One of Beijing's most-watched bands, Queen Sea Big Shark (QSBS) are an electro-rock group with an urgency and wild spirit that seems to perfectly capture the zeitgeist of the capital's roiling indie music scene.
They play a spiky, retro blend of synthed-up rock with influences as diverse as 1970s New York East Village bands and 80s Japanese cartoon songs.
CBD is one of their most popular songs on MySpace and it's an electro synth pop track with dark, futurist basslines, while Love is Pop is a gentle electronic ballad that treads as close to pop as these guys are probably capable of.
Their live shows are high-energy, charismatic affairs, with lead singer Fu Han gyrating in a spectacular mirrored dress - one of her trademark self-designed pieces - and guitarist Cao Pu slinging out riffs as tight as the rhythm section of drummer Xiao Wu and bassist Wang Jinghan.
And they regularly pack out Beijing's top live music venues.
Like many Beijing bands, Queen Sea Big Shark's retro rock stylings strike a chord with Chinese audiences. Western influences are definitely noticeable in the rock emerging from the Beijing underground, particularly the groovier stuff that characterises veterans of the scene such as New Pants and Queen Sea Big Shark.