Croisements 2013: “Les Hommes Debout”. Expo in Beijing, Wuhan, Shanghai, Zhongshan.

Lend an ear to The Standing Men

(Des Hommes Debout),

these phosphorescent mannequins are purveyors of

stories, words and culture, they will light up with

words and colors, with the contact of the public.

 

Last winter, I gave my voice for some weird recordings. The result is here: “Les Hommes Debout”. My voice, as well as voices from other artists living in China is used to personify the mannequins.

If you are in Beijing, you can see the expo at the “ART BEIJING” Expo:

http://www.artbeijing.net/ from the 29 to the 2 of May. The mannequins

will then be moved to Penghao theater until the 12 of May, before moving to Wuhan, then Shanghai and finally Zhongshan.

Here is the pitch: 

 

“The Standing Men is a suprising and welcoming interactive

installation, that has been specially adapted to the Chinese audience

within the frame of Croisements Festival. They hail the passers-by and

invite them into a dialogue. They tell their stories in Chinese, wonder

about life and the environment they occupy. The audience is not only a

spectator but also touches, speaks, answers, plays along and engages in

a tactile dialogue with these luminous beings with often funny and

unexpected comebacks. Children and adults, come touch them, listen to

them, hug them, and in turn, whisper some words into their ear, The

Standing Men will answer in words, lights, and colors. Valentin Durif,

Victor Roux and Pierre Amoudruz, three designers of the installation

worked in residence in Beijing. The voices of Hu Ge Ji Le Tu (Ajinai),

Randy Abel, Liu Yusi, Djang San, Xiao He,

Xiong Liang and other passers-by, lenders of stories are used as main

material of the installation.

 

More infos here:

http://www.faguowenhua.com/saison-culturelle/festival-croisements-2013/programmation-596/expositions-600/les-hommes-debout-aadn.html?lang=en

—————————————————————————————————————————————————

See you soon !

www.zhangsian.com

http://djangsan.bandcamp.com/

http://www.youtube.com/user/zhangsian

http://www.myspace.com/zsian

http://site.douban.com/zhangsian/

http://soundcloud.com/djangsan

http://site.douban.com/baoxianchaoren

http://www.reverbnation.com/djangsan

http://u.youku.com/张思安

http://djang-san.members.restorm.com/

http://www.beijing-underground.com/

Croisements Festival 2013 Opening Concert: Djang San “One Man Live Orchestra”

Recent Reviews and articles:

 

Djang San’s Electronic Music (Not) for Chinese Restaurants  (Music Dish China)

每一个音符都是一次实验 (Every note is an experiment) (Music Dish China)

DJANG SAN – Un chercheur d’or musical à Pékin (Le Petit Journal)

Insane local musician releases 4 albums at once (Time Out Beijing)

Interview: Djang San (Smart Beijing)

 

Don’t forget to vote for “The Amazing Insurance Salesmen”, nominated as best local band of the year in Beijing by 

City Weekend Magazine. Vote here:

http://www.cityweekend.com.cn/awards/2013-beijing-restaurants-bars-awards/

 

Thank you all very much for your support.

Sincerely yours,

Djang San. 

 

————————————————————————————————————————————————–

 

www.zhangsian.com

http://djangsan.bandcamp.com/

http://www.youtube.com/user/zhangsian

http://www.myspace.com/zsian

http://site.douban.com/zhangsian/

http://soundcloud.com/djangsan

http://site.douban.com/baoxianchaoren

http://www.reverbnation.com/djangsan

http://u.youku.com/张思安

http://djang-san.members.restorm.com/

http://www.beijing-underground.com/

 

AIS Nominated for “Best Local Band of the Year” by “City Weekend”, Vote for us !

The Amazing Insurance Salesmen are nominated as

“Best Local Band of the Year” on City Weekend Beijing.

Vote for us !

