Shanghai Gets Back to “Normal”: Museums, Movies, and Musical Life in China’s Great Metropolis


 

Looking out over the Huangpu River and the Shanghai Bund from a Pudong-side cafe as I write this post.

It has now been over four months since the Big Lockdown in Shanghai was officially lifted on or around June 1st. In this post, I discuss how life has returned to “normal” since that time (note: nothing is truly normal since COVID began in 2019.) I focus especially on some of the live music scenes I’ve been participating in lately, which for me are a barometer for city life. The week-long holiday following the 73rd anniversary of the birth of the PRC on October 1 provided me the opportunity to spend a healthy chunk of time in the city and reconnect with people and scenes, including of course my own Shanghai family. Thankfully, the sauna-like heat and humidity of summer are long gone, and except for one sweltering day, we experienced some refreshing rain and mild and cool fall weather. Here are some highlights of the past week.

 

After teaching my last class of the week at Duke Kunshan University, I returned to Shanghai on Thursday evening, driving through the usual barrage of city traffic towards the Old Docks along the waterway known as the Bund. Arriving there around 7:30 pm, I made my way up to the rooftop where Kathleen’s restaurant is located, where my wife and I attended a party to welcome the new Head of School for Shanghai American School. Since our daughter graduated from the school in June, I don’t currently have ties with the school, except for my legacy as a Board member. It was on that basis I was invited by the other members of the Board to meet the new HoS. It turned out to be a big party with maybe 200 people in attendance, mostly parents of course. We enjoyed the evening overlooking the Bund and the Pudong nightscape, and we met a few other parents as well as catching up with some of the Board members and school admin folk with whom I worked on the SAS Board from 2016-1019.

 

The band backs a singer (Paul) on the stage of Chair. “I can’t get no….satisfaction!”

Later that night, I attended an event at the Chair, a live music club in the Tonglefang neighborhood, a converted factory district that features bars, restaurants, and clubs (it used to be home to the original Muse 1). That night, the club was opening its stage to “amateur” musicians and singers. Apparently, this was being promoted as an acoustic or unplugged music night, but the musicians were amped up as usual. The house band consists of a drummer, a keyboard player, and a bass player. They backed up a range of artists, including some talented musicians as well as quite a few singers. Some of the singers had their songs down while others relied on their phones to conjure up the lyrics. My bandmate Jud and I pay attention to this, since we’ve been striving to go “off book” in our playing. When it was our turn to mount the stage, we encountered some technical issues, namely that there wasn’t a cable to connect Jud’s acoustic guitar. Lesson learned: always pack a cable or two in your guitar case, as well as spare strings and a device for changing them at a moment’s notice. We played the Led Zep song “Hey Hey What Can I Do” which has become a staple of ours over the past few months. Then our singer Tammy, who recently joined up with us, sang “Big Girls Don’t Cry” by Fergie while I accompanied her on guitar.

 

Musicians and guests hanging outside of the new Magpie cafe, a late-night hangout on Xiangyang Road

After that event, we rode bikes over to the new Magpie, a small café bar on Xiangyang Road, which has become a nightlife hotspot over the past couple years. We’ve been going to the new Magpie quite a lot lately, and usually we end up on mikes with our guitars plugged into the amp, regaling the small and mostly Chinese crowd with a mixture of English and Mandarin pop-rock songs. The owner Jackie and his wife, who runs the café, seem to appreciate our act. Jackie is a good musician, and he often plays guitar and trumpet in his café. He runs a larger café on Kangding Road where we have also spent some time, but nowadays we seem to be gravitating more to this small venue. We were joined that night by Ginger, a well-known singer here in Shanghai who used to sing at the Cotton Club with Greg Smith and band.

 

On Friday evening, I went to the Xintiandi complex with my wife and daughter to see the Chinese holiday film, 万里归土 which could be translated as “The Long Road Home.” This was the first film we’d seen in theater since the lockdown began in March. Based in reality with some dramatic license, the film tells the story of an intrepid yet beleaguered group of Chinese foreign service officers in 2015, who go all out to get Chinese work crews out of a war-torn country in North Africa, which is in the throes of a revolution. The hero is an officer who uses his linguistic skills as well as a mixture of diplomacy, guile, and grit to get his people across the border and back to China as guns blaze and bombs blast across the inhospitable desert landscape. China is drawing on the Hollywood blockbuster thriller model for its own propaganda purposes, and while the film has a strong political message (unlike some other countries, ahem, China doesn’t interfere with domestic politics in other countries and used no weapons, China is a safe place in contrast to the developing world, etc.) it does seem to work on the dramatic level, even if the film focuses on its Chinese characters while treating most others as a backdrop (again, echoes of Hollywood there). There are a couple of sympathetic individuals from the war-torn country who help the Chinese, only to meet a bad fate at the hands of the revolutionaries. I shan’t spoil it any more in case anybody wants to see the film. My recommendation? Go see it, if only to learn how China is advancing its political propaganda efforts through the medium of film. I found myself appreciating the actor who plays the role of the hero, who goes through hell to get his people back to safety. I would want this dude to have my back.

