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Hong Kong’s indie scene to be uplifted by 2-day music event Un.tomorrow: First Assembly, showcasing 10 local bands

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Hong Kong’s indie scene to be uplifted by 2-day music event Un.tomorrow: First Assembly, showcasing 10 local bands


With a lack of funding, resources and venues, independent music in Hong Kong has long faced its challenges. But now, urged on by the concept of an “unknown tomorrow”, a group of local rock musicians and promoters are collaborating to make something out of their collective talent.

Un.tomorrow is a new music collective and independent label currently preparing for its debut event, on March 9 and 10, which will showcase 10 acts at an art school in Kowloon.

On the first day, Arches, Code, Perish of Empyrean, David Boring and An Id Signal will take the stage, starting at 4pm; performers on the second day will be The Crush, Life Was All Silence, Wellsaid, Butter Nut Squash Waltz and Wong Hin-yan with a jazz band of three – including two members from Fountain Collective – wrapping at 10pm.
Instead of seeing each other as competitors in the small pond of Hong Kong indie music, Leung Wing-lai (of An Id Signal), Jason Cheung (of post-punk band David Boring), Rocky Sum Lok-kei (of Wellsaid) and Medius Chung Tsz-tung (Zenegeist) decided to join forces to achieve one common goal: to uplift the city’s underground scene.
From left: Leung Wing-lai, Jason Cheung, Rocky Sum Lok-kei and Chung Tsz-tung of Un.tomorrow, a new sound collective comprising local bands and musicians. Photo: Sun Yeung

An Id Signal was established in 2005, while David Boring and Wellsaid were founded in 2013 and 2016, respectively. Zenegeist is an online platform that has produced content about indie music from around the world while promoting local gigs since 2013.

“We try to come up with our own sound and host our own gigs. DIY is a big part of our music and how we view ourselves as artists,” says Cheung, guitarist of David Boring.

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“It’s also a core identity of Un.tomorrow – in the sense that these people are all in the Hong Kong scene doing things their own way, which is how we came across each other in the first place and eventually got together to do this.”

The name comes from a Cantonese expression meaning, “You never know today what’s going to happen tomorrow, so you might as well do it now”.

“When the future is not in our hands, we have to do something right now,” Cheung says, laughing, “The Cantonese phrase is more snappy”.

A promotional poster for Un.tomorrow’s debut two-day event, First Assembly. Photo: Un.tomorrow

The bands involved have all nurtured their own fan bases over the years, but Cheung admits it is not an easy feat for “things to grow on their own beyond that. The rent is extremely high in Hong Kong and it can be very expensive just to keep up. Many people try to do things out of their own pockets, but it’s not really sustainable for the more ambitious projects.”

Un.tomorrow’s coming concert, “First Assembly”, is not only named for the school venue, but also because “it’s time for us to come together and see how things go”, says Cheung.

“It’s also somewhat inspired by the kind of ‘buffet-style’ gig nights in the 90s, when different genres of musicians would put on live shows together. There may not be a consistent sound or theme, but the idea is to join forces.”

Un.tomorrow is an independent music collective with the common goal of uplifting Hong Kong’s indie music scene. Photo: Un.tomorrow

“We’re trying to get everyone on board, that’s why we call it ‘First Assembly’, because we hope this will continue to grow.”

Also in March, the collective will release A Night to Call, Tales to Tell, a vinyl double live album by one of the performers at “First Assembly”, singer-songwriter Wong Hin-yan, whose work on the 2022 film The Narrow Road won him two best original film score gongs at the 59th Golden Horse Awards and the 41st Hong Kong Film Awards.

“Un.tomorrow: First Assembly”, Arts and Culture Centre, HKICC Lee Shau Kee School of Creativity, 135 Junction Road, Kowloon, 4pm to 10pm, March 9 and 10. Tickets HK$580 to HK$1,040; students HK$480



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