Chinese popular music genre
C-pop
is an abbreviation for
Chinese popular music
(
traditional Chinese
:
漢語
流行
音樂
;
simplified Chinese
:
??
流行
音?
;
pinyin
:
hany? liuxing y?nyue
;
Jyutping
:
hon3jyu5 lau4hang4 jam1ngok6
), a loosely defined musical genre by artists originating from mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan (the
Greater China
region). This also includes countries where
Chinese languages
are used by parts of the population, such as Singapore and Malaysia. C-pop is used as an umbrella term covering not only Chinese pop but also
R&B
,
ballads
,
Chinese rock
,
Chinese hip hop
and Chinese ambient music, although Chinese rock diverged during the early 1990s.
There are currently three main subgenres within C-pop:
Cantopop
,
Mandopop
and
Hokkien pop
. The gap between Cantopop and Mandopop has been narrowing in the new millennium. Hokkien pop, initially strongly influenced by Japanese
enka
, has been re-integrating into C-pop and narrowing its trend of development towards Mandopop.
[
citation needed
]
Chinese popular music in China was initially a vehicle for the
Cultural Revolution
and
Maoist
ideologies; however, during the country's extensive political and cultural changes of the past 50 years, it has lost much political significance; and now closely resembles the styles of Taiwanese Mandopop, Cantopop,
K-pop
and
J-pop
, from Taiwan, Hong Kong, South Korea, and Japan, respectively.
[
citation needed
]
History
[
edit
]
The term
shidaiqu
(meaning "music of the era" or
"popular music"
) is used to describe all different types of music sung in Mandarin and other Chinese dialects recorded in China from 1920 to 1952, then in Hong Kong until the 1960s. Shanghai was the main hub of the Chinese popular music recording industry, and an important name of the period is composer
Li Jinhui
.
Buck Clayton
is credited with bringing American
jazz
influence to China and the music gained popularity in hangout quarters of nightclubs and dancehalls of major cities in the 1920s. A number of privately run radio stations from the late 1920s to the 1950s played C-pop.
[1]
Around 1927, Li Jinhui composed "The Drizzle" ("
毛毛雨
") sung by his daughter Li Minghui (
黎明暉
), and this song is generally regarded as the first Chinese pop song.
[2]
[3]
[4]
It fuses jazz and
Chinese folk music
? the tune is in the style of a traditional
pentatonic
folk melody, but the instrumentation is similar to that of an American
jazz orchestra
.
[5]
The
Bright Moon Song and Dance Troupe
founded by him was known as the cradle of C-pop.
[6]
Around the time of the
Japanese invasion of Manchuria
, and the
Chinese Civil War
, pop music was seen as a leftist undisturbed distraction. After the
Second Sino-Japanese War
and
World War II
C-pop has been marketed, produced and branded regionally. The
Chinese Communist Party
(CCP) established the People's Republic of China in 1949. One of its first actions was to label the genre "
Yellow Music
" (the color is associated with pornography). The Shanghai pop music industry then took pop music to Hong Kong and in the 1970s developed
Cantopop
. The
Kuomintang
, relocated to Taiwan,
discouraged
the use of native
Taiwanese Hokkien
dialect from the 1950s to the late 1980s. As a result,
mandopop
became the dominant musical genre in Taiwan.
In 2000 EolAsia.com was founded as the first online C-pop music portal in Hong Kong. The company survived the
dot-com bubble
and offered online legal music downloads in February 2005, backed by
EMI
,
Warner Music
and
Sony BMG
.
[7]
It primarily targets consumers in Hong Kong and
Macau
: some songs require
Hong Kong Identity Cards
to purchase.
In August 2008 Norman Cheung, father of HK singer
Ronald Cheng
, acquired the remaining portion of EMI Music Asia when EMI, which had entered China in the early 20th century, withdrew from the Chinese market. Typhoon music made the purchase for an estimated
HK$
100 million.
