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Song name in Chinese Artist Composer Lyricist 人在旅途洒淚時: Michael Kwan Annabelle Lui (雷安娜) Michael Lai: Jimmy Lo Kwok Tsim 上海灘
The Bund is a Hong Kong period crime drama television series first broadcast on TVB in 1980. It is praised as "The Godfather of the East" and spawned two sequels, two remakes, and a film adaptation. The theme song, which shares the same Chinese title as the series and was performed by Frances Yip, also became a memorable Cantopop hit.
The Radio Television Hong Kong (RTHK) Top Ten Chinese Gold Songs Awards, which is one of the major music awards in Hong Kong since 1979, can reflect the great reliance on Japanese melodies in Cantopop. During the 1980s, 139 out of 477 songs from weekly gold songs chart were cover versions, and 52% of the cover versions were covers of Japanese ...
Prequel to 1980's The Bund II: 13 Apr Easy Come Easy Go 發達容易搵食難 6 Wong Wan Choi, Lisa Lui, Liu Wai Hung: Modern drama 14 Apr The Sword 一劍走天涯 10 Ha Yu, Sharon Yeung: Costume drama 21 Apr The Brothers 親情 75 Chow Yun-fat, Carol Cheng, Simon Yam, Shirley Yim, Susanna Kwan: Modern drama 28 Apr Happy Heroes 歡樂群英 10
[1] [2] Beginning in 1978, it is the oldest major award in Hong Kong, even earlier than the Jade Solid Gold Awards. The ceremony is usually held in January following the end of the previous music season. It usually takes place at the Hong Kong Coliseum, sometimes at the Sha Tin Racecourse.
The term English pop in Hong Kong does not mean pop music from England, but western style pop songs sung in the English language. In the 1950s, popular music of Hong Kong was largely dominated by pop songs in the English language until the Cantopop's emergence in the mid-1970s.
The song can be heard in protests in Hong Kong as recently as September 2019, when students sang this song over the national anthem during a secondary school's opening assembly. [ 9 ] [ 10 ] [ 11 ] The song was initially removed on music platforms including QQ Music in mainland China because of its widespread usage in anti-extradition bill ...
Many Hong Kong English bands and singers performed on EYT during the 1970s, such as Agnes Chan, The Young Men and the Lotus. By 1989 Enjoy Yourself Tonight had suffered a terminal decline in audience number; despite (or perhaps because of) a radical change in format (which saw weeknight programmes reduced to half-hour durations, plus the ...