Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The following is an overview of 2023 in Chinese music. Music in the Chinese language (Mandarin and Cantonese) and artists from Chinese-speaking countries ( Mainland China , Hong Kong , Taiwan , Malaysia , and Singapore ) will be included.
In February, his OST for the movie YOLO was released; the song, “Little Happiness” (小美满), proceeded to dominate the weekly charts across Chinese platforms and was awarded Movie Song of the Year at the 2023-2024 at the China Movie Data Gala and Awards Ceremony of China Movie Channel M-Chart. [80]
If There's Still A Tomorrow (Chinese: 如果還有明天) is a Taiwanese pop song written and composed by Liu Weiren (Chinese: 劉偉仁) and included in Hsueh Yue (Mandarin: 薛岳)'s fifth album "Life, Old, Sick, Death" (Chinese: 生老病死) , which is one of the main songs of the album. The original singer, Hsueh Yue died of terminal liver ...
This is a list of Chinese folk songs, categorized by region. In the 1990s, with the spread of music television in China, a new type of folk song began to emerge, known as new folk songs (新民歌) or TV program folk songs (晚会民歌).
Tanya Chua received the most nominations with eight and won three major awards for Best Female Mandarin Singer, Best Mandarin Album and Album of the Year. She is the first singer to ever win Best Mandarin Album and Album of the Year at the same time, after the award was reintroduced in the 28th Golden Melody Awards. Chua is now the holder of ...
Song Qian (Chinese: 宋茜; born February 2, 1987), known professionally as Victoria or Victoria Song, is a Chinese singer, dancer, actress, model, host and author known for her work as the leader of South Korean girl group f(x). She made her solo debut in May 2020 with her eponymous studio album.
The chart tracks songs' performance from Friday to Thursday. Chart rankings are based on digital downloads from full-service digital music retailers (sales from direct-to-consumer sites such as an individual artist's store are excluded) and online streaming occurring in Malaysia during the tracking period.
During the late 1960s and 1970s, Mandarin pop songs were getting more and more popular and became the mainstream of Hong Kong pop. [6] In the 1970s, Hong Kong audiences wanted popular music in their own dialect, Cantonese. Also, a Cantonese song Tai siu yan yun (啼笑姻緣) became the first theme song of a TV drama.