China Doll comes
(cityweekend) Updated: 2007-05-11 10:31
Increasingly popular with Beijing expats and the local A-list crowd,
hedonistic China Doll is luring party people back to Sanlitun¡¯s bar street area
in droves. And it's not the club's mildly titillating murals and videos, it's
the music. Under the guidance of Zhang Youdai, the first Chinese DJ to make
Rolling Stone magazine, some of the brightest names on the local and
international DJ circuit are throwing down on China Doll's turntables, putting a
fresh spin on the dance music scene.
Ai Wan, Shanghai-born actress and China Doll owner, recalls the recent
glowing appraisal of her club by Tim Healy, one half of electro-rock duo Coburn
which threw a landmark set at China Doll last month. "Tim enjoyed playing so
much that he said he actually wanted to come back and do another set at 5 a.m.,"
she relates. Ai is not surprised by her club's popularity, "China Doll is about
creativity, change and tapping into Beijing's artistic renaissance," she
explains. "Hence our policy of bringing in gifted, innovative DJs, Chinese or
foreign. They don't have to be big names, as long as they have something
original to offer."
As well as regularly hosting foreign DJs, China Doll also boasts some of
Beijing's top Chinese mixers. Youdai thinks Leslie Jiachao, one of the three
local residents, is "the most talented DJ in Beijing right now." The two have
worked together since the Cloud 9 days, and were the first Chinese DJs to play
the Berlin Love Parade last year. "Having Youdai here is a real plus," Ai says.
"He knows his dance music and is an expert at picking out the brightest names.
We aren't going to rely on bringing in the number seven DJ in the world, or
those who live off their reputation, like some of the other clubs in Beijing.
China Doll's music policy is about giving Beijing audiences something dynamic,
exciting and on-the-edge."
Youdai is clearly proud of his young charges: "There are two types of DJs in
Beijing right now. The first play at the glitzy megaclubs like Banana and
Babyface. These guys are commercial mixers-they please the crowd but have no
taste or style. The second type are individual and artistic, but they rarely fit
into a club atmosphere. When I took over as musical director here I wanted to
find DJs who were a fusion of the first and second type. It wasn't easy."
DJ-ing since the age of 17, Leslie Jiachao has seen Beijing clubs come and
go, but maintains China Doll is the best platform for dance music in the
capital. "The crowds here are great¡ªthe right mix of Chinese and foreigners. I
used to get a little nervous when I shared the stage with the likes of Paul van
Dyk or Sasha, but now it's just pure excitement every time."
Date: June 2 Tel: 010-6417-7968
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