South alliance. The undercurrents veiled by mainstream historiography might in fact be the most inspiring.

Lil Gorby, the Marked One, 2023, CGI, archival inkjet print, 60 x 48 cm. Courtesy the artist.

Speaking of the piece I did about Gorbachev’s forehead, although Gorbachev stepped down as the Soviet Union’s supreme leader two weeks before I was born in 1991, I still have vivid childhood memories of his TV clips, with his telegenic disposition and his sprawling, archipelago-like birthmarks. A few years ago I learned about the myriad of jests and conspiracy theories about his birthmarks. Even mischievous postmodern novelists like Don DeLillo poked fun at them. I can totally relate to these bizarre, slapstick, somewhat low-brow infatuations and in fact they were just stand-ins for a repressed curiosity about the deeper structure of the human world. These stranger-than-fiction, mind-bending connections, when properly historicized, become uniquely revealing. So, to answer the question, the “globalness” in my work is just a façade, and deep at work is the boundary-breaking and deterritorialization effect inherent to these weird connections.

Simon: Do you think being in Shanghai gives one a different perspective as opposed to other cities in China? In that regard, how do you think your relocation to Zhuhai might influence your work?

Julian: To be perfectly honest, I moved to Zhuhai for a teaching position, which I very much needed due to a sluggish economy and the financial difficulties I experienced as a freelancer in Shanghai. I still much prefer living in Shanghai over other Chinese cities. However, maybe moving a bit away from the often cacophonic Shanghai art scene is good for my well-being and concentration.

What a Great Place to Put a Data Center, 2022, game-engine rendered image, LED light box, aluminum 150 x 18 x 66 cm.

Simon: What advantages does China offer young artists? What are some difficulties you face?

Julian: The biggest difficulty I encounter is that it is really hard to see good and inspiring art in China. Not saying that art here is all trash, but I often see more repetition and derivatives, and the range of topics are always limited. Another downside is that the market here plays too big of a role in the ecosystem of art — which may be true everywhere — but because of the severe lack of institutional and academic players in Chinese contemporary art, the issue becomes extremely pressing. Speaking of advantages, if any, I would say it’s the relatively low production and living costs, when compared to places usually perceived as art capitals.

Simon: Though your work deals with some fairly heavy themes, I feel there’s also an element of humor involved in pieces like Lil Gorby, the Marked One (2023), or Minerva’s Drone Crashes at Dusk (2023), even the Pinocchio-like figure in Der Bau (2023). Do you think about humor while creating work? Why is it important to you, or not?

Julian: I think I am a fairly funny person, but also generally pessimistic about the state of affairs, politically or economically. One can dissect cynicism as either funny pessimism or pessimistic funniness. I don’t think cynicism is necessarily a bad thing, especially in a cruel world which we can do very little about. Cynicism can be productive and an art of its own, not in the sense that it produces anything concretely, but that it can be uniquely revealing. Oftentimes, I find topics that I am very interested in, for example, an episode in the Japanese leftist movement, or some weird technical object from the Cold War era, but I struggle to find a funny enough angle to tackle it. For me the humor and funniness is the magic sauce of a good artwork, something that helps to differentiate it from a piece of academic writing or a hodgepodge of notes and sketches. A lot of research-based biennale art today feels pedantic and derivative for presenting its research “as is” and lacking affects of sensible intensity. Over the years I never quite managed to infuse my work with a strong affect like awe, disgust, or grief, which I really really wanted to do. A sense of humor ends up being the least I can do. I would say it is still suboptimal, but that’s how cynics see things anyway.

Cheval de frise, 2022, steel angles, stainless steel clamps, custom-made drum set, tambourine, 115 x 100 x 87 cm. Courtesy the artist.

Simon: Finally, I know you went through a modular synth/music hardware phase. Have you made soundtracks for any of your video pieces? Knowing that you recently gave a lecture related to Detroit techno, what interested you about this technology or means of producing music?

Julian: I’ve made some very simple soundtracks for my videos using basic audio stretching, pitch shift, beats slicing, and sometimes granular synthesis. Unfortunately I had very little training in music theory and instruments. I wish I could compose and assemble a good soundtrack in the future. My previous enthusiasm about synthesizers and music hardware was part of my general interest in mechanism and apparatus. When entering a new field of inquiry or hobby, the impulse to learn and acquire hardware usually feels the strongest, which was also true when I learned about photography, film, or CGI. More often than not my craze on hardware and technology becomes counterproductive and distracting. I am still extremely interested in the history of electronic music and beat-making as a form of resistance, but I don’t think I can proceed any further in proper music-making due to limited time and energy.

Banner image: Minerva’s Drone Crashes at Dusk, 2023, CGI, archival inkjet print, 40 x 40 cm. Courtesy the artist.