 

After all that activity, I had a quiet Saturday, which I spent taking my daughter to her tennis lesson and cycling around the demolition ground of the Old Walled City surrounding the City God Temple (a sad fate indeed for such a precious historical sector of the city).

 

I stepped out into the live music scenes again on Sunday. That evening I met bandmate Jud, fellow guitar fiend Tom, and a special guest for a jam session at 521, a café restaurant off Suzhou River. We have been jamming there frequently for over a year now. After our warm-up, we headed over to another open mic session, this time at the I Love Shanghai bar on Xinzha Road. This old dive bar has a fraternity feel to it with graffiti art on the walls and a pool table. It has a small stage on one end of the bar, where they hold performances. I gave a film screening of my jazz film there a year ago. The open mic night is hosted by some Filipinos in the musical and F&B community and attended by a variety of musicians. Some of the musicians, such as Ray Dio, play their own original songs, while most others cover well-known pop-rock songs. There is some overlap with the scene we attended at the Chair. We got up on stage and played a small set, and later in the night, after they turned off the amps, we joined a group for an unplugged singalong.

On the stage of I Love Shanghai, we support a singer as we lose our religion

 

On Monday evening, the restaurant Cottons on Xinhua Road hosted a special live event, featuring Greg Smith on guitar accompanying two singers. The first was guitarist Dave Stone, an Aussie who has been a feature of Shanghai live scenes since he landed here for the Expo in 2010. Following Dave’s set, Greg was joined by Ginger, who gave a lovely vocal performance that included Lou Reed’s song “Satellite Love”, the John Prine tune “Angel from Montgomery” and many others. It was truly a special event, and well attended by a mixture of Chinese and foreign guests. While enjoying the performance I had the chance to catch up with an old mate or two and talk to some other internationals about the impact of the pandemic and the lockdowns on China and its precarious foreign communities. Needless to say, the lockdowns dealt a harsh blow to the foreign communities of Shanghai and elsewhere in China and catalyzed another mass exodus of foreign passport holders and international businesses out of China. Those who remain here hope for better times to come. Or perhaps like me, they are willing to forgive the lockdowns long as they never happen again.

 

The lockdown of spring, which I experienced in the neighboring town of Kunshan (see my previous posts), wasn’t as traumatic as it was for people in Shanghai. Many Shanghai-based folks I’ve talked to over the past month or so, whether Chinese or foreigners, seem to be suffering from a condition that people liken to PTSD. People are still scarred and recovering from that dark episode in Shanghai’s recent history. If music isn’t the cure for this ailment, it is certainly a palliative, and Greg, Dave, and Ginger’s performance had obvious healing powers for a community exhausted from the ordeals of the past few months.

 

Xu Bing’s Gravitational Arena, one of his artworks at the MAP

On Tuesday, I joined my wife and daughter for a tour of the new Pudong Art Museum or MAP. Located in a prime spot overlooking the Huangpu River, with huge windows looking out toward the Bund, the museum is a nice place to visit. The main event was the exhibition of the works of famed Chinese artist Xu Bing. Known especially for his experiments with Chinese characters, his work is stunning when seen in its full glory. In addition, the museum featured a special exhibition of the Tate Museum called “Op Art” which showcased experimental movements in 20th century optical arts by artists in the USA, UK, Europe and elsewhere. One of the highlights of our visit was having lunch on the rooftop restaurant, where we met Alessandro, an F&B entrepreneur who was attending to the needs of the guests. While on the pricey side, I recommend this restaurant with its view overlooking the river and the Bund, and the food is delissimo!

 

On Tuesday night, we attended yet another open mic session at I Love Shanghai. This time we were joined by musician friends Tom and Kyle, whom we met in August while performing at the Jerry Garcia birthday event in the club Real Shanghai. They had just returned from a music festival in Hangzhou and had some interesting stories to share. They performed a medley of Elliot Smith tunes and one of Tom’s original songs. We performed a couple of our more seasoned songs on stage, and after they turned off the amps around 11 pm, we joined the others for a rousing jam session, with Jud and I leading the way for a while with some party songs and medleys from our growing repertoire. We find that knowing songs well and having two guitars gives us an advantage in these situations, as does our experience playing unplugged in noisy cafes and bars over the past year or so.