 

To vote, you must register on City Weekend, to do so, go to :

http://www.cityweekend.com.cn/signup/

Once you are signed up, go to that link:

http://www.cityweekend.com.cn/awards/2013-beijing-restaurants-bars-awards/

 

Click on “Local Band of the Year”.

Then click on the “Vote” button located near “The Amazing Insurance Salesmen”.

Help us become even better than we are !

 

 Thanks !

See you soon.

 

www.zhangsian.com

http://djangsan.bandcamp.com/

http://www.youtube.com/user/zhangsian

http://www.myspace.com/zsian

http://site.douban.com/zhangsian/

http://soundcloud.com/djangsan

http://site.douban.com/baoxianchaoren

 

 

05 April 2013 – The Amazing Insurance Salesmen @ Sound of the Xity Music Festival

Friday, 5 of April, not 13 of April

                  It’s at Mao Livehouse, see you there !

www.zhangsian.com

http://djangsan.bandcamp.com/

http://www.youtube.com/user/zhangsian

http://www.myspace.com/zsian

http://site.douban.com/zhangsian/

http://soundcloud.com/djangsan

http://site.douban.com/baoxianchaoren

http://www.reverbnation.com/djangsan

http://u.youku.com/张思安

http://djang-san.members.restorm.com/

http://www.beijing-underground.com/

 

The Amazing Insurance Salesmen 3rd Anniversary Party @ 2 Kolegas this saturday night !

 

Special thanks to 2 KolegasWHAI and DJ Gildas for 

joining the party, we hope you 

will come

celebrate with us 3 years of madness,

and will push us to continue this

crazy project we started in the

spring of 2010. 

 

In 3 years, we won the Global Battle of the Bands in

Mainland China and Hong

Kong, played in Malaysia,

played the Midi festival

the Zebra festival, the

French“fête de la musique”

inBeijing,Wuhan,Shanghai.

Played in countless cities in

China, were interviewed

by countless magazines.

 

We would like to thank The Beijinger, Beijing Daze,

City Weekend, Time Out, LiveBeijing Music, Martin

Rawlins Studio, Pangbianr,

GBOB,Wangba Records,

Niurenku, Mogo, China

Music dish,

the French Embassy in China, the Alliance Française,

all the venues where we played

including Yugong Yishan, Mao Live House (Beijing and

Shanghai), What Bar, D22, Nanluoguxiang, VOX,

2Kolegas

(again), Temple Bar, all the

festivals and

venues that have welcomed us over these last 3 years,

all the people that wrote about us, filmed us, took

pictures of us, talked about us….

 

We Would also like to thank all the people who

listenned to our music, came to the concerts, believe in

us, gave their support and accompanied us during all

that time, the musicians and bands that gave us their

support and many other people

but the list of names is too

long ! 🙂

So once again, Thanks !

 

Please take a litsen to our EP “Escape” and buy it if you like it !

itunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/escape/id439273111

Bandcamp: http://djangsan.bandcamp.com/album/escape-2011

 

www.zhangsian.com

http://djangsan.bandcamp.com/

http://www.youtube.com/user/zhangsian

http://www.myspace.com/zsian

http://site.douban.com/zhangsian/

http://soundcloud.com/djangsan

http://site.douban.com/baoxianchaoren

Digital Albums Release Party 09/03/2013

 

Actually it’s not three, but 4, here is the 4th:

 

 

Listen to it here: 

http://djangsan.bandcamp.com/album/this-is-nonsense

 

For the occasion here is an interview by Josh Feola from Smart Beijing and Pangbianr: 