Chinese Basketball Star Cui Yongxi Joins the Brooklyn Nets

Brooklyn is about to learn how southern China hoops: rising Guangxi-born basketball star Cui Yongxi has signed a two-year two-way deal with the Brooklyn Nets. 21-year-old Cui, who also goes by the English name Jacky, joined the Portland Trail Blazers in the NBA Summer League this year, and previously played for the Guangzhou Loong Lions in the Chinese Basketball Association (CBA).

His contract allows him to represent both the Brooklyn Nets and their G League development team, the Long Island Nets. While Cui is expected to spend time in Long Island, it’s also possible he’ll be called up to the NBA during the regular season.

Cui has said he aims to develop as a “3-and-D” player who can make 3-point shots and contribute to defence.

Brooklyn Nets new signing Cui Yongxi shows off his new jersey.
Cui shows off his new jersey. Image via Lanqiu Diantang.

1.99 meters tall, Cui has already played for China’s men’s national basketball team. He represented his country in the 2023 FIBA Basketball World Cup and 2022 Asian Games, helping China win bronze in the latter.

If Cui makes it into an NBA game, he will be only the eighth athlete from the Chinese mainland to play in the league. The only current NBA player with Chinese citizenship is the Golden State Warriors’ Kyle Anderson, whose great-grandfather was a Chinese immigrant to Jamaica. Anderson was naturalized in 2023. Before that, the last time a Chinese national was in the NBA was Zhou Qi’s 2017 to 2018 stint at the Houston Rockets.

Cui may be poised for potential superstardom, but he’s not the only basketball player in his family. He’s claimed that his sister is “more talented” than him, and his father Cui Guangming, who went viral in China last year for still being able to dunk at age 48, is known as a formidable street ball player.

Cui Yongxi and his dad, Cui Guangming. Image via Wo de Maoming Luntan.

Banner image via Dahua Tiyu Quan.

Huawei Launches the Mate XT, the World’s First Tri-fold Phone

Gone are the days when the conception of a smartphone phone was limited to a single screen. Last week, Huawei released its latest phone model, the Huawei Mate XT, which is the world’s first tri-fold phone. In doing so, the Chinese tech giant has managed to steal some thunder from Apple’s recent launch of the iPhone 16.

When folded, the Mate XT is like any other smartphone currently on the market, about the size of an adult hand. However, it weighs 300 grams, slightly heavier than the iPhone 16 at 170 grams. The exterior is engraved with the text “Designed and Crafted by HUAWEI.”

The real magic happens when the phone is unfolded. Turning the original screen around, the phone can be opened like a book, instantly revealing a horizontal screen that is exactly the length of two phone screens side-by-side. From there, flipping over the third screen reveals a 10.2 inch tablet. You can even flip one of the screens back to act as a stand for your display.

Huawei Mate XT, the world's first tri-fold phone.
The Huawei Mate XT in its folded form. Image via X.PIN.

Most netizens who have gotten their hands on the phone marvel at how thin the device is when unfolded. For those who game, the lightweight Mate XT also has an advantage over tablets like the iPad, which is roughly the same size but weighs around 487 grams. 

However, this is also the most expensive phone made in China, starting at 19,999 RMB or around 2,850 USD. And that’s if you’re lucky enough to get one: over 5 million people registered for a spot in line before the phones even went on sale. 

Netizens joked that buying the flashy, high tech Mate XT is like investing in an expensive bottle of Maotai. Others compared it to buying stocks, which proved to be an apt analogy. In less than a week, the phone was already reselling on second-hand platforms for 10,000 RMB more than its original price. 

One reseller compared dealing with the Mate XT to riding a roller coaster, as the phone was reselling for up to 90,000 RMB when it was first sold, but dropped to 30,000 RMB by the third day. “It’s like a gambler’s mindset, if you think 30,000 RMB is too low to sell, tomorrow it might only be selling for 20,000 RMB.”

So if you’re lucky enough to buy a Huawei Mate XT, then resell it, you might end up making more than enough money to get yourself the latest hot pink iPhone 16, which is selling for just 5999 RMB or 855 USD.

Banner image via X.PIN.

Adrian Cheng Steps Down as New World Development’s CEO Following First Loss in Two Decades

Adrian Cheng Chi-kong stepped down as CEO and Executive Vice Chairman of Hong Kong-based property giant New World Development following the company’s first annual loss in 20 years, with a staggering deficit of 19.68 billion HKD (approximately 2.5 billion USD) for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2024. This marks a significant decline from the last reported loss in 2004, which totaled 975 million HKD.

In 2007, Cheng joined the board of New World Development as an executive director and became CEO in 2020 during a challenging period marked by a nearly 25% drop in revenues. Under his leadership, the K11 brand emerged as a hallmark of the company, blending art, culture, and retail across Hong Kong and the Chinese mainland in cities like Shanghai and Guangzhou. 