 

Excavation site in the Guangfulin complex.

On Wednesday, I accompanied my wife and mother-in-law on a drive out to Songjiang on the outskirts of the Shanghai metropolitan area, where we visited the 广富林文化遗址,a complex of old-style Chinese buildings and temples surrounding the excavation site where artifacts of habitations from 6000 BC were found. The excavation site is replicated in a big underground space that also takes one on a journey through Chinese history. With its replicas of ancient old tombs, artifacts, and local businesses from Ming Dynasty, ending with the Bundscape of Shanghai, this space reminds me of the previous instantiation of the Shanghai History Museum in the Pearl Tower in Pudong. The complex was packed with vacationers from Shanghai and environs, and despite the masks, it did indeed seem for a moment that holiday life in China has returned to its normal frenzy.

 

Last night, my remaining bandmate and I ended up playing our guitars for quite a while under an outside canopy at Ray’s bar, a neighborhood bar on Changle Road, while the rain on the canopy provided a canasta for our songs. Owner Ray seems very happy to have us there, and we may end up playing a regular gig at this bar in future. One plus is that inside the bar has an electric piano, and I ended up playing the piano and singing a few songs to Jud’s guitar accompaniment, much to the delight of a very happy group of Italians who were celebrating a birthday. Thus, we are doing our part to reinject some merriment into the city’s musical nightscape and give our international residents more reasons to stay here. Or at least we hope so.

 

 

 

Getting Back to 1969 on a Long and Winding Road: Some Observations About the new Beatles Doc by Peter Jackson et al


 

I’ve been watching music documentaries all year long as I worked on my own doc on the history of jazz in Shanghai. Partly these films are for inspiration—and a great deal of what I learned from these docs went into my own doc—and partly they are for fun and enjoyment. This week I took the time to watch the new three-part documentary film on the Beatles, “Get Back.” Directed by LOR director Peter Jackson, this film just came out at the end of last month on the Disney Plus channel (which means you have to buy into the channel to see it). Since I’m a huge Beatles fan and have been since I was a wee lad, it was a great pleasure to be granted privileged access to their recording studios in January 1969 and observe them closely as they put together a new album, which turned into Let It Be. 

This album and the accompanying Abbey Road album, which they made later that year, was their swan song as a group, since they separated and went their own ways afterwards. Also, the concert they held on the rooftop of their own Apple Corp. building in downtown London was the last time the band would ever play together. As a Beatles fan and as a musician with some aspirations towards songwriting, watching them rehearse and come up with songs for the album and concert is a fascinating experience. Though it’s a long film (around 8 hours in total), for me it was well worth the time it took (three consecutive nights of viewing in my case) to see the film in its totality.

For those of you who missed the news, Peter Jackson and his team sifted through around 60 hours of original footage from a documentary project originally led by director Michael Lindsay-Hogg, whose 1970 documentary, Let It Be, was the first product of this filmmaking venture. Filmed with several cameras giving you several different vantage points, the footage captures all members of the Fab Four plus a “fifth Beatle,” the African American keyboardist, Billy Preston, who joined the band midway through their one-month slog towards making a new album. There’s also a “sixth Beatle,” namely their long-time producer George Martin, who although not the final producer of the album Let it Be (unfortunately) was helping them to record the songs in their own home-grown Apple studio, along with a healthy dose of equipment borrowed from his company EMI Records. The cameras and an aerial mic, which hovers into view now and then above them, capture all of the nuances of their interactions, musicianship, facial expressions, and casual conversations over nearly a one-month long period. In full color, and with all the magic that Peter Jackson and his team could assemble to fix up the old footage and sound , the results are stunning. Never have we the fans had a chance to be so close to the four gentlemen and their retinues as they craft an entire album of brand new musical goodies. (If you could smuggle a camera into Santa’s workshop, you might have a similarly magical experience.)

The film is divided into three parts. Sound familiar? After all, this is the dude who directed the Lord of the Rings and the Hobbit, much to our delight and our chagrin—at least, for those of us who would have preferred a Hobbit that cleaves more closely to the brilliant fantasy novel by Tolkien. My first thought upon hearing this news was: Couldn’t he have cut it into a single full-length documentary film? But no. Once you see the film in all three parts, you realize that it had to be done this way.

Why? First of all, this is a unique record of one of the greatest pop-rock acts of all time, and it will serve as an archive and a treasure trove of information for scholars and fans of the Beatles and of popular music for ages to come. Cutting it down would only have lessened its value, even if it enabled more viewers to see it in its entirety. As it is, other than die-hard Beatles fans, musicians, and lovers of rock music history, it is hard to imagine anybody willing to spend 8 hours watching all this footage. There is an arc to the story, but it’s a long arc indeed.