Djang San — aka Zhang Si’an, aka Jean Sébastian, aka the Amazing Insurance Salesmen‘s lead guitarist — has been a fixture on the Beijing folk, rock, and jazz scenes for over a decade. He originally came up in the early 2000s River Bar scene, which at the time featured regular performances from a bunch of guys who are now too well known to play together or at any small bar that can’t offer a substantial financial guarantee (Xiao HeSecond Hand RoseBrain Failure, et al).AIS has been going for three years now, playing to bigger audiences worldwide (they competed in the world finals for the Global Battle of the Bands in 2011, in Malaysia). On the side, Djang San has been travelling down the rabbit hole of experimental electronic music, supplementing his growing battery of traditional Chinese string and wind instruments with loop pedal layering, synthesized backdrops, home studio experimentation, and DIY music video production. He’s released a staggering amount of solo material on his bandcamp over the last few months, which he’s celebrating with a show this Saturday at Jianghu. Read on to learn more about the mysterious Djang San alter ego, and his other,other alter ego, “Zhang Si’an (aka Jean-Sébastien Héry),” the hard-nosed music journalist (hey, he just interviewed SmBJ’s editor-in-chief).

***

SmartBeijing.com: So when I interviewed you a year and a half ago, Amazing Insurance Salesmen was pretty busy on the festival circuit and had just released a new EP. What’s happened with AIS since then?

Djang San: We have played a lot this year. We are celebrating our three year anniversary on the 16th of March at 2 Kolegas, there will be surprises and DJ’s. We are playing at Sound of the Xity in Beijing on the 5th of April at Mao Livehouse and we hope to make it in more festivals this year. We want to record something but we haven’t found the right place or the right people to do it yet. Actually, if anybody reading this interview is interested to help us recording or investing in the band, or promoting the band etc…. they can contact me. We are also looking for a manager and so am I for my solo project.


AIS at the 2011 Global Battle of the Bands finals in Malaysia

SmBj: In that time you’ve been a lot more active with your solo work, grouped under the name Djang San. It’s a lot more experimental and seemingly improvised than your other stuff. How did this project start and how has it evolved? How does “Djang San” differ from “Zhang Si’an” and your role as the guitarist of AIS?

Djang San: Zhang Si’an was the name I was using to play folk. When I realized that most people outside China couldn’t pronounce it right (you need to know pinyin…), I changed the name to Djang San. The name change coincided with the changes in my music, when I started to play as a one man band, started to use loop machines and mix more electronic music with folk music. On stage, I am not always experimental, I can be completely electro or folk, and sometimes I mix those three different styles together. It really depends on the mood I am in. If it’s polluted out there or if the sky is blue, the music will be completely different. As a guitarist in AIS, I still come up with most of the songs and words, but Maikel and Maomao have a bigger part in the writing and arranging process now. I am trying to push them to come [up] with more ideas and I’m also trying to make Maomao sing because he has an interesting voice and I think it would benefit the band.

SmBj: In the last few months you’ve released quite a lot of solo music on your bandcamp. Can you talk a bit about your process? Do you compose most of this material, or is it more improvised? What instruments and effects pedals do you use? What is your home recording setup?

Djang San: I just released 4 different albums. Electronic Music for Chinese Restaurants and This is Nonsense can be considered the same album divided in two parts. One Man Live Orchestra Vol.4 is the last volume of live recordings I have made in 2011-2013. The 4th album is a compilation of songs I have recorded over the last ten years using the Chinese instrument, zhongruan. I did this compilation because I wanted to get people to focus on that part of my music, for them to understand better what the zhongruan is as well.

One Man Live Orchestra Vol.4 and all the other live recordings have a big part that is improvised, because I get bored playing the same songs all the time and I like to explore the possibilities of the equipment and instruments I have. I think the live recordings I do are like a picture taken at a specific moment. If I play that again, it will probably sound different. As I said earlier, my mood, the weather, the environment I am in when I play mean a lot to me when I’m on stage and can influence how I play that night in various ways.

I have composed, arranged, recorded, mixed and mastered everything on the albums, apart from the two jazz covers “Summertime” and “Take the A Train,” which I obviously didn’t write.The live recordings were done by friends of mine who helped me record on the spot. Special thanks on that to Olivier and JB.

