Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Wang Luobin wrote the song in 1939 in Qinghai while shooting a film near Qinghai Lake. He met a young Tibetan girl, and wrote a song about the beautiful impression that she left upon him and all those around her. The song is set to the tune of Qayran jalğan (Қайран жалған) - a Kazakh folk song - that Wang had collected in the area ...
"Drizzle" has been identified variously as the first work of shidaiqu, [6] the first C-pop hit, [16] and the first Chinese modern song. [4] The genre that followed "Drizzle", blending Chinese folk music and jazz, was rejected in the early People's Republic of China , which deemed it " yellow music ". [ 17 ]
Papa, Can You Hear Me Sing (Chinese: 搭錯車) is a 1983 Taiwanese musical film directed by Yu Kanping (虞戡平) starring Sun Yueh and Linda Liu (劉瑞琪). [1] This film was released eight times in Taiwan and eleven times in Hong Kong and won four Golden Horse Awards . [ 2 ]
Wrong Carriage, Right Groom (2023) Wrong Carriage, Right Groom ( Chinese : 上错花轿嫁对郎 ; pinyin : Shàng cuò huājiào jià duì láng ) is a Chinese television series that produced 20 episodes in September 2000 with the participation of Huang Yi , Nie Yuan , Li Lin , Shi Xiaohong .
"Chinese Food" is a song performed by American singer Alison Gold. It was released on October 5, 2013, as her debut single with Patrice Wilson 's label PMW Live . Wilson also wrote and produced the record.
Zhang Xianzi (simplified Chinese: 张弦子; Traditional Chinese: 張弦子; pinyin: Zhāng Xiánzǐ; born April 22, 1986) is a Chinese singer of Zhuang ethnicity. She is professionally known by her given name 弦子 (Xianzi) which translates to "harp" in English.
The Northeastern Cradle Song is a lullaby known to many people in China.It is a folk song representative of Northeast China.. This cradle song is said to be originally sung in Pulandian, now part of Greater Dalian, at the time when Pulandian was called New Jin Prefecture (in Chinese: 新金县), located north of Jinzhou (in Chinese: 金州)).
The song has been caught in a decades-long dispute over authorship and intent. This song has often been associated with a political meaning, for the real Green Island was used as a place of exile for political prisoners from the late 1940s during the single party rule of Taiwan's Kuomintang (Chinese Nationalist Party).