Part 1 covers the gathering of the band back together after a hiatus. It is obvious from the get-go that this is a last hurrah for the Beatles as a group. The individual members, particularly George, John, and Paul, have already started down their own pathways towards solo careers, or to being the front men of other bands, as the case was for Paul. They have all developed their own distinctive repertoires of songs and song fragments, which they are now competing with each other to get onto the new album and onto their next album, Abbey Road, though they didn’t know it at the time. Even Ringo has some songs to share. 

In the first part of the three-part film, Paul emerges as the dominant and driving force behind the band. We thought it was John, and in the early days, it was him. Now Paul is at the helm, driving the team forward through the ice and snow of a newly emerging project and album like a man driving a pack of huskies through a blizzard in Alaska. Not all are on board at first. There is some confusion over what their goal is with this new and somewhat nebulous project. They aren’t familiar with the director Michael Lindsey-Hogg, and they aren’t too comfortable with all the cameras hovering around them. Above all, they are very uncomfortable with the space they’ve been given to work out and rehearse their new songs—the voluminous Twickenham Studios (long story short, another director gives them the “opportunity” to use one of the studios for the project). 

Despite their initial attempts to pull themselves back together as a band, things quickly go awry. John (inseparable now from his amour Yoko Ono, who appears by his side throughout the film) is AWOL part of the time. His comings and goings are erratic at first, much to Paul’s chagrin. Here (spoiler alert) is one of the best bits in the film: We see Paul literally pull a new song out of his gut as he aggressively strums on the guitar or bass (can’t remember which now), which turns out to be the classic song “Get Back.” It’s as if he’s trying to call John back into the band—get back Jojo to where you belong!!! It’s one of the most thrilling and haunting scenes in this eight-hour drama, at least in my own humble opinion. 

Then, as the first part is winding down, George provides some additional drama to the story by leaving the band. He is apparently huffed because they aren’t taking his own musical ideas seriously enough and because of Paul’s tendency to micro-manage George rather than letting him work out his own bits in the songs. Paul does indeed appear in the film as a domineering leader, telling everyone else exactly what to do for each song. That said, this is the man who not only pulls “Get Back” out of nowhere, but also adds “Let It Be” and “The Long and Winding Road” to the song selection. If there’s one thing that stands out in this film, it’s Paul’s unquestionable genius as a musician, not to mention his incredible work ethic. 

In Part 2, the band continues to rehearse without George, but of course they manage to pull him back into the band eventually. George retreats for a few days, obviously a negotiation strategy on his part to be taken more seriously as a songwriter in his own right. Thankfully, after some meetings with George at his home, and after a long conversation between Paul and John that is clandestinely recorded by a mic (one of the more interesting conversations of the film), they convince George to rejoin the band. 

But the real turnaround is when they decide to abandon Twickenham Studios and move their operations to their own turf—the basement studio at the Apple office (their company office) in London. At first they try out the equipment that their friend magic Alex has set up only to realize that it is complete rubbish. George Martin and EMI come to the rescue by offering recording equipment and tech support, and they are off and running in their own “home” so to speak. The band members visibly relax and the bonding really begins. Surrounded by their retinue of loyal supporters and loved ones, the Beatles form a band again, and their jubilation flies off the screen as they come together with a combo of golden oldies and new bits and bobs. 

What’s fascinating about this process of songwriting is how much they rely on their prodigious knowledge of rock and pop music history. While they continue to forge on with new songs that miraculously come into being over time, they are constantly playing around with old songs—covers mostly, but also their own original songs from earlier stages of their history as a band. Not only do they trot out a veritable history of rock music and its deep roots in R&B and the Blues, but they also delight endlessly in goofing around with these songs. Both Paul and John make faces at each other while crooning in various styles from the sublime to the ridiculous. John adopts a low register for some songs, and he is constantly peppering the sessions with his own humorous if nonsensical verbal interjections (if Paul is the musical genius, John is the verbal genius). George and Ringo get into the groove, although they let Paul and John take center stage. All of this playing around proves crucial in pulling the band and their groove together.

Then in steps Billy Preston, a blues-based keyboardist steeped in the gospel tradition of the USA. His addition to the four-man band gives them even greater energy and spirit, while injecting a large dose of authenticity into their bluesy songs. It also allows the other band members to play around with various styles and instruments. This is the other thing that becomes apparent throughout the film: All members of the Fab Four are multi-instrumentalists. Of course, Paul is the most famous of the group for his ability to master different instruments. While a bass player at heart, he also plays guitar, piano, drums, and some other string instruments. At one point we see Paul and Ringo jamming together—on piano!—with Ringo taking the high keys and Paul (bassman) the low. We also get to witness Ringo working out his song “Octopus’s Garden” on piano. George also plays around on the keyboard now and then, as does John. Sometimes John takes over on bass while Paul plays the piano. This versatility is the band’s secret weapon.

