China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Boyish all-girl pop band crushes teenagers’ hearts

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A little less than a year ago, Min Junqian was an unknown art student in Shandong province, dreaming of becoming a star and hitting the big time.

Fast-forward to now: The 23-year-old is a member of Acrush, China’s first boyish all-girl band, which released its debut single last week. The boyish band already has hundreds of thousands of fans — more than 749,000 followers on SinaWeibo, China’s Twitter-like service.

“Our fathers’ generation still holds the idea that girls should dress in a feminine manner, something I was never comfortabl­e with,” Min said. “I just like to dress in a unisexway.”

Min didn’t expect to be picked for the band when she auditioned last year. But her boyish outlook and androgynou­s style were exactly what Tencent-backed entertainm­ent startup Zhejiang Huati Culture Communicat­ion was looking for.

Marketed as a pop band that encourages girls to pursue their own identities and shake up female convention­s, Acrush cuts against the grain inChina’s music industry, where girl bands are marketed as sweet youngthing­stoappealt­omales.

“I left home when I was young,” said Acrush lead singer PengXichen, 21.“Tocomfortm­y parents, I told them my boyish outlook would keepmesafe.”

Fromday one, ZhejiangHu­ati created individual identities for the women. Min is supposed to be the band’s comedian, while Peng is a “gentle romantic”. The 21-year-old Lu is styled as an energetic dancer with a sunny dispositio­n.

Lu wears long-sleeved outfits to prevent the public from seeing a dragon tattoo on her arm. She says only: “I did it when I was an ignorant girl.”

But she did admit to sometimes dressing in pink and behaving like a child.

The Chinese blogospher­e is ablaze with questions about Acrush’s leanings. Asked if they support feminism and lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r issues, band members claim they have no idea what LGBT means.

“We’re just handsome girls,” Min said.

 ?? THOMAS PETER / REUTERS ?? Members of Acrush, a Chinese all-girl band, pose for pictures before a rehearsal at a dance studio in Beijing last month.
THOMAS PETER / REUTERS Members of Acrush, a Chinese all-girl band, pose for pictures before a rehearsal at a dance studio in Beijing last month.

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