Eight years ago 31-year-old migrant worker Sun Heng
boarded a train bound for Beijing from Anyang City in central
China's Henan Province with a guitar and not a lot
else.
His life became governed by 1.5 yuan (19 US cents) a
day busking on the streets. When he did find work, it was carrying
heavy loads, riding rickshaws and singing for pittance in grotty
nightclubs.
The turning point came in May, 2002. He founded a band
of migrant workers and began to put on mini concerts exclusively
for other migrant workers.
"We need songs about our lives, not hollow ditties or
sweet melodies about urban vanity," said Sun.
The band has now stages over 200 performances for over
60,000 migrant workers and they have distributed over 100,000
cassettes and CDs. There are no exotic settings, no grand stages,
no roadies and no big trucks. But the "Young Migrants Band" has a
guaranteed fan base.
They began touring the country last December,
performing their first gig in Sun's hometown of Anyang.
"It was so cold that even our voices were frozen, but
none of the audience left until the last minute," said the young
singer, who will continue his trip to Shenyang, Xi'an, Guangzhou
and many other cities across China after the Spring Festival
holiday.
Sung has spent the run-up to the Chinese New Year
recording a new album, which includes a song called "Five Jiao
(meaning six cents)".
The song was written about the real experience of a
worker in Shenzhen. The man worked for several employers but not
one of them paid him. When the New Year drew near, he had only five
jiao in his pocket and had to lie to his mother about his life in
the metropolis.
"There are always so many stories behind the people
far away from home," said Sun, who has also been making a digital
video newsreel as the Spring Festival approaches.
The heroine of the video is a woman from east China's
Shandong Province. She operates a Shandong
snack stall in suburban Beijing. Her husband is a truck driver who
longs to buy his own truck for 20,000 yuan (about US$2,577). They
have been working hard in Beijing for seven years but their
ambitions are still distant dreams.
"I want to record the real life of migrant workers and
create our own culture," Sun said.
As the New Year approaches, the band has been drawing
more attention.
A week ahead of the Spring Festival, Sun attended the
first celebration gala for 120 million migrant workers nationwide
put on by CCTV.
"Work is glorious! Work is glorious!" he sang with
more than a trace of irony. The performance will be broadcast to
the whole country.
This year, Sun will spend New Year in Beijing with his
family.
"It is the first time I have been able to spend New
Year's Eve with my family in Beijing since I left my hometown," he
said.
They have invited six friends who are migrant workers
in Beijing but whose hometowns are all over China.
"They would rather spend the New Year's holiday in
Beijing although it is the biggest time of family reunion for the
whole nation," Sun said,
"Their annual income is about 5,000 yuan (about
US$644), half of which would be used up for traveling expenses and
gifts for family members if they went home," Sun said.
(Xinhua News Agency February 17, 2007)
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