Finally, we come to Part 3. By this time, the band is well on the way to producing yet another great album. We watch and listen closely as their songs coalesce into their familiar and classic forms. We see and hear the performances of multiple versions of many songs, including several that didn’t make the cut for “Let it Be” but made it onto “Abbey Road.” We get to witness their mistakes and missteps as they work out the details of each song. We also hear many songs or song fragments that would become part of their solo repertoires after the band broke up. Meanwhile, they continue to break out into joyful renditions of old pop and rock songs going back to the 1950s. Smiles abound as they re-explore songs from the Cavern Club and Hamburg days, which in turn evoke memories that they share with each other. While the seriousness of honing their new songs intensifies as the deadline for their performance approaches, they never stop having and making fun. 

By this time, after long discussions and heated arguments back and forth, the band settles on a solution as to where to hold a live performance, which was one of the stipulations of this filmmaking project. At first the Director Michael wants them to go to Libya for the concert, but they won’t have any of that and Paul makes it very clear that they are not leaving their home country. Yet comically, Michael keeps harping on this idea oblivious to their complete rejection of it. Obviously, none of them are too keen to get back into a public arena. If you know the history of the Beatles, you’ll know that they stopped performing three years earlier in 1966, mainly because they couldn’t hear themselves on stage due to the screaming, but also because they wanted to explore more complicated songs that weren’t easy to produce live (hence Sergeant Pepper’s). But they also felt threatened in live arenas. There was always the possibility of violence to their persons, given the mass hysteria that accompanied the band wherever they went. Thus, getting back onto a public stage must have been a formidable thing for the four lads to contemplate. Not to mention the fact that they look and feel rusty and out of practice (though they loosen up visibly over time). 

Finally, their sound engineer Glyn Johns, who has been with them and earned their trust throughout the film project, and their own trusted road manager Mal Evans convince them to go onto the rooftop of their own building, where they can be in the public eye while controlling who gets access to their stage. This turns out to be the ideal solution, and after some hesitation they agree. Most of Part 3 involves them rehearsing their new songs for the album and the live performance coming up in a countdown of days. The songs are getting more and more powerful as they lock into a groove for each song. They are also become more and more familiar and closer to the versions we know and love from the album. 

Finally, the long-awaited and anxious day arrives when after many delays and moving around of the schedule, they mount the rooftop stage and perform new songs to the public for the first time in three years. With cameras mounted on the rooftop, on a nearby rooftop, and on the street, as well as a secret camera in the downstairs office, we see the band go from song to song with increasing confidence, nailing each one as their local audience of neighbors and streetwalking pedestrians grows around them. The police come to tell them to kindly desist their noise-making, proving how polite and well-behaved they are in London (at least on camera, though since it was a secret camera they didn’t know it at the time), but the Beatles and their entourage ignore the pleas and finish their concert. Several of the songs, fed into the recording studio, are captured for the album. Everything goes swimmingly, and the Beatles, along with their new member Billy Preston, dismount the impromptu stage triumphantly.

Finally, we are treated to the sessions leading to the definitive versions of their studio songs, including the immortal song “Let it Be.” The filmmakers provide us with captions to let us know which are the definitive versions, and we get to see them performed live. All of these songs that we’ve known all our lives (at least for me, since I was born in the year 1969 when they filmed this session), we see and hear as the four lads conjure them up out of thin air and relentlessly perfect and polish them into the glittering gems and jewels that they became.

 

 

My Emerging Career as a Documentary Host in China

Lately I’ve been meaning to write a piece about my involvement in documentaries in China—not the films that I myself make, but ones that I’ve been asked to host. Now it appears that there is even more of a demand for foreign experts like me to host or participate in documentaries made by Chinese production companies. China wants to get its stories out to the world and tell them in ways that are engaging to international audiences, while also meeting the approval of the powers that be. So far I’ve had a good experience with the docs I’ve been asked to host, and now it seems there may be more opportunities for me to do so in the future. 

My first experience with a Chinese documentary project was in 2015, when people from my wife’s TV station ICS (she works there as a presenter) asked me if I’d like to host a documentary about wartime Shanghai. The film was directed by Wang Xiangtao 王向韬 also known as David. Born and raised in Shanghai, Dir. Wang was educated abroad in Australia and he is a very good researcher and writer as well as a director. Together we made the film “World War at my Doorsteps” 战火围城,(click and scroll down to see the film) which focuses on two stories. One was the story of a German Jewish wartime refugee named Ernest Heppner, who spent several years in Shanghai, ending up in the ghetto in Hongkou set up under the Japanese occupation in the 1940s. He later wrote a memoir about the experience, long after he and his wife, whom he met in Shanghai, emigrated to the USA.

