万州
Played a party virtually in the middle of nowhere tonight, a city called Wan Zhou, 3 hours outside of Chongqing. The promoter (J&B, evidently some Scottish brand of whiskey) didn't tell me that I was going out to the sticks so I wasn't happy about having to spend all day commuting, but it ended with a nice surprise.
Normally for shows like this, outside of major cities, I'm restricted to only playing psuedo commercial music, at least something within in the 125-135 bpm (house/breaks music range) but tonight I spent an hour chatting with the J&B boss from Guangzhou during the hour long break. He was telling me how he hates commercial club music and listens to hip hop, which blew me away, and then suggested that I play hip hop when I get back on. Me and Tangzong (the Chengdu local J&B promoter) were both reluctant but it turned into total insanity. The best DJ'ing memory at least for the last month. It was the first time hip hop had ever been played in that club.
I don't know what else to write, I just had a really great time tonight. Tomorrow I take the train back to Chongqing where I'll regroup with 哈儿妹妹,马明,小浪,and the Chungking Flight Group.
Precious Sleep
Nothing makes you appreciate sleep like being able to not get much of it for an extended period of time. Matter of fact, I can't wait until I'm asleep.
The last 4 days have been absolutely non-stop. DJ gigs every night - the MC battle, then the Barbeque, where Wu and I together DJ'd for 13 hours straight, then a few hours of sleep and a flight to Kunming and a show tonight with Chivas. I get 10 hours to sleep and then I take another flight to Lijiang where I will do nothing but lounge around for 4 days until I catch a plane to Wuhan for the weekend. Then back to Chengdu.
I've never been to Lijiang before, but I hear it's among the most beautiful places in China. I brought my big camera, which I haven't used for months, in anticipation. Now I will go to sleep, and I will not set an alarm clock. I'm overjoyed. :love:
Oh, tonight was Qing Ren Jie, which is Chinese valentines day.
Knockin’ on Heavens Door (remix) MP3 Download
I did a remix of Knockin' on Heavens Door by Bob Dylan a month or two ago, check it out. I don't want to call it a mash-up because it sounds quite different and doesn't involve anything modern or commercial. Recently it's been the last track I play at every show. Subwoofer or decent headphones recommended, the low end is substantial!
Download Link: Just Charlie - Knockin Remix.mp3
[audio:http://www.djcharlie.us/audio/knockin_streamin.mp3]

MySpace Redesign
I updated my Myspace page yesterday after several hours of wrestling with CSS and html formatting. I don't know why I dedicated the time to this since I usually only visit Myspace once a week to address friend requests from internet strangers , but anyway, here it is.
The goal was for it to not hurt your eyes and ears like most of Myspace. The header is my humble tribute to Chinglish, which I can barely go a day without laughing at. Thank you, Asia.
New DJ Bio
I asked Sascha to write me a new English DJ biography in the same vein as the Hunters & Gatherers bio that he wrote about a year ago. He gave it to me today, I don't think it could be much more perfect.
DJs come and go, pretenders to the throne all. Only the white wizard of the decks, DJ Just Charlie remains constant, weaving spells across three continents, raising the dead up on the dance floor and giving hope to the living. In DC, the locals forget about politics and spread the legend of their native son, Just Charlie. The pride of DC and the warlock of the East Coast came to the Far East in 2005 to study the crimson magical properties of ancient China and fuse them with the white magic of the West. Now armed with the twin blades of East and West lore, this DJ is nigh invincible. Dance floors rush up to greet him and revelers thank the Gods that finally, after waiting for so long, music to move the body is now available in the deep hinterlands of western China. Join us. Only thus can you transcend the daily grind and reach nirvana in the small hours of the night, in sweaty clubs, whirling to the twin decks of the mighty white wizard: DJ Just Charlie.
It is, of course, satirical. My previous bio which says that I was the first DJ on the moon is officially obsolete.
Music Log – Hilltop Hoods (Australian Hip Hop)
I don't get the opportunity to check out much Australian hip hop, but I breezed through a Hilltop Hoods album in 2003 (The Calling) and came across their new release, The Hard Road, a few weeks ago. From Adelaide, Southern Australia, they generally have a distinct jazz-influenced style which I can really appreciate, finding myself in the middle of the Crunk Era or whatever XXL probably calls it. Finding new hip hop that I can get into has become increasingly difficult since about 2000 for me, but while I rate the new Blue Carpet album from Snoop fairly high, Hilltop Hoods seems to more suit my tastes. Check out a track from their latest album, titled Conversations From a Speakeasy:
:slick:

Music Log – Thelonious Monk
In addition to posting words and photos, I always thought it'd be cool to post small music on a regular basis, as a representative of what I'm listening to. Here goes the first one-
The last few days as I've been working on web projects I've been listening to a lot of Thelonious Monk. I found the complete Blue Note recordings online and have been listening to them all, really enjoying them in the late summer months. Here's one to check out:
Jade came in here yesterday, heard me listening to this, and said she didn't know what it was but it sounded like coffee shop music.
:sax:
Back Online! Updated!
I switched web hosts, made a load of adjustments, and the blog is now back online. A few things here and there might not be fully functional yet, but they'll be addressed in the next 24 hours. All of the previous posts should be intact and search-able.
I have an enormous amount to write about, places I've traveled, people I've met, and the two weeks that I spent with my father and uncle who will soon conclude their grande tour of China. Put shortly, they had an absolute blast.
Here's a photo that I took recently at a temple in Chengdu:

