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Diaspora diaries

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Even in the darkest of Berlin nightclubs, DJ Zhao Bei stands out from the crowd.

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Chinese faces are a rarity in the European DJ scene, but even more unusual is the variety of African dance music he plays, from a continental version of salsa to Afro-jazz to kuduro, from Angola.

Born in Beijing and educated in the United States, Zhao has never visited Africa but he is fascinated by the diversity of its music. Much of his time is spent on searching for ethnic tunes and mixing them with hip-hop and techno. Since moving to Berlin, in 2007, he has taken his vast collection to a growing number of the German city's clubs, and music festivals in Italy, Serbia and the Netherlands.

The son of quantum physics professors, there were high expectations for Zhao to achieve academic excellence. He says he 'consciously resisted the pressure' by aspiring to be an artist and a 'party guy'. When he was 12, he moved with his parents, who were taking up teaching posts in Albuquerque, New Mexico. He mixed with people of many nationalities and avoided the 'closed-minded' Chinese community.

'I started reading books at 14 and I came to believe that humans should live in big groups and babies should be raised by dozens of people,' he says, indicating that this was where his interest in Africa and tribal living began. 'We need a sense of community and togetherness.'

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His ideals, however, were battered by the 'superficiality' of Hollywood. After earning a fine-art degree in Los Angeles, he landed a lucrative job creating title sequences for films and commercials.

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