Notably, Hong Kong’s K11 Musea stands out as a vibrant hub for art and lifestyle, showcasing Cheng’s vision for high-end retail. As part of its restructuring, New World Development will spin off five key K11 assets, including the K11 brand and the Gentry Club, selling them to Adrian Cheng for 209 million HKD (approximately 25 million USD), allowing him to retain a significant role in the brand’s global expansion.

Hong Kong’s K11 Musea is a landmark where culture blends with retail. Image via Jing Daily Culture.

This spin-off indicates a strategic pivot for New World Development as it seeks to stabilize its finances. While the company has not disclosed specific numbers, reports suggest that staff cuts may accompany these changes, reflecting the broader challenges facing the property sector in Hong Kong, which has been mired in a prolonged downturn since 2019. The company had previously warned of the loss, citing different issues — such as asset impairments, losses on investments, and higher interest rates. New World’s woes have been intensified by a real estate slump as the city loses its allure as a financial hub.

Effective immediately, Eric Ma Siu-cheung has been appointed as the new CEO of New World Development. With 38 years of experience in land planning and construction, Ma brings extensive expertise in urban development and infrastructure from both public service and the private sector. Having previously served as the Secretary for Development, he has shaped key policies affecting the city’s infrastructure and housing markets, positioning him to lead New World through its current challenges and potentially revitalize its brand and market presence.

Adrian Cheng said he submitted the resignation a few weeks ago and expressed a commitment to public service, “I believe it is time for me to focus on contributions to society and pursue my passion for art and culture. I am confident that New World Development will continue to thrive under new leadership.” 

Cheng will take on the role of Non-Executive Vice Chairman of the company. 

His father, Henry Cheng Kar-shun, added, “I fully respect and support his decision to dedicate more time to public service, and I firmly believe he will bring about positive and far-reaching changes for society.”

Rudi Leung voices out his opinion about Adrian Cheung’s potential role and influence moving forward. Image via Leung’s thread.

Rudi Leung, founder of the creative agency Hungry Digital and a marketing expert, stated “I hope the Arts Development Bureau or the Tourism Development Bureau will hire Adrian Cheung Chi-kong as a part-time official. His presence would bring a level of sophistication that is often lacking, as taste can be cultivated with investment.” 

The Cheng family remains one of Hong Kong’s wealthiest dynasties, with a fortune estimated at 22.1 billion USD, according to Forbes. The family’s business interests span various sectors —  including property, jewelry, and logistics. While Adrian Cheng’s departure marks a new chapter for New World Development, the family’s legacy and influence in the Hong Kong business landscape are likely to endure, particularly with the continuing success of the K11 brand.

Banner image via Marketing Interactive

New Chinese Rap, Ambient Techno, Indie Pop, and More

September’s new releases showcase, per usual, the crazy diversity of music in China’s scene today. It’s all here, from Chainhaha’s atmospheric synth pop, to Demon & Eleven Children’s fuzzed-out sludge rock, and all manner of hip hop, from J-Fever, Eddie Beatz, and Zhou Shijue’s soulful collaboration as Heart-Healing Frequency (心愈频率), to Charity SsB’s edgy, electronic rap — Editor.

Wang Yiling 王忆灵 – Ode to Wither 枯萎颂

Making chamber pop with an avant-garde edge and expansive art pop veneer, Wang Yiling strikes gold on her ambitious, singular, and captivating LP Ode to Wither. Steering clear of the often bland and vapid arrangements found in Chinese folk music, Yiling, along with an arsenal of instruments (strings, accordions, clarinets, cello, and even harmonium) and maverick performers (including Bokai and Li Zenghui) at hand, has crafted arrangements dense in layers and rich in details. Set to the singer-songwriter’s restrained yet impassioned voice and a poetic poise not afraid to peer into the darkness of our lives, Yiling has crafted a delicate, elegant, and precious work of art.

Chainhaha – Za Nang Zz Nang

Chainhaha — the young independent singer-songwriter whose sound seduces, haunts, and bewilders in equal measure — returns with her latest LP. Za Nang Zz Nang is a tapestry of folk, synth pop, and trip hip that recalls the nymphish digital wonderlands of Bjork. At the core of Chainhaha’s latest is a harmonious melding of the organic and inorganic. Its delicately rendered digital provocations weave seamlessly into the singer’s graceful and otherworldly intonation, communicating with the spirits that populate the world. 