When I record at home, I don’t have much equipment, just a cheap sound card and a laptop, not even a Macintosh, as well as a shitty microphone. I wish I could use better equipment but I can’t really spend money on this these days… So in the end it all relies on what I can do with almost nothing. As the pre-amps on the sound card are not great, I go through the pre-amps of the loop pedals I use and then I modify the sound again using VST plugins in Cubase (I use Cubase 3, the other versions don’t work…). I can’t talk more about what I use, a cook never wants to reveal too many of his secrets :-).

SmBj: You often prescribe very specific conditions for listening to each new solo album you release online, for example demanding the audience listens to it in quality headphones, lying down on their apartment floor. What part does the user experience play in your recorded music?

Djang San: The truth is people can listen to the music however they want. Nowadays everybody has a laptop and listens to music through bad quality speakers. I give conditions because I think any music should be listened to properly. A lot of people tend to think that nowadays music is easy to do, that you just have to press a button and then sounds come out… well yeah, sounds come out, but it takes a lot of time to make those sounds come together, write songs, put a meaning in what you do etc… I mean, people sit down on their couch to see a movie, so why not lie down on the floor to listen to some music ?

SmBj: Your album and track titles are also pretty conceptual. Can you explain the idea behindElectronic Music for Chinese Restaurants?

Djang San: Well the title is ironic, the music is not specifically for Chinese restaurants…. it’s kind of a joke really. I live in Beijing, travel around in China, and at some point we all end up in restaurants eating chuan’er and drinking beer. Restaurants in China are a social space where all kinds of things happen, people sign contracts, they get drunk, meet with friends after or before Karaoke at 5 in the morning, meet women and men…. There are restaurants all over the place in China and the music on that album has a lot of different tastes and colours, like the ones there are in Chinese cuisines and restaurants.

SmBj: Speaking of electronic music, it seems more and more people in Beijing with a rock/folk background are coming at electronic music as a new creative field, without much knowledge of or stake in the broader history of electronic music as a separate genre. What is attractive about electronic music for you? Do you view Djang San as more of a “rock” or “folk” or “instrument-based” project, or an electronic project, or does the distinction even matter at this point?

Djang San: I started to play with electronic instruments and equipment because it opens a broader field of composition and creation for me. When I bought my first loop station a few years ago I was using it only to loop guitar, then I got bored of playing with other people and I wanted to be able to do everything by myself. Instead of finding a way to replace other musicians, I found a different way of playing alone. As a guitar player coming from rock music, I used to think that electronic music was a lot of pushing buttons and I thought most DJ’s and electro musicians were not musicians at all. I changed my mind when I started to use synthesizers, samplers and loop stations because I realized that these machines are like any other instrument, you have to practice to learn how to play it, and it doesn’t come so easy. In my opinion, the best DJ’s and electronic musicians are people who already have a solid knowledge of music. Really, it doesn’t matter what you use as long as people can rely to it.

For me, electronic music is independence. It’s a way to control everything from beginning to end without having to rely on anybody but yourself. It’s like conducting your own little orchestra. I found my own way of linking the instruments and the equipment, and I think that is the way it should be for any musician. The important [thing] for me is to always go forward, discover new ways of doing and writing music. About two years ago I started to produce my own videos, I had never done that before and I haven’t studied anything about that, but I found a way to do it and studied myself how to master a few software that allow me to do what I have in mind. In the end it is about getting to express what you want.

The project “Djang San” is a bit of everything, it’s like the result of my experience in music for the last 15 years. I don’t think it’s any particular genre, it gathers all the different music styles I have played in my life.

SmBj: You are having a release show for your four most recent albums on Saturday. How do you release an album that’s already available online? Will you have a physical product, or is the event just meant to bridge virtual with real space?

Djang San: I can’t release CD’s physically here, I have no support from any record company and any contacts I have had so far in the record business in China or elsewhere have led nowhere because I wasn’t satisfied by the contracts I was offered. Once again, I am open to suggestions for that matter so if anybody is interested in helping, they can contact me.