Consulate Lecture, Qing Cheng Shan
Last Wednesday I gave an hour-long lecture at the American consulate on DJ'ing in China. After six months or so of hesitation I decided to commit myself to it, I suppose to broaden my horizons and try something different. I saw a list of the topics that the previous lectors selected and was fairly put off by the entire idea when I found that people are lectured there on topics like classic French literature, 20th century American colonialism, and China's economic growth. Boring. So, the primary objective was to make it fun an interesting. I didn't think this would be too difficult considering the countless bizarre situations I've found myself in over the last year, so I decided to focus primarily on identifying the largest disparities between the two club cultures and the talking about the observations I've made as a first-hand witness of how China's nightclubs operate. I thought it went very well and flowed much more like an open dialogue than I expected it to, which was a welcome surprise. I was also surprised to find that many of the people who showed up to hear me speak barely knew what a DJ was, while others were themselves DJ's. Overall a good experience which yielded almost all that I hoped it could. Maybe at some point in the future I'll give another lecture on another topic that isn't so boring - I've already been thinking of doing one on creationism or scientology, which I don't think many Chinese people are even familiar with. We'll see.
Today I took a tour of Chengdu along with Sascha, who was able to obtain a big car and driver for the day, courtesy of the Chinese government, since he's authoring a book on Chengdu. I tagged along and took photos as they dropped us off at all of the major tourist sites in the city, granted us entry into special ordinarily-restricted areas, and took us out to lunch. Most of the sites both of us had been to, but we checked out a few temples that I hadn't been to before, in addition to a giant museum that's set to open next year. The museum is actually an airplane-hanger-type facility built around a location filled with excavated fossil remains and 1,000-year old petrified trees. We were also taken to a storage facility guarded by three men which held a collection of ancient artifacts. 3,000 seemed to be the magic number dating all the articles, including a number of stone figures and small jade sculptures and scriptures. The day as a whole was largely impressive - after splitting with Sascha I met with Jade, who I went to Tibet with (she worked for Chivas at the time) last March. It'd been a long time since we'd seen eachother and it was a welcome opportunity to practice not speaking any english for the evening. New vocabulary include breakdancing (jie wu), cross the street (guo ma lu), and gua wa zi (crazy person) in Chongqing-hua (haar!). Pretty fantastic times.
Tomorrow I'll set out and try to find a decent electronic piano to set in the studio. It's been ten years now, but I'm committing myself to learning again!
September 11th Five Year Anniversary
As you're probably already aware, today is the fifth anniversary of the September 11th attacks on New York and Washington DC. It being a nice round number, half a century, grants it a little more significance in our hearts, so I'll write about my own experience on 9/11 and what I remember of what it.
My story isn't the most dramatic, but took place in Tysons Corner, VA. That Tuesday morning I awoke before the first plane struck the North tower at the same time as my friend Zach, who was coming to work with me. I had gotten him a job at my office and he stayed at my house the previous night so we could go to the office together for his first day. Listening to the CD in the car and not bothering to turn on the TV or radio, we remained blissfully unaware of what was happening until walking past my boss David's office where he was seated intently in front of a 9" television. Generally the television was reserved as a late-night still-working comfort and not a morning distraction, so I walked inside to see what was going on. He relayed the news that a plane had hit the World Trade Center as I saw on the TV what looked like a smoke stack. The significance of what had happened was evident in David's voice.
And then, while standing there, the second plane was flown into the South tower. I could hear gasps from other offices as I stepped out of the corner office and walked down the halls witnessing a handful of employees experiencing varying levels of denial. Some continued to work and didn't want to hear or talk about what was happening, while others were becoming hysterical. One employee fearing for her safety, Jamie, a recently married marketer in her early 30's, called her husband and quickly formulated an escape plan to rural Maryland. Another employee, the ex-Marine Manny, showed a tender, vulnerable side after years of being the defacto ex-military office brute.
Eventually, all of us who stayed watched TV and read reports on the internet of what was happening while trying to render conclusions from the buzzing rumors. The Capitol had been bombed. The Sears tower had been evacuated. LAX had been attacked. Not five minutes would pass without another indication of the mounting threat, until the Pentagon was struck. Only 15 miles from where we were, this seemed to hit us the closest. Shortly afterwards, a fire alarm went off in the building. I felt a rush through my body as I felt a threat not from fire, but from hysterical people in this building. Zach and I stepped out into the 11th floor lobby to see fifty Merryl Lynch employees milling around amidst the loud fire alarm as one woman loudly screams "There's a bomb in the building" with a quivering lip. Knowing that uncontrollable fear had captured so many peoples minds, this no longer seemed like such a safe place. Moments later the building was evacuated, with the fire alarm still going off. The elevators were crowded to capacity as Zach and I took the fire escape down 10 flights of stairs to the ground floor. The echo of the fire alarm and of our hasty steps down the stairs filled my ears and mind until we arrived at the ground floor to find the door locked. With the insanity fully enveloping us, Zach and I looked at eachother and shared a laugh as we pounded on the door hoping someone would hear us and open the door from the outside. After two minutes of pounding the door is opened, we're released, and we take our final steps out of the building with the fire alarm still buzzing behind us.
I found this video last night. It's a 30-minute unedited capture of the attacks in New York, filmed by local residents. It captures the surreal nature of the unexpected attacks perfectly.

