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Rice’s first show in a Kowloon warehouse in April 2023. Adrianna Lee, who founded Rice to put on “guerilla” gigs, is excited to support Hong Kong’s underground rock scene. Photo: Rice/Kenji Chim

Profile | Post-punk, hardcore, metal – ‘guerilla’ Hong Kong live music promoter on levelling the playing field for niche genres

  • Adrianna Lee didn’t want to give up on seeing alternative rock bands perform live when she returned to Hong Kong from the UK, so she founded Rice to put on gigs
  • After Rice’s first shows, in a Kowloon industrial building and under a bridge in Tsing Yi, Lee is bringing in two ‘emo’ bands from Chicago to perform in April
Hong Kong

While Hong Kong has long been known for its nightlife, the financial hub hasn’t always been kind to niche music genres that attract smaller audiences, particularly alternative categories such as punk, hardcore and metal.

When Adrianna Lee Ka-yee returned to Hong Kong after nine years in Britain, she thought she would have to give up going to live music gigs.

“I came back in late 2019, then Covid happened,” she says. “There was virtually nothing happening here; and even when it started back up, it was mostly raves.

“I feel like the trend right now is leaning towards electronic dance music and not so much band shows.”
The founder of Rice, Adrianna Lee, saw that small bands in Hong Kong’s underground rock scene needed support. Photo: Xiaomei Chen
Live music gigs are well established in the West, but in Hong Kong the rise of techno has seen the already underground hard-rock scene dwindle.

Lee says she had a hard time finding “loud and heavy” rock gigs in Hong Kong, compared with other East and Southeast Asian cities such as Tokyo and Bangkok, where “shows happen almost every night”, she says.

It was really nice seeing people dancing and rolling on the floor, covered in mud and not caring
Adrianna Lee on Rice’s second show, ‘Thrash Pass’

“Even when we had rock concerts, it’d be something that everyone went to for the big act. It won’t be small bands. [I thought that] if no one’s doing that, I might as well do it myself.”

So she founded Rice, a “guerilla” gig promoter, in February 2023. The name plays on a British ticketing app called Dice that she would often use to browse live music shows and buy tickets.

Last April, Rice held its first show, in an industrial building in Kowloon with three Hong Kong post-punk bands and a four-sided stage that “breaks away from what people would normally expect from rock gigs”, Lee says, adding that she wanted something “slightly different and more immersive”.

The crowd at Rice’s first show get into the music. Photo: Rice/Kenji Chim

“My ideal show would have the crowd standing right next to the performers so they merge,” she says. “Intimate gigs are always better; you get to crowd surf or mosh right in front of the band.

“You can see them looking at you; they’re smiling, you’re smiling – it’s the best kind of experience.”

After the first show, Lee started selling merchandise to promote Rice. With support from the community, she took part in weekend markets and the Shi Fu Miz Festival, in Cheung Chau.
Adrianna Lee manning the Rice stall at Shi Fu Miz, a three-day electronic music festival in Cheung Chau in 2023. Merchandise sales promote Rice’s operations. Photo: Rice

Her stalls sold everything from Hong Kong indie bands’ T-shirts to cassettes and vinyl, with 100 per cent of the profits being given to the musicians.

She has also been developing Rice branded T-shirts, matchboxes and, most notably, folded paper fans that read “sick” on one side and “fan” on the other.

She laughs: “It’s a sick-looking fan, but ‘sick fan’ also sounds like ‘eat rice’ in Cantonese. It’s our most popular item.”

The front side of Rice’s “Sick Fan”, which is a Cantonese-English wordplay. Photo: Rice
The back side of Rice’s “Sick Fan”. Photo: Rice

Aside from the quintessentially Hong Kong quality of its Cantonese-English wordplay, the fan will come in handy during the city’s notoriously humid summers.

Rice’s second gig, “Thrash Pass”, took place last month and featured four Hong Kong hardcore bands in an outdoor area under a bridge near Tsing Yi.

Lee says organising the show was stressful, particularly the logistics of moving the sound system and equipment all the way out to an empty field.

Rice’s most recent event, “Thrash Pass”, held on an empty field under a bridge in Tsing Yi. Photo: Rice/Gideon de Kock

But the biggest obstacle was selling tickets, she says. “I wanted to do a hardcore show, knowing there’s not a big market in Hong Kong. I knew it was going to be difficult, and there were virtually no ticket sales until the last few days, which is terrifying for a promoter.”

Luckily, it was a success, with a dedicated crowd willing to “trek all the way out to the middle of nowhere”.

“It was really nice seeing people dancing and rolling on the floor, covered in mud and not caring. Not to mention how heartwarming it was to know that our events could be an outlet for people to just let loose and be themselves,” she says.

The mosh pit goes wild at “Thrash Pass”, a gig featuring Hong Kong hardcore bands. Photo: Rice/Gideon de Kock

“Some of them came up to me after the show to thank me, which made all the stress worth it.”

And she’s going to do it all over again. For April’s guerilla gig, Lee has invited two bands from Chicago: Your Arms Are My Cocoon, which she categorises as “lo-fi, emo, screamo”; and Blind Equation, which she calls “emo cyber-grind” – “it’s a subgenre of hardcore, like cyber music meets grindcore”.

While the event details are yet to be confirmed, Lee is certain of one thing: “I want to focus on pushing lesser-known bands that need the publicity and are genuinely excited to play, which excites me as well.”

Adrianna Lee working Rice’s stall at a weekend market in the basement of Tsim Sha Tsui’s Chungking Mansions. Photo: Rice/Elton Fung

Meanwhile, she has also been encouraging others to start their own projects.

“I found out one of my friends used to be in a hardcore band, and that another friend was contemplating starting one.

“They didn’t know each other, but I told them, ‘Why don’t you go and talk to this person, and you guys can start something? There aren’t enough bands in Hong Kong, so just start one.’

“If it doesn’t work, it doesn’t work – at least you tried, right?”

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