The music is already released and anybody can listen to it. Nowadays, no one will listen to music if it isn’t free, so what I do is that I put it for free streaming online and if people want to support what I do, they pay for it and download it.

Doing a release party from something I put on the Internet is a way for me to tell people to come and listen, to know about it.

SmBj: Recently you’ve done some interviews with promoters and venue managers involved in the Beijing music scene for MusicDish China. What are you interested in documenting as a journalist or interviewer?

Djang San: Most interviews are about musicians and bands. I want to do interviews about the people who are behind the scene, to show people what the music scene here is really about.

I also publish the interviews on my own website.

SmBj: Are there any new bands or venues or promoters you’ve seen come up in Beijing recently that seem promising? Conversely, are there any new trends that you see as particularly negative in the Beijing music scene?

Djang San: I have heard Dice recently, and The Last Three Minutes, these two bands could have a good future if they develop in the right way. Unfortunately, the lack of money and serious promotion in the underground bands here is crippling the music.

The global trend in music in Beijing is that you basically have to rely on yourself and can’t really rely on other people. In “Music Business” you have “Business,” once you realize music is a business you realize that it’s no different than any other business. The bigger fish eats the smaller one, and a lot of talent gets destroyed or is even never considered.

There are several issues here according to me:

– I think for most people outside China, music in China is still a joke, there’s a big image problem.
– There is a tremendous gap between pop music and underground music here, and those two universes are completely separated.
– One could say there is no market for rock music and underground music in China, one might be true.
– There is no possibility for independent music to develop to a larger scale in China, except if it backed by the government or by big investors.
– It still is a lot about the guanxi and not enough about music and artistic quality.

I think there is a market for music that’s “Made in China” in the West, and there is a gap here that is asking to be filled by people who have the understanding of the two markets.

***

Djang San is having a “digital release party” for his last three albums on Saturday, March 9 at Jianghu.

 

 

New Release: A compilation of Zhongruan Recordings.


 

To listen and buy, click on this link: 

http://djangsan.bandcamp.com/album/zhong-ruan

All the songs on this album were previously released. This album is a compilation of songs recorded using the Zhongruan, a Chinese instrument. 

The idea here is to show what I have been able to do with this instrument, using my own way to write songs with it and play with it.

 

1.

Intro – 引言 01:18

2.

Walking in Beijing – 在北京走路 03:21

3.

Mad Horses – 奔放的马 02:57

4.

Summertime – 夏日怡情 03:04

5.

Take the A Train – A号火车 04:07

6.

Where is Happiness ? – 幸福在哪里? 03:31

7.

Beijing Gulou – 北京鼓楼 02:02

8.

Three Monks – 三个和尚 01:25

9.

Yunnan Jam – 云南即兴 04:51

10.

Where’s Happiness (live) – 幸福在哪里 (现场版本) 03:47

11.

Take the A Train (live) – A号火车 (现场版本) 02:49

 

See you soon.

 

www.zhangsian.com

http://djangsan.bandcamp.com/

http://www.youtube.com/user/zhangsian

http://www.myspace.com/zsian

http://site.douban.com/zhangsian/

http://soundcloud.com/djangsan

http://site.douban.com/baoxianchaoren

 

 

Hungry ? New Release: Electronic Music For Chinese Restaurants.

 

 

 

Click here. to listen to the music and buy it directly on Bandcamp.

Track list:

1.

I Wanna Make Some Money ! (我要赚一些钱) 03:12

2.

End of the World (part 2) 世界末日 (第二部分) 03:26

3.

End of the World (part 4) 世界末日 (第四部分) 02:34

4.

Fairy Tale 童话故事 03:44

5.

Mashed Potatoes 土豆泥 05:52

6.

Instant Noodles 方便面 01:53

7.

I don’t Know Why 我不知道为什么 02:31

8.

Inverted Mess 反过来的 05:32

9.

Yunnan Jam 云南即兴 04:51

10.

The Fugitive 逃犯 04:35

11.

