My Little Airport


My Little Airport is a Hong Kong-based indie pop band. Their English lyrics are marked by spelling, grammar, and rhythm inflected by Hong Kong English. The band's lyrics and music are written by Ah P and sung by Nicole. The duo occasionally invite friends and relatives to participate in their albums and shows. They established Harbour Records with four other indie bands from Hong Kong, and on it released their 2004 debut album The OK Thing to Do on Sunday Afternoon Is to Toddle in the Zoo. In 2006 they joined Elefant Records, hoping to gain distribution beyond Hong Kong's small indie fanbase.

Career

The band had its start while the two were journalism students at Hong Kong Shue Yan College, writing songs in both English and Cantonese. They intended to put into use lessons learnt in class, and as a result this is why many of their songs have been said to follow the Five Ws: "Who?", "What?", "Where?", "When?", "Why?" as journalistic works typically do. The duo is also notable for their quirky song titles, often addressed to friends, such as "leo, are you still jumping out of windows in expensive clothes?", "victor, fly me to stafford", or addressed to celebrities, such as "Gigi Leung is dead", "Faye Wong, about your eyebrows".
In 2009, the group started writing politically themed songs such as "divvying up Stephen Lam's $300000 salary" and "Donald Tsang, please die". The latter song was written after Tsang suggested that the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 were insignificant compared to China's current economic power.
A fourth album entitled poetics – something between montparnasse and mongkok was released on 23 November 2009, which contains many of those politically charged songs. A fifth album entitled Hong Kong is one big shopping mall was released on 26 August 2011, which received numerous awards. In October 2012, the band released their sixth album, lonely friday, on the Harbour Records label.
On 30 November 2011, Hong Kong arts and culture magazine Muse named my little airport Hong Kong's 'Next Big Thing' cultural heroes of 2011. The song "you don't want to be my girlfriend, phoebe" was covered by the Scottish indie band, BMX Bandits.

Discography

Studio records

Singles

2004 – Radio Singles
2005 – Radio Singles
2005 – CD Singles