The other story in the film was about the American journalist J.B. Powell, who served as editor of the China Weekly Review in the 1920s-1940s, and was well-known for his anti-Japanese stance, which landed him in the infamous Bridge House in the 1940s. Like so many others who were sent there, he barely escaped with his life. A third story was going to focus on the Jesuit Father Jaquinot and his effort to build a safety zone in the old Chinese city area, but it turned out there wasn’t room for that story in the film. Despite the harrowing stories that we told about Shanghai in the wartime era, it was a pleasure making this film. I enjoyed working with Dir. David Wang and with the crew as we filmed on location in various key sites in Shanghai, including the Post Office Building, Suzhou River near the Embankment Building, the Park Hotel and others. 

In 2018, I was approached by people from the Jiangsu TV station in Nanjing to host a series of six episodes of a documentary project about the infamous Nanjing Massacre of 1937. The series “Dark Time: We Were in Nanjing” 黑暗时刻:我们在南京 focuses on the stories of several foreigners living in or nearby Nanjing at the time, who tried to help Chinese people in the city during this horrific episode of violence. The most well-known among them was John Rabe, the “Schindler of Nanjing”; his story has already been told, and we focused on some of the lesser-known people, including journalists, doctors, missionaries, businessmen, and educators, who bravely stayed in Nanjing during the height of the massacre.

This was a much bigger and well-budgeted program with several directors and a large crew of around 25 people. For this series, we filmed on sites all over Nanjing, including the former homes of John Rabe and Pearl Buck, as well as the Qixia Temple and a factory site in the mountains. The crew also used a drone to capture scenes from the air including at the wall of the city, on the Yangtze River, and above the Nanjing Massacre Memorial Museum.

Filming on location in Nanjing

Filming on location in Nanjing

The biggest challenge for me was delivering all my lines in English and in Chinese. In the end, they were able to use the English version for the series which first aired that December, but it was certainly good practice for me to memorize all those lines in Chinese. As with the previous film I participated in, this series was already scripted, and so my role was more as a reader and occasionally an editor than a creator of the content. Nevertheless I enjoyed this role and learned a great deal about the details and the backgrounds of the people we focused on for the series. It is still hard for me to watch some of these episodes since this was such a singularly horrifying event in that terrible war, but I think it was very well done and delivered in a way that didn’t shirk from the grim realities. 

Posing atop a building on the Bund with the film crew of our series about Shanghai in 1949

Posing atop a building on the Bund with the film crew of our series about Shanghai in 1949

More recently, in spring 2021, Director David Wang once again approached me with another wartime project: 《百年大党——老外讲故事》“上海解放特辑”( Witness a New Dawn). This time the story was about the takeover of Shanghai in 1949 by the Communists and the People’s Liberation Army. David had recently published a book “Shangahi 1949” about the coverage by foreign journalists of this enormous event in the history of the city, and as a Shanghai historian, I was very interested in the project.

Dir. David Wang giving me some instructions during our filming on site at the Yangshupu Power Plant

Dir. David Wang giving me some instructions during our filming on site at the Yangshupu Power Plant

Rather than making one longer film, they decided to make six five-minute episodes. Each episode reveals one facet of the event, which would then travel more easily on the internet. Once again, we filmed in many locations, including atop several famous landmark buildings along the Bund and Suzhou River, and at the Yangshupu Power Plant upriver from the Bund. The timing was tight, since the series was meant to be released on May 27, the date that the PLA secured the takeover of Shanghai in 1949. As someone once said, and the rest was history!

Here’s where you can see the episode, each is around 5 minutes long and they are in English:

第一集《解放》 Episode 1: Liberation

第二集《旧上海的末日》Episode 2: The Last Days of Old Shanghai

第三集《“紫石英号”事件》Episode 3: The Amethyst Incident

第四集《为了光明的上海》Episode 4: For the Glory of Shanghai

第五集《第一印象》Episode 5: First Impressions

第六集《上海的新生》Episode 6: The New Birth of Shanghai

While this series is somewhat heavy-handed in its emphasis on this historic moment, it was quite an experience hosting the series and I think the results are pretty stunning, especially since the crew used a drone to capture scenes of the cityscapes from the air. I always learn a great deal about the art and science of filmmaking while working with the Chinese film crews, who are the epitome of professionalism.