想想XiangXiang – Hear it, XiangXiang it! 也就听个想

Canton noise pop busting at the seams in youthful vitality, Guangzhou’s XiangXiang dazzle on their fizzy and fuzzy debut Hear it, XiangXiang it! Full of spunk, musical chops, and power chords, there’s a wistful fizzy exuberance to their brand of noise pop that’s infectious — brimming with a wide-eyed grin and an intrepid spirit. Evoking acts like Lonely Cookies, yourboyfriendsucks, and Carsick Cars whilst charting their own course, there’s not an ounce of fat across its twelve tracks. The band know exactly when to catch their breath and when to rev up the reverb.

Deep Water 水太深 – Deep Water II 

Chengdu dream pop duo Deep Water return with their sophomore release, the aptly named Deep Water II. Pushing ahead with their slick, sultry, and hazy sound, their latest finds the band leaning more into Mazzy Star territory — submerging listeners in simmering synths and wistful guitar chords — and letting singer Xiao Man’s smoky vocals do the heavy lifting. As before, there’s a pulpy efficiency to their music that’s seductive and easing. And production-wise, it’s a feast for the ears. Derivative maybe, but it’s hard to deny how damn delectable it all is. 

CharitySsB – CLEMENCY

Alternative rapper Charity SsB — whose emotionally-charged melodies are coated in everything from hard-hitting industrial beats, tipsy trap stylings, and sugar-coated vaporwave pop — has been a staple of the Shanghai scene for years. His latest, CLEMENCY, released with esteemed Shanghai electronic music label GENOME 6.66 Mbp, sees the artist throwing on his producer hat for the first time. This “bold venture” into music production pays off quite well, finding the perfect balance between its deconstructed club sheen and his ethereal, wraithlike vocals (which mostly fade to the background), accumulating in the ten-minute piece “WOOD HOUSE” — a heady ascent into divinity.   

ROMO 如梦 – Echoes of Paper 纸山脊

Indie rockers ROMO, out of Wuhan, pivot and mature on their sophomore release Echoes of Paper (纸山脊), released with Maybe Mars. Colored with a quieter, looser, and warmer hue, the band wisely zeroes in on their rustic cowboy blues musicality. Think grungy angst and self-reflective lyricism — a far cry from their post punk brethren. Its noise rock pop sensibilities and post rock meanderings may not be to everyone’s liking, and some might find its tonalities lacking in dynamism. But I hear a band gradually shaking off the weight of their influences and finding their own voice in the process.  

J-Fever 小老虎, Eddie Beatz 也是福, Zhou Shijue 周士爵 – Your Voice Has Changed (你的声音变了) 

One of our favorite team-ups in the past few years has been Heart-Healing Frequency (心愈频率), a trio made up of hip hop acts J-Fever (小老虎), Eddie Beatz (也是福), Zhou Shijue (周士爵), and their brand of vintage evocative, soulful hip hop. They’ve returned with a third volume of music last month, Your Voice Has Changed (你的声音变了). The lead single off the release is “欢聚” (Huānjù), a gorgeous embracing hug of a song and a love letter to the bonds we create and the need to cherish every gathering. For the track, the team gathered a murderer’s row of singers to create a gospel chorus — special guests include Voision Xi, Fishdoll, Kirby, Dara, and Leo1Bee, among others.

Demon & Eleven Children – Demonic Fascination

Sludgy, muddy, and stone-cold cool — something wicked this way comes on Demon & Eleven Children’s raw and heavy new LP, Demonic Fascination, released with SloomWeep Productions. With an old school grime that evokes classic psychedelic rock and blues rock just as much as modern-edged stoner metal and proto-doom, the band captures a down-and-dirty sound that oozes with attitude and lewd pleasures. It grinds down your soul in all the right ways. 

Wu Zhuoling – Reverie

Chengdu based producer Wu Zhuoling, known for her ambient-laced soundscapes and multi-layered dance rhythms, returns to the dancefloor with her latest, Reverie. Dank, dense, and atmospheric, its nature-informed meditative qualities blossom into up-tempo techno euphoria. In many ways, this is Zhuoling’s most accessible album yet, evoking the starry-eyed cerebral soundscapes of Jon Hopkins whilst never losing sight of its melodic club sensibilities. A richly detailed finely woven tapestry of ethereal dance music. 

Ying Shui Di Jiang 英水帝江 – Riding on the Wind 乘風 

Formed by Nanjing artist Zhao Yuan and featuring a rotating crew of members from the “world music” world, Ying Shui Di Jiang has been on quite the journey for the past two decades, in the words of WV Sorcerer label boss Ruo Tan, “absorbing elements of traditional folk music, ritual music, industrial, sampling, and scratching, transforming into an experimental musical art group with a variable lineup.” Finding cult-like appeal for their seamless collaborations and layered and atmospheric live performances, their latest release acts both as a retrospective of the band’s vast sonic breadth and as a tribute to their recently lost member, Mr. Malegebide, a.k.a. DJ Evilbee, who passed away not long after his participation in one of the two live performances collected here. 

Banner image by Haedi Yue.