King Ly Chee 荔枝王 Resurrections

Even looking behind the mirror there’s not been much to get excited about for local live music fans over the last 18 months as COVID and government regulations have decimated live music and concert venues.

Sometimes though, behind a cloud there is actually a silver lining as fans of the iconic hardcore band King Ly Chee found earlier this month with the surprise announcement of the band’s first concert in four years.

As resurrections go, this was totally unexpected – seismically similar to the ABBA reunion among pop fans perhaps – as the band’s break-up in 2017 seemed terminal with former members all getting involved in new bands and musical projects.

In 1999 when Pakistani frontman Riz Farooqi returned to his birthplace from New York ‘hardcore’ barely existed in Hong Kong. Riz though was a passionate devote… finding happiness, joy and release/freedom in the music and community.

Finding some like-minded musicians King Ly Chee was born and a generation of HongKongers found their voice and identity in Hong Kong hardcore.

bc magazine spoke with Riz Farooqi ahead of their new concerts:

King Ly Chee live again, honestly didn’t expect to see that to happen – how did it come about?
The band ended in 2017. I carried the band through numerous lineup changes which I did because I had made a commitment to myself back when I started the band in 1999 that I would keep it going no matter what. So regardless of who left I just kept it going which is why it ended up feeling like a revolving door of members. But by 2017 I was done looking for new people – it finally came to a point that it just wasn’t right to keep replacing people. That particular lineup that ended in 2017 included a total of 5 people (Myself, Ivan, Brian, Ho, and Joe) who pretty much made the band their lives and dropped everything to be able to honour commitments when it came to shows, touring and recording. 

So in 2017 it was done and I was ready to move on with my new band Dagger.

But then Covid came and put a complete stop to Dagger because my drummer, Ivan, lives in Macau. In fact the very last show I’ve played was two years ago when Dagger played at The Wanch in Feb of 2020 which was also the last time I saw Ivan. So it’s been two years of absolutely nothing going on in my life. NOTHING. I even started another band, Regret, in that time trying to get the fire going again. But the drummer of that band, Egas, ALSO lives in Macau. 

I started reminiscing and a bunch of old KLC photos and videos kept popping up on my newsfeed. These photos were from an era of the band that was MOST beloved by Hong Kong. That’s not even an understatement…looking at all those photos and videos of people right here in Hong Kong losing their minds to this band was something that really meant a lot to me. Interestingly enough the drummer for that era is an amazing dude named Kevin (out of all the band members I’ve had the honour to play with in KLC, he was always the closest to me – like a full-on brother), just so happened was also missing that era too. I contacted Andy who played guitar back then and the three of us decided to try it out to see how it felt. It was just a quick jam – but we ripped through all those songs as if literally NO time had passed. After the first jam we all kinda sat there smiling from ear to ear.  

King Ly Chee - HK hardcore

There have been many members of King Ly Chee since 1999, who will be in the 2021-22 line-up?
That’s the thing. When people ask if we’d ever reunite I always say, “which era”? For Hong Kong there was never any doubt that the ‘Stand Strong’ era would be it. So the band that is back together is myself, Kevin, and Andy (Unfortunately Alex is not in Hong Kong so it won’t include him, but our good friend Ho (also an ex-member of KLC) will be on bass). 

What has it felt like to prepare for a gig and play the King Ly Chee songs again after such a long time?
As mentioned above, it was like literally no time had passed. Kevin, Andy and I got right back into it and the craziest part was that the vibe was exactly the same from back then. People have to understand, we’re talking about something we did almost 20 years ago, and for it to click like the way it did today in 2021 is something none of us envisioned. But it felt right being back in the practice room together and we’re currently gearing up to play the first of our comeback shows. We’re STOKED. 