Since joining a group of documentary filmmakers on a tour of some of the old Silk Road sites of Dunhuang and Xi’an last month, other opportunities for collaborations are now opening up for me, and I hope to engage in more doc film projects in the future. I also hope that I can contribute my own expertise in the storytelling. China needs to find more ways to tell the big stories about this country and its long and complex history, and the people and government of China are eager to do so. As a long-term resident of China, having lived here most of my adult life now, I’m happy to contribute to these projects as long as I feel that the stories are genuine and truthful and not too laden with the baggage of contemporary politics. But of course that can sometimes be hard to avoid, particularly in the current moment as we celebrate a century of the Communist Party of China.

 

Screening Jazz & Blues a la Shanghai—Some Thoughts and Reflections on the Filmmaking Process

Talking to some audience members after the screening on Friday in Shanghai

Talking to some audience members after the screening on Friday in Shanghai

Last week I give my first public screenings of my latest film. Before then, I had only shown it in private to small, select audiences, who gave me good feedback. This process seemed to be working pretty well, and so after several small intimate screenings followed by revisions, I was ready to show V20 to a bigger audience.

On Wednesday, I gave a screening at my university, Duke Kunshan University, as part of the arts festival last week. Then on Friday, at an event sponsored by Frank Tsai and China Crossroads in association with Katherine Song and the Royal Asiatic Society of Shanghai, I screened the film to a sizeable audience of 100+ people in Shanghai. Overall, I got some good and positive feedback. Nevertheless, the experience has taught me a valuable lesson.

The lesson is this: It is best to work with an editorial team when shaping the film’s story.

I have been making this film pretty much on my own. I had some help with the filming, but the editing process has been me sitting in my “studio” (a room in my apartment with an iMac), for hundreds, perhaps even over 1000 hours. And that tends to create a myopic vision of the story, even if one comes into it with the best of intentions.

Because the film came together organically, it took me a while to get around to scripting it, and even then, I was working on it piecemeal. One big breakthrough came earlier this year, when I realized that I had to add a narration to the film. Since then I’ve been scrapping the narration together piece by piece, like a patchwork quilt. This has been effective, but it also led me into some thorny brambles.

Certainly the film has improved greatly over the past few months. And my editing skills have improved 100-fold since I started this project. Still, it is far from where I want it to be. It wasn’t until last week’s screenings that I realized how distorted some of the story is in its current form. I don’t mean that its untruthful, but it represents only a part of the picture.

This is where an editorial team comes in handy. Having a group of trusted people to go over your story with you and help correct your own myopic vision is important. For example, because I did most of my research and filming around 8-10 years ago when I was working on the book Shanghai Nightscapes with James Farrer, the story of jazz in Shanghai that I tell in the film is outdated. Even though I covered some events since then, I realized after talking to some people who know the scene well that it since has progressed in many ways that aren’t being captured in the film.

Second, the film is focused too much on the jazz club/bar scene, and on the foreigners who built that scene. I did try to strike a balance with Chinese musicians and singers such as Coco Zhao and Jasmine Chen, but this wasn’t enough. 

Third, the film right now is too much of my own personal take on the scene and its development. I need to pull out further and develop a bigger picture, with more context for people unfamiliar with Shanghai and China. I’ve done some of this already, but more needs to be done to get this film to Peoria. : )

In my next version, I plan to work closely with a few trusted people to help revise and broaden the story. And I plan to incorporate more of the recent changes and add more about the Chinese musicians who have been pushing and shaping the jazz scene, and diminish the role of the jazzpats (not that they aren’t important, but they are only part of the story).

The next step is to rework the script and revise the narration. Then I can go back into the editing room and reshape the film. It won’t involve any radical changes, just some more contextualization, and a broader view of the jazz scene in Shanghai with more focus on the Chinese musicians who are developing the scene. I’m looking forward to doing some additional research and a few follow-up interviews this summer.

Fortunately, this project intersects well with some other writing projects I have in the works, including some articles and conference papers on the music scenes. So it should be a productive summer as I re-engage with the city’s jazz scene and delve deeper into recent developments in that scene. I’m aiming for Version 21 to be completed later this summer. Once that’s ready, I plan to hold more screenings of the film, but not until I get the story right.

 

Focusing on Discipline and Daily Practice: my New Years Resolutions for 2021

At the beginning of 2020, I posted a piece about the growing global environmental crisis, and I ended with this brief list of New Year’s resolutions. 

1. Consume less, and produce more

2. Learn to garden and grow plants, and plant some trees

3. Take public transport when possible

4. Ride my bike more often

Ironically, the onset of the pandemic and our decision to take shelter in my parents’ home in Massachusetts, which extended from one month to six months, helped me to meet at least some of these goals. As I have already blogged extensively over the past year, I did take a deep dive into nature. I spent a great deal of time in forests and wildlife refuges and learned a lot more about trees and plants. While I didn’t plant any trees, I certainly came to appreciate and understand them far better. 