[8]
[9]
In February 2008
mainland China
's top search engine
Baidu.com
was sued by local industry groups for providing music listening, broadcasting and downloading without approval.
[10]
Piracy
continues to exist in China
[11]
but Google have since announced a cooperation deal offering free listening and genuine music copies. Top100.cn was founded by basketball star
Yao Ming
, agent Zhang Mingji and music insider Chen Ge via a 20 million
yuan
investment.
[12]
Google mp3 became available in March 2009.
[13]
The future of C-pop in mainland China is slowly emerging. However, the
Chinese government
's banning of the highly popular show
Super Girl
for one year in 2008 and 2012 still a very controversial for the mainland China market.
[14]
In the early years of modern mainland China, emphasis on collectivist and party values, would predominantly set the theme for the music that was produced. Chinese officially sanctioned music schools, teaching popular music usually involves praising China's national culture through song lyrics that echo the official orientation of the PRC. The way in which popular music is taught in the school system relates to Chinese patriotic verses and traditional Chinese culture. The educational policy is heavily influenced by the government, and the "... Chinese government still uses traditional Chinese culture and values to enhance its legitimacy and consolidate its authority"
[15]
(Ho, 2012, p1).
After the
Cultural Revolution
that isolated China from the rest of the world for more than a decade, the country opened up, especially under the leadership of premier Deng. Global economic development offered all sorts of opportunities for Chinese businessmen and the opening up of east coast regions to outside economic interests served to boost significantly cross-cultural exchange between China and other nations, including the United States. Globalization and China's joining the World Trade Organization, with the implication of a move to make institutions within the country more compatible with those of the rest of the world, and the surge in international trade all contributed to bringing not only increased economic activity but also social exposure to foreign cultural standards. Although the new openness affected relations with a broad range of foreign countries, the United States was especially important as it was a major trading partner, and globalization has helped both nations to develop a healthy relationship for future growth.
The openness to trade and other exchanges with the United States, including the growing number of Chinese students seeking admission to educational establishments in the US, facilitated familiarity with
American popular music
. Although this was not the first exposure to foreign music for China, as there had been a growing awareness of the unique brand of western influenced popular music in Hong Kong, known as Cantopop, the influences of
American rock
, and African American rebellious
hip hop
and rap music were undoubtedly a lot more accepted by Chinese youth compared to their parent's generation. Nowadays mainland singers like Hua Chenyu, one of the most influential young pop-rock singers in China today, sold out an Olympic sized stadium concert in two minutes and 58 seconds, demonstrating the homegrown pop music of China are at the stage of strong mass appeal.
[16]
[17]
(Rupke & Blank, 2009). The globalization of popular music impacted other East Asian countries, especially Korea and Japan, and this in turn has influenced developments in China, as "pop-culture excursions between (the) three countries"
[18]
are deemed significant (Tricks, 2014, p. 4).
Genres
[
edit
]
Genre
|
Subgenres
|
Location
|
Chinese popular music
|
Mandarin popular music
|
Mainland China, Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia
|
Cantonese popular music
|
Hong Kong, Macau,
Guangdong
, Malaysia
|
Hokkien popular music
|
Taiwan, Fujian, Malaysia
|
Hakka popular music
|
Guangdong, Fujian, Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan
|
Notable artists
[
edit
]
In 1999, Malaysia's
Nanyang Siang Pau
compiled a list of the top 100 most influential C-pop artists in the 20th century. The top 30 are in this order:
Teresa Teng
,
Zhou Xuan
,
Yoshiko ?taka
,
Samuel Hui
,
Bai Guang
,
Paula Tsui
,
Alan Tam
,
Jacky Cheung
,
Anita Mui
,
Leslie Cheung
,
Faye Wong
,
Liu Wen-cheng
,
Chyi Yu
,
Lee Yee
(李逸),
Danny Chan
,
Dave Wong
,
Julie Su
,
Roman Tam
,
Beyond
,
Eric Moo
,
Chyi Chin
,
Yao Surong
,
Wu Yingyin
,
Tsin Ting
,
Yao Lee
,
Tsui Ping
,
Tsai Chin
,
Lo Ta-yu
and
Jonathan Lee
.