For those who might recognise the name but don’t know the band, can you give us a quick potted history of who are/were King Ly Chee?
King Ly Chee is a hardcore band I started back in 1999 as a way to introduce the world of “hardcore” to HKers. I wanted to introduce this underground culture in a language that was more easily digestible to the local population (Cantonese) because it’s what saved my life once (as did metal and punk rock) and I wanted to see if it could help others as well. 

Are you going to record/film/live stream the upcoming King Ly Chee shows?
The current plan is to film the first show back and then see what happens. 

king ly chee stand strongThe first show sold out in minutes, the second almost as quickly – is King Ly Chee back as a band? Will there be any new KL songs?
We have been totally shocked by how fast both shows sold out! 

Yes, we have 2 brand new songs done and will continue to write into the new year. We’ve talked about maybe getting a brand new EP out in 2022 but will see how it goes. The most important thing about getting back together is to just have fun and put zero stress on each other. All of us are married, have full-time jobs, the majority of us have children, we’re just getting back together to have fun, play shows, write music, and use this all to have an excuse to be in the same room together. 

Which of the various online music channels can readers buy/stream King Ly Chee?
We’re on everything – bandcamp being the best because bands get paid the best on this platform. 

Where can people purchase King Ly Chee albums, merchandise?
Currently, the only store selling our stuff in Hong Kong is the amazing Infree Records in Mong Kok run by a true HK legend Soni. If you all haven’t visited this store yet, you’re missing out on an absolute cultural event. 

As a musician what has been the hardest aspect of life under COVID?
Not being able to play shows and tour. I couldn’t care less about recording – I actually HATE recording – being a studio musician/band has never interested me at all. For me the whole point of being in a band is to actually play shows in front of people engaging with music screaming their heads off. 

Apart from the King Ly Chee gigs, what’s on the musical horizon for your other bands Dagger and Regret.
Nothing else…not until it’s easier for people to travel to Hong Kong.

Apart from writing, singing and performing in three bands Riz Farooqi started and runs the hardcore website UniteAsia which brings together bands and fans of hardcore, punk, metal from across Asia.

King Ly Chee Live

Read more about King Ly Chee here

https://www.bcmagazine.net/2017/05/07/king-ly-chee-break-up/
https://daily.bandcamp.com/features/riz-farooqi-interview
Vice: How King Ly Chee Is Keeping Hong Kong Hardcore Alive
Facebook: www.facebook.com/kinglychee
Instagram: kinglychee

Buy/stream King Ly Chee

Bandcamp: https://kinglychee.bandcamp.com
Spotify: King Ly Chee

King Ly Chee Live

King Ly Chee @ Cultkey – 27 December 2021
King Ly Chee @ The aftermath – 29 January 2022

images: skipp zhang, fb

Regret’s Eponymous Hardcore Debut

New hardcore band Regret have released an eponymous 7-track debut EP on cassette and through bandcamp.

A veteran of the local music scene singer Riz also plays guitar in Dagger, fronted the massively popular King Ly Chee and runs the popular Unite Asia hardcore music website.

Commenting on his new band and their debut EP Riz said “We were just looking to play something that was more straight-ahead hardcore punk whose simplicity and directness is better suited to capture the intense emotions we all have as HongKongers living through the tumultuous past couple of years.”

Regret‘s seven tracks, including We Exist, the band’s debut single released in March, are about political turmoil, minority rights, police brutality and censorship.

“The past couple of years have been heavy on the people of Hong Kong, but then you’re seeing similar issues pop up in Myanmar, Thailand, Chile, USA, and everywhere else,” commented Riz in an interview.

“Though you may find your own situation so utterly hopeless, seeing others fighting the same causes brings a sense of camaraderie. So instead of letting all of these dark, chaotic, uncertain emotions eat us up inside, we’re getting it out through this music.”

Regret: Riz, Kuro, Egas

King Ly Chee Release Live Video of Reunion Show

Hardcore band King Ly Chee recent gig, its first since 2017, sold out in under 90 minutes.

Thankfully for fans across the globe the concert at Cult Key, featuring the ‘Stand Strong’ era of the band, was recorded.