The pandemic also forced us to consume less and produce more. For example, while sojourning in the USA, we cooked most of our meals. On the other hand, the need for things while pandemicking in Acton Mass. did lead me to buy quite a few articles of clothing, books, and other items for myself and my daughters. In terms of public transport, that became a moot matter as we solaced in the United States. Perforce of the situation, I did do a lot less driving and really no commuting over those six months. And, best of all, I rekindled my old love for cycling, and I spent more time on a bicycle this year than I have at least since my grad school days.

As we enter into the year 2021, I’m shifting my resolutions from being more nature- and environment-conscious to focusing on developing some skills and furthering my various projects. This past year was one of dispersion. The circumstances of the year made it difficult to focus and concentrate on my projects. To be fair, I did make some progress and worked on a film and a few publications. But overall my mental energies and initiatives were fairly diffused over the pandemic year.

For example, as my previous post indicates, my reading list for 2020 was very broad, and I cast my net widely as I sought to both escape my mundane world and to understand some important things about it. At the same time, living in my hometown under the pandemic conditions led me to take full advantage of the opportunity to explore my home state of Massachusetts in a deep way I had never really done before. 

I’m glad I was able to do this, but now that I am back in Shanghai and back at Duke Kunshan University, I’m looking forward to returning to projects that I put aside for the pandemic year, or at least put on the back burner.

Now that I am teaching full-time, I’m looking at my portfolio of activities, skills, and projects in a new light. When I was a full-time administrator over the past eight years, it was catch-as-catch-can when it came to working on non-administrative projects, academic or otherwise. I’m hoping that the additional flexibility of having a full teaching schedule, as demanding as it may be at times, will help me to concentrate more on advancing my various research, writing and film projects.

This calls for a great deal of focus, discipline, and concentration. These haven’t always been my strong suits. I tend to get excited about too many things at once, and I tend to get involved in too many projects at once. I admire my colleagues, who are able to focus all of their attention and energy on one research project, seeing it through to completion before they accept another big task. I’ve always been a multi-tasker, and while it has enabled me to get involved in a wide range of projects over the years, it’s been harder to bring any one of them to completion. This year I resolve to be more focused, disciplined, and persistent when it comes to working on my projects, and not to accept new ones until I complete old ones first.

Another thing I intend to work on more this year is my skills in languages and reading. For one thing, I’ve resolved to work on my Classical Chinese skills. Since teaching my course on Ancient China for Duke Kunshan University, it has become very clear how important it is for me to engage with the original texts as well as the translations. For this reason and a few others, I recently took the initiative to start a workshop on Classical Chinese for some of our faculty on campus, who are involved in classical studies. I’m hoping that this will become a regular event and that we can all learn from each other as we develop our reading and translation skills. 

Another thing I’ve been meaning to do is to get into the habit of reading modern Chinese texts on a more regular basis. I do read Chinese for research purposes, but rarely for pleasure, and so I am hoping to start a daily practice of reading fiction in Chinese. My idea is to pick a novel and read it through in its entirety. This is not an easy task for me, since even though my Chinese reading ability is fairly good (for a foreigner at least), it is always slow going. But I’m hoping to get into a regular Chinese reading habit. 

I also plan to engage more with my other Asian language:Japanese. Since reading the book of Japanese short stories in translation, which I blogged about in my previous post, I am determined to read some of these stories in their original language. My Japanese isn’t nearly as well developed as my Chinese, so it may prove too difficult to read entire novels. Instead, I’m thinking of starting with some short stories by authors I know and love and see how that goes.

Speaking of reading, I’ve always been a poor reader of music. This past year I did get into a daily habit of working on my two instruments, piano and guitar. I am somewhat satisfied with my progress in both instruments over the years, but one thing I’ve neglected is sight-reading. I was never a very proficient sight reader of piano music, and I’m hoping to work on that skill more this year and develop a daily habit of sight-reading some pieces for piano. 

I also want to work on my guitar sight-reading skills. I’m pretty good at following tablature (i.e. where to place the fingers on the fretboard) but I still need to work on reading musical notation for guitar pieces. If I can get into a daily practice of working on my guitar sight-reading skills, I’ll be very happy.

That’s enough resolutions for now. I don’t want to bite off more than I can chew, and these are all realizable goals. I’m thinking of them not just as goals for this year, but for a lifetime of habits. All of these resolutions go back to being more focused and disciplined, and developing skills and furthering projects that I already have, so I’ll let that be the major theme of 2021 for my own self-improvement drive.

 

Reading more notes is one of my goals for 2021

Reading more notes is one of my goals for 2021