There’s moments in your life that change how you view things, sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse. Other times you may even wake up and feel like a totally new person. Somehow, overnight you shed your old skin and come to a conclusion or realization that shakes you so thoroughly that everything is different now. This is the type of event that inspired “Shanghai,” a song about an experience of getting high and transforming into a new person through that experience, like a butterfly emerging from a chrysalis.
“Shanghai” is such a happy tune, but actually comes from a place of darkness and band infighting. Not because of payouts or mismanagement or even personal issues, but over hot pot. The story of “Shanghai” all comes back to one night in the city that it’s named after, when a bunch of Australians got very angry about nothing.
Joey describes the incident to an interviewer in the documentary Sleeping Monster: “Ten white, six foot loser white men, and we had Jäger shots, and then we just went out for hot pot and just became insanely angry at each other. And, um, it's just piggish, and then, um, me and Cavs have an insane fight then Stu is trying to interject and then it just exploded from there.”
After being asked by the interviewer “did Ambrose have one as well” he responds: “Ambrose had one, yeah, and Eric, yeah… Everyone, literally Jägermeister, we were arguing over nothing.” When asked how long it took to recover, Joey said “A couple… I don’t know, probably a week? But also it was fine.”
This story gives us the outline and the timeframe, showing that Eric was still in the band at this point. This narrows it down to around the date of their gig at the Modern Sky Lab on 2019-11-21. Joey later talked about that night before a performance of the song on 2023-02-25: “This song’s about a fight that we all got in in Shanghai… I wanted more Szechuan tempeh and Cavs didn’t want any and unintelligible this led to a fist fight. It was mainly because we had gotten fucked up on Jäger. And I got food poisoning and then Cavs got… burned, I guess.”
On 2023-06-08, Ambrose explained the origins of the track from his point of view. “We almost broke up this night. Got a little bit too tongue click in China.” Joey interjects, “we had too many Jägerbombs in Shanghai.” Ambrose continues: “we had hot pot and everyone was absolutely maggoted and everyone started arguing about the intensity of how spicy the hot pot was.”
Stu’s recollection of the event is a lot more vague, though he explains the song itself in a Stereogum interview: “We had this one night/day in Shanghai, where we got the classic Szechuan hot pot and got really drunk and all went insane, basically. It was just a bizarre experience that makes sense to anyone who was there. But I suppose the song is also about that transformative element of travel — again, written from the perspective of becoming a butterfly or changing or having a singular experience that feels like you’re hatching from your cocoon. Shanghai felt like that to us. It was our first time there. I want to go back.”
The interview confirms that the events took place in November of 2019. Another interview from December of that year says “We had actual fights with each other on the street, it was some kind of enlightening out of body experience where you, like, wake up the next morning, ‘Oh, I’ve changed, I’ve become a butterfly today’.”
Butterfly 3000 came out of attempts to make music for the concert film Chunky Shrapnel and Stu said that “Shanghai” was one of a few songs that made it clear that there was a possibility to make these electronic experiments into their own album. In fact, an Instagram post from January of 2020 shows that the lyrics “bye, bye Shanghai” were at least thought of at the time, as Lucas comments it under a photo of the band alongside Sam Joseph and Gaspard Demulemeester eating hot pot. It’s unclear if the photo was taken the day of the incident.
The final version of “Shanghai” was recorded by Stu (synthesizer/vocals/acoustic guitar/bass/piano/Mellotron), Ambrose (percussion/vocals), Cavs (drums) and Cook (synthesizer). The melody would later be used in “Interior People.” The song appeared in two promotional videos for Butterfly 3000. In Gizz goes to the zoo, Stu jokingly sings Ambrose’s part while taking photos for the album’s sleeve. Joey wears a shirt that says “Shanghai” throughout. It also appears in the background of the Gizz with the program vlog. “Shanghai” was released on June 11th, 2021. It appeared in a full album video filmed at the Natural History Museum in Los Angeles on the 24th.
“Shanghai”’s music video was directed and animated by Amanda Bonaiuto and released on June 21st, 2021. It follows two men who walk and dance across a surreal landscape before being covered in butterflies at the end of the video. According to an It’s Nice That article, Bonaiuto was picked by the band after Ambrose found her work on Instagram. She turned out to be a fan when they contacted her and was excited to make a video for them. The only instruction given was that the video had to include butterflies.
She explained her view of the work in an interview with It’s Nice That, saying the characters are “entangled in this stressful strut, where they nearly step on each other over and over again as they move forward. Kind of like ‘shooting yourself in the foot’ or tripping over your words, and the strut doesn’t get interrupted or changed until we see the butterflies for the first time.”
The ending represented rebirth in her mind. “[It’s] almost like a bad joke about overdoing it. Like, if they get swarmed and covered head-to-toe in butterflies (creating something like an exoskeleton) maybe all of their problems will go away.”
Like all Butterfly 3000 videos, it would be featured on the Blu-Ray Butterfly 3000: Ocular Edition.
The song would see its live debut on 2021-10-30 (alongside “Gaia”) at the Sidney Myer Music Bowl in Naarm (Melbourne) for the “Play On Victoria” music festival to celebrate the end of the COVID-19 lockdown. The 2022 versions are very close to the record with no additions at all outside of a longer, atmospheric intro. The only person playing synths here is Joey, with Cook adding piano behind him and Stu playing chords on his Yamaha SG-2A.
In 2023, however, the band would get more invested in synthesizers with Stu getting his own, leading to a new rendition of “Shanghai.”
These versions are capable of getting past the ten-minute mark with a longer jam towards the end of the song and ad-libbed lyrics by Stu that Ambrose echoes, such as “throw your wings in the fire” and “let’s get real high.”
On December 6th, 2021, the band revealed the remix album Butterfly 3001. One of the first singles released would be “Shanghai Dub” by legendary Jamaican producer/engineer The Scientist. He said in a press release: “I’ve always enjoyed being able to apply my dub mixing techniques to music outside of the typical ‘reggae mould’. The music of KGLW, and specifically the song ‘Shanghai’, provided me with the perfect landscape to be able to create something sonically rich and exciting for the listener. KGLW fans and dub-reggae fans, alike, will enjoy this song very much. Stu and the guys from KGLW are creative and imaginative musicians and songwriters and I thoroughly enjoyed working on the 'Shanghai' track for their Butterfly 3000 remix project.”
The album was released with a second remix of “Shanghai” by Deaton Chris Anthony, which brings the song into drum and bass territory. This remix would appear in the video Kick It.
The Scientist Dub was released early on December 6th, 2021 to tease Butterfly 3001.