A live video and a backstage sneak peak video have been uploaded on their drummer Kevin’s YouTube channel Kidney Buster.

Read bc magazine’s recent interview with Riz Farooqi about King Ly Chee resurrection here.

King Ly Chee are playing the third Tone Online Music Festival, 16 January at 5:30pm, catch the whole festival on TonemusicTV’s Youtube channel https://www.youtube.com/c/TONEMUSICTV.

Due to Covid restrictions, King Ly Chee’s gig on 22 January has been postponed.

image: www.instagram.com/uuzoey

King Ly Chee Break-up

After 18 years it looks as though one of Hong Kong’s most enduring bands King Ly Chee has reached the end of it’s current road with the hardcore band’s mainstay Riz Farooqi posting this message on their facebook page yesterday.

我中文真係唔夠好…十分抱歉…

Tonight my brothers Brian, Joe and Ho announced that they will be leaving the band. In fact the band has been taking a break since January of this year to figure out where we are emotionally and within the various stages of our lives. Making a commitment to a band like this (and a person like me) has not been easy and will never be easy – you can ask anyone in the photo here about their experiences both within and outside the band.

Either way…when we all look back at this and what we were all able to accomplish together – all these faces in this photo (and the ones who aren’t here Mike, Gaeon, Wing, G, Fei Hin who kept the band going in dire times) took a little dream that I had when I started in 1999 and made it their own.

At 22 years old I came back to Hong Kong wanting to do something to help Hong Kong’s underground community, who knew it would turn into what it did  

There are so many memories come flooding back…I still remember the day King Ly Chee joined a music festival in Tuen Mun (Gold Coast) in the summer of ’99 and at the same competition a death metal band got on stage to compete. After they finished I ran to go say hello to them because I was so happy to hear extreme music in Hong Kong! They turned out to be Departing Cross…that guitar player Chai became a great friend of mine later. The drummer who would join them later (Man) would also become a member of King Ly Chee many MANY years later. I remember having the same response when I went to a show at the Warehouse in 1999 and saw a band called Hyponic get on stage and play doom metal and how happy I was to meet Roy and his wife Anita. They later even helped me translate MANY of the articles that were in my zine called 由零開始 Start From Scratch, as did Sammy of Lam Kei, and so many other friends.

I remember touring China in 2000 for the first time and we stayed at Wu Wei (singer of SMZB)’s house with his mom, I remember traveling by train from Wuhan to Beijing for the first time and arriving in Beijing Train Station while the snow was falling around us, I remember getting on stage with Reflector-Brain Failure that night and becoming lifelong friends, I remember the next day Xiao Rong of Brain Failure took me to Scream Records to try to get the label to release our album We Are Who We Are in China.

I remember putting my arms around Stephane and Alex as they cried on the plane leaving Korea after we played 6 shows in 3 days in Seoul in 2000, I remember getting my daily 4pm phonecalls from Kevin when he joined King Ly Chee, he would call every single day for the first year exactly at 4pm on his way to work at a tattoo shop and we’d talk about whatever like only brothers did, I remember Andy-Alex-Kevin and I recording “Stand Strong” until 5am every day and then going home for one hour then getting changed and going to our jobs, I remember touring Southeast Asia for the first time and meeting so many great people who are still good friends today, I remember touring Europe in 2006 in the fucking cold with Ming-Andy-Alex-Pong and dying cause it was so cold, I remember how on the way back from Europe while we were at the Dubai airport Alex told us that he had decided to leave and my heart broke into a million pieces because never in my life would I have ever thought he would leave the band, I remember after that Andy and Pong were like “Don’t worry – we’ll keep the band going with you”, I remember so many people saying that to me every time something happened – like Mike, Gaeon and Wing who sprung into action and helped the band continue somehow someway, I remember going on tour with NOFX and even though Fat Mike didn’t like anything that was too metal sounding – El Hefe and Smelly always came to watch us play every night and they always said “Man your guitar always sounds so HEAVY! I love it!”, I remember receiving a random message from some guy named Brian who was living in Australia and played in a nu-metal band, I remember many months later receiving his band’s CD, I also remember later he sent me tracks of some really progressive metal songs that he had written, I remember that around this time the next heartbreak happened when Andy decided he couldn’t continue either, many months later that random ICQ (or was it MSN?) friend Brian was in King Ly Chee, I remember touring the Philippines and after the last show of the tour we all stayed out with our Filipino brothers until the next morning talking – laughing, how about the time that I picked up my ultimate heroes from the airport in Hong Kong – the band that GOT me into hardcore back in ’94 – mother fucking Sick Of It All! Holy shit…not only was I picking them up but I was the one organizing their first ever show in Hong Kong…Holy fuck…

