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electric road 電​器​道

by Celestial 天上

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  • Compact Disc (CD) + Digital Album

    Comes in a multi-panel gatefold digipack, which opens up to show an imagined HK streetscape...

    Includes unlimited streaming of electric road 電器道 via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
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  • Streaming + Download

    Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
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  • Full Digital Discography

    Get all 9 Celestial 天上 releases available on Bandcamp and save 35%.

    Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality downloads of subversions vol. II, subversions vol.I, retrospect 七重天, return to the dub station 返嗒, cloud songs, electric road 電器道, hong kong dub station 香港空轉, happy valley 快活谷, and 1 more. , and , .

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about

“Electric Road 電器道” is the fourth album from Hong Kong collective, Celestial 天上, in which they dive deeper into the underwater world of dub electronica. Although Electric Road is the name of a real street in Hong Kong, the album is not really about that street, but rather the name serves as a descriptor for an imagined sound-scape, or subterranean mind-space, somewhere nearer the bottom of Hong Kong's harbour. Ten years after the Handover, and ten years on from the first Celestial album, Electric Road celebrates the vibrancy of 21st Century Hong Kong, as exemplified by the life on the streets. But the album also reflects on the emptiness of modern day life, and the way in which culture and heritage in Hong Kong are often swept aside in the name of 'progress', and profit:

"Some of this album might seem dark" says producer Pete Millward, "but I've been disappointed this past year; disappointed and confused the Hong Kong government’s complete disregard for heritage, as evidenced by by the tearing down of the Central Star Ferry Pier and its replacement with a Stalinist Mausoleum, the fated demise of Queen’s Pier, the inexorable filling in of the harbour, the seemingly inevitable trashing of the Soco Islands for an LPG terminal, and this administration’s indifference to the environment in general – in short, the Hong Kong that we live in. Amongst other things..."

The artwork (a photo-montage created from scratch by Pete – hence the schoolboy errors) shows a surreal Hong Kong street - but don't bother looking for it in Hong Kong - it doesn't really exist, perhaps like the false memory of a perfect chimerical past that is reflected in the fluid ripples of the dubscape.

Several of the tracks started life as instrumentals that Pete wrote for The Bass Cadets, the live dub band that he performed with at Rockit (the Hong Kong music festival) a few years back. Musically, “Electric Road” pushes the envelope already stretched in the previous three Celestial CDs, that of deep textural dub-electronica, flavoured with Asian instrumentalists, occasional vocals and other-worldly samples. The album once again features Asia's guitar giant, Eugene Pao (包以正), HK's number one Erhu player Hsin Hsiao Hung (辛小紅), and Shakuhachi master Sunny Yeung (陽光). Newcomers are Koto virtuoso Fukuhara Sawako (福原 左和子), plus vocalists May Chan, well known in Hong Kong for her session work as "細 May", Adrian Da Silva, leader of Hong Kong’s AudioTraffic (winner of the Hong Kong leg of Battle Of The Bands), and visiting from New York, Mariella Gonzalez. There is also a reunion of Mandarin and Welsh Rappers, Antonius Chen and John Griffiths, who both first contributed to the second Celestial album, "Happy Valley". And Pete supplies all the other guitar, bass, melodica, keyboards, production, programming and mixing.

“The first song on the album and only cover version, “Kowloon, Hongkong” (a sixties hit for Barbara Pan, but also performed by Irene Ryder, amongst others), started life as an extended 12 minute Ambient Bossa Nova opus for the art exhibition curated by Hong Kong artist anothermountainman (a.k.a. Stanley Wong), entitled “Red, White & Blue”, featuring artworks made from the ubiquious Asian plastic fabric. For this album it was slowed down some more, and given the Celestial ambient dub treatment (of course).”

credits

released June 30, 2007

All other instruments, arrangement, production, mixing and sleeve design by Peter Millward, at Drum Music, Hong Kong. Chinese song titles thanks to Antonius Chen.

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about

Celestial 天上

Celestial 天上 are a Hong Kong based collective who have produced nine albums of Asian Dubscapes:

“Spirit House”, released 1996, “Happy Valley 快活谷” 2001, “Hong Kong Dub Station 香港空轉”, 2004, “Electric Road 電器道” 2007, "Cloud Songs" 2009, "Return To The DubStation", released 2014,“Retrospect 七重天”, released in 2016, Subversions Vol. I, and Vol. II both released in 2022.
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