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"Để Mị nói cho mà nghe" ("Let Mị tell you something") is a song by Vietnamese singer Hoàng Thùy Linh in her third studio album, Hoàng (2019). It was released by The Leader Entertainment on June 19, 2019 as the lead single from the album. The song was written by Thịnh Kainz, Kata Trần, T-Bass, and is produced by Kainz himself.
One of those nephews Li Yiyu (Li I-yu, 李亦畬, 1832–1892), authored several particularly important works on tai chi. The other nephew, Li Yiyu's younger brother Li Qixuan (Li Ch'i-hsuan, 李啟軒, 1835-1899), worked closely with Yiyu to further develop the art, and was also credited as an author of at least one work on the subject of tai chi.
Chyi Yu is a protege of the late Taiwanese composer and songwriter Li Tai-hsiang. [3] Li wrote the evergreen masterpiece "The Olive Tree", which was released in 1979. [ 3 ] Chyi later married Li's younger brother.
Power Station (traditional Chinese: 動力火車; simplified Chinese: 动力火车; pinyin: Dònglì Huǒchē) is a Taiwanese rock duo, composed of Yu Chiu-hsin (尤秋興) and Yen Chih-lin (顏志琳), both of the Paiwan tribe of Taiwan's Pingtung County. Their music is characterized by their energetic rock ballads, as well as their ...
He had a number of masters and learned Tan Tui, changquan, xingyiquan, baguazhang and Wu-style tai chi. [1] He reformed his Wu-style training to make it more systematic and standardised the Wu-style tai chi he had learned from Wang Maozhai. After Wang's death, Yang became the leader of the Wu-style Beijing group. [1]
Yuchi Gong (尉遲恭) or Yuchi Rong (尉遲融) (585 – 25 December 658 [1]), courtesy name Jingde (敬德), also known by his posthumous name Duke Zhongwu of E, was a Chinese military general who lived in the early Tang dynasty.
Yuchi Jiong (尉遲迥) (died 11 September 580 [1]), courtesy name Bojuluo (薄居羅), was a general of the Xianbei-led Western Wei and Northern Zhou dynasties of China. He first came to prominence while his uncle Yuwen Tai served as the paramount general of Western Wei, and subsequently served Northern Zhou after the Yuwen clan established the state after Yuwen Tai's death.
Li Tai-hsiang (Chinese: 李泰祥; pinyin: Li Taixiang; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Lí Thài-siông; 20 February 1941 – 2 January 2014) was a Taiwanese Amis composer and folk songwriter. He was best known for penning a series of popular Mandarin-language pop and folk songs throughout the 1960s and 1970s at the height of the genres' popularity. [1]