BEIJING, July 24 (Xinhua) -- Beijing's Great Hall of
the People is set to become the Great Hall of Pop when it stages its first ever
pop concerts in August.
Five artists are set to rock China's premier
political venue, which is better known for hosting the annual meeting of the
National People's Congress.
Taiwan singers Richie Jen and Huang Pinyuan will
launch the Great Hall's pop music debut on August 11, followed by Taiwan's Jeff
Chang on August 13, Hong Kong singer Sandy Lam Yiklin on the 15th and local
singer and song writer Xu Wei on the 17th.
Jen and Huang were full of enthusiasm for the venue,
which sits on the edge of Tian'anmen Square, and have been taking photos in the
building.
"It has always been a dream of mine to visit the
Great Hall of the People. I would never have expected that I would be holding
aconcert here," said Jeff Chang, famous for his trademark high-pitched voice.
The hall, with a capacity seating of 6,000, offered a
new experience for the audience, according to the organizer, the
ChinaPerformance Art Agency (CPAA).
The Great Hall of the People has hosted concerts in
the past, but they mostly fall into the category of highbrow art or well-known
foreign musicals such as Cats, Chicago and Casablanca, which all played there
last year.
However, pop concerts, with their elaborate stage
designs and the performers' easy interaction with the audience, are likely to
test its popularity as a venue.
The organizer has won approval from the
administrative bureau of the Great Hall of the People for the audience to bring
fluorescent sticks and other accessories to cheer along their idols.
Stadium concerts in Beijing were suspended after
Taiwan singer Chow Wah Kin's gig in the Capital Stadium on March 31 so the city
could renovate its stadiums in time for the 2008 Olympics.
Other venues, such as the Beijing Exhibition Center
where U.S. hip-hop quartet Black Eyed Peas played to a sell-out crowd last week,
cannot accommodate the large crowds attracted to the big names of pop.
"Small capacity venues make it hard for agencies to
make a profit," music critic Ke'er Qinfu was quoted as saying by the Beijing
Youth Daily.
He said the 6,000-seat capacity of the Great Hall was
ideal for pop concerts, and the August acts would hopefully set a trend.
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