Morning Hangover 早上宿醉 02:20

 

Message to the listeners :

 

1) Don’t listen to this on your computer’s speakers, use real external speakers, or good headphones (if you want to hear the stereo effects).

1.5) Keep in mind that

I have recorded everything at home in Beijing, so I did whatever I could with the equipment I have here (it’s not great equipment, a bad sound card and an average quality microphone).

 

1.7) If you are in China, you might want to use a VPN.

2) Press play on the Bandcamp Player, or click on the link to play it on Bandcamp.

3) No need to lie down on your bed, sofa or on the floor this time, just listen to it wherever (though I think it would be better home)

4) This album is an experiment, this is the first time I compose songs in the way I did for these recordings, so I hope it will be an enjoyable experience for you.

If you want to support me as an artist and musician, please buy the music. Buy it here: 

 

http://djangsan.bandcamp.com/album/elevator-music-for-chinese-restaurants

 

See you soon.

 

www.zhangsian.com

http://djangsan.bandcamp.com/

http://www.youtube.com/user/zhangsian

http://www.myspace.com/zsian

http://site.douban.com/zhangsian/

http://soundcloud.com/djangsan

http://site.douban.com/baoxianchaoren

 


Ride the Snake: One Man Live Orchestra (Vol 4).

 

If you don’t see the player, click here. to listen to the music directly on my website. 

 

Tracks:

1.

Djang San – French Man in Beijing Smog 北京重污染下的法国男人 03:06

2.

The Moon 月亮 02:16

3.

The Mumu is back 模模归来 02:42

4.

Polution is great (part 1) 污染好棒 (第一部分) 00:58

5.

Polution is great (part 2) 污染好棒 (第二部分) 02:08

6.

Ruan Jam 中阮即兴 03:39

7.

Flûte inversée 葫芦丝 07:13

8.

End of the World (part 3) 世界末日 (第三部分) 02:04

9.

Death on a Sanlunche 死在三轮车上03:27

10.

Uyghurs in Beijing 北京维吾尔族 05:14

11.

Perhaps 也许 01:45

12.

Clacclac 克拉克拉 01:38

13.

The Sun 阳光 04:11

14.

Summertime 夏日怡情 02:40

Warning to the eventual listenners:

 

1) Don’t listen to this on your computer’s speakers, use real external speakers.

1.5) Keep in mind that all the music has been recorded live, with only myself on stage, using loop machines, several instruments (Guitar, Zhongruan, Hulusi, Keyboard, rythm machines etc…)

2) Press play on the Bandcamp Player, or click on the link to play it on my website.

3) Lie down on your bed, sofa or on the floor.

4) Let yourself go.

5) Listen to it alone.

 

Informations about “One Man Live Orchestra (Volume 4): 

“One Man Live Orchestra Volume 4” is my latest live release as “Djang San”, the name I use when I perform alone (I also have other names: Zhang Si’an, Jean-Sébastien Héry, The Incredible JSB, The Amazing Insurance Salesmen).

I have been doing music in relation with China since the year 2000, I have performed in China’s main cities, venues and festivals, including the Midi, Zebra, COART, Dong Party etc….

This album is composed mostly of experimental improvised tunes recorded live in different venues in Beijing in 2012 and beginning of 2013.

The purpous of these recordings is to show music, recorded at one point in time, mostly improvised, capturing a moment in my life as an instant composer.

With this project, on stage, I play as a one man band, using a guitar, different Chinese instruments, a keyboard, several loop stations and rythm machines.

 As my budget is limited, I couldn’t get a better recording quality, I hope you will understand and concentrate more on the artistic meaning of it.

 

If you want to support me as an artist and musician, please buy the music.

 

See you soon.

 

www.zhangsian.com

http://djangsan.bandcamp.com/

http://www.youtube.com/user/zhangsian

http://www.myspace.com/zsian

http://site.douban.com/zhangsian/

http://soundcloud.com/djangsan

http://site.douban.com/baoxianchaoren