Memories like this can go on and on…because there are COUNTLESS stories like this to be told and shared with all of you…maybe one day there may be a book made

For now…I want to first and foremost thank EVERY single person who has ever joined King Ly Chee for believing in me, believing in the band, believing in the purpose of the band, believing in the message…I know that some of these guys left the band not on good terms – but as my brother Kevin once said “Man – time heals everything” – I do hope that as time passes that every single one of these guys (and girl – we did have a girl vocalist for a year  will always remember their time in this band and the great things that we accomplished together.

Thank you everyone for giving us your hearts, believing in the band anytime in our 17 year existence…whether you were a fan of the Stephane-Ian lineup or the Stephane-Alex lineup or the Alex-Andy-Kevin lineup or the Alex-Andy-Pong-Ming lineup or the Andy-Pong-G lineup or the G-Brian-Pong-Man lineup or the Kent-Egas-Brian-Ho lineup or the Kent-Egas-Joe-Brian lineup or the Joe-Ivan-Brian-Ho lineup…whichever lineup you fell in love with – I can tell you from the bottom of my heart EVERY member gave 150% of their heart and soul to this band, to creating the music you heard, to playing those shows that you saw, to touring all over the world…

To this I live in eternal gratitude to these amazing individuals.

Lastly, thank you to every one of you all over this world who has supported the band. Thank you for your kindness, for your generosity, for your graciousness, for your heart…thank you for believing in this band.

I have about 13 demo songs that I had written this past year or so for a future King Ly Chee release – but now I guess I’ll just put those online as a heartfelt thank you.

For one last time…
我 - 地 - 係 - KING - LY - CHEE
1999-2017.

Buy King Ly Chee’s albums and eps on Bandcamp

Bane @ Hidden Agenda – 8 March, 2015

Bane @ Hidden Agenda - 8 March, 2015

Legendary US hardcore band on their final Asian tour ever perform at Hidden Agenda supported by local bands King Ly Chee, Oh Nullah. Tickets are $180 (Advance), $220 (Door) from White Noise, Zoo Records, Star Crossed Tattoo, Daydream, 實現會社.

Bane
support: King Ly Chee, Oh Nullah
When: 8pm, 8 March, 2015
Where: Hidden Agenda
How much: $180 (Advance), $220 (Door)
More info: Tickets from White Noise, Zoo Records, Star Crossed Tattoo, Daydream, 實現會社

Bane @ Hidden Agenda – 8 March, 2015

Bane @ Hidden Agenda - 8 March, 2015

Legendary US hardcore band on their final Asian tour ever perform at Hidden Agenda supported by local bands King Ly Chee, Oh Nullah. Tickets are $180 (Advance), $220 (Door) from White Noise, Zoo Records, Star Crossed Tattoo, Daydream, 實現會社.

Bane
support: King Ly Chee, Oh Nullah
When: 8pm, 8 March, 2015
Where: Hidden Agenda
How much: $180 (Advance), $220 (Door)
More info: Tickets from White Noise, Zoo Records, Star Crossed Tattoo, Daydream, 實現會社