Do More With Reuters

China rappers have all the bling but not much sting

Tue Feb 19, 2008 9:15pm IST
 
Email | Print | | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

LONDON (Reuters Life!) - They've got the attitude, the swagger and the baggy jeans but instead of rapping about violence and sex, Chinese hip hop group, Dragon Blue Tongue, sing about...cooking.

The Beijing bling band are in London as part of a festival of Chinese culture ahead of the Olympics.

The group will play at the Royal Opera House later this week, but their first introduction to London's music scene was less salubrious -- a dingy rehearsal studio in a west London industrial neighbourhood, where they are collaborating with East Asian British musicians, DJ Phat and Suki Mok.

"We rap about Chinese food, Chinese dishes, and Chinese ordinary things, daily life, daily struggle," 24-year old Li Jun Ju, who goes by the stage name Kirby Lee, told Reuters.

Dragon Tongue Squad certainly take their influence from the hard-edged gangsta rap born on the streets of inner city America but the similarity ends there.

"We are not gangsters and we do not call a woman 'bitch' or 'ho'," Lee said about their squeaky clean lyrics. "That's not my cup of tea."

They are looking to inject Chinese culture into the Western music.

Their song about cooking -- in which Lee and band mates 22 year-old J-Fever aka Lil' Tiger, whose real name is Zhao Hong and 29-year-old Zhang Nan who goes by the stage name Crazy Chef, shout out in Mandarin "stir fry....quick cook.....chop suey....steam" in celebration of the cuisine, also includes traditional Chinese sounds and instruments.

With the right to party in China still very much controlled by the Party, Dragon Tongue Squad make sure they toe the line.  Continued...

Photo

Catch the latest news, pictures, stats and live race commentary on our special Formula 1 page.  Full Coverage