[19]
At the end of 2007
RTHK
began promoting a tribute called "Immortal Legends" (不死傳奇) in honor of the singers who died a legend in the industry. The honor was given to
Roman Tam
,
Anita Mui
,
Teresa Teng
,
Leslie Cheung
,
Wong Ka Kui
(founder of
Beyond
), and
Danny Chan
.
[20]
All six pop stars played a major role in developing the Hong Kong or Taiwan music industry.
In 2010, the
Chinese Music Awards
recognized the top 30 C-pop artists since 1980. They are, approximately in the order of their birth years:
Liu Jia-chang
,
Li Guyi
(李谷一),
George Lam
,
Sam Hui
,
Paula Tsui
,
Roman Tam
,
Alan Tam
,
Liu Wen-cheng
,
Julie Su
,
Teresa Teng
,
Fong Fei Fei
,
Jenny Tseng
,
Lo Ta-yu
,
Fei Yu-ching
,
Leslie Cheung
,
Danny Chan
,
Chyi Yu
,
Tsai Chin
,
Chyi Chin
,
Anita Mui
,
Jonathan Lee
,
Jacky Cheung
,
Cui Jian
,
Liu Huan
,
Tat Ming Pair
,
Beyond
,
Sandy Lam
,
Faye Wong
,
Eason Chan
, and
Jay Chou
.
[21]
At the end of 2010, Vietnam's
Hoa H?c Tro Magazine
proclaimed a list of the top 5 C-pop
boybands
of the 2000s decade, all are from Taiwan. They are:
F4
,
183 Club
,
5566
,
Fahrenheit
(Fei Lun Hai), and
Lollipop
(Bang Bang Tang).
[22]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
Miller, Toby
(2003).
Television: Critical Concepts in Media and Cultural Studies
. Routledge Publishing.
ISBN
0-415-25502-3
- ^
May Bo Ching (2009). Helen F. Siu; Agnes S. Ku (eds.).
Hong Kong Mobile: Making a Global Population
. Hong Kong University Press. p. 60.
ISBN
978-9622099180
.
- ^
"
"SHANGHAI IN THE 1930S"- Legendary Women"
.
Vantage Shanghai
. 11 July 2013. Archived from
the original
on 6 February 2015
. Retrieved
4 May
2016
.
- ^
"FROM SHANGHAI WITH LOVE"
.
Naxos
. Archived from
the original
on 8 July 2017
. Retrieved
4 May
2016
.
- ^
Andrew F. Jones.
"ORIAS: Sonic Histories: Chinese Popular Music in the Twentieth Century"
(PDF)
. Archived from
the original
(PDF)
on 29 October 2013.
- ^
"??老上海歌星:明月社成流行歌曲??"
.
Xinmin Weekly
(in Chinese (China)). 19 August 2009.
- ^
Entertainment News Wire. "
ENW at allbusiness.com
."
Download store to debut in Hong Kong.
Retrieved on 18 March 2008.
- ^
English.cri.com. "
English.cri.com
."
EMI Withdraws from China, Following HK Acquisition.
Retrieved on 8 September 2008.
- ^
Varietyasiaonline.com. "
Varietyasiaonline.com
Archived
2008-10-16 at the
Wayback Machine
."
EMI selling China business.
Retrieved on 8 September 2008.
- ^
NBC News. "
NBC News
."
China's top search engine accused of aiding illicit online copying.
Retrieved on 19 March 2008.
- ^
China Briefing Media. [2004] (2004) Business Guide to the Greater Pearl River Delta. China Briefing Media Ltd.
ISBN
988-98673-1-1
- ^
China.org. "
China.org
."
Google embarks on free music downloading.
Retrieved on 19 March 2008.
- ^
PCworld.com. "
PCworld.com
Archived
6 June 2011 at the
Wayback Machine
."
Google to Launch Free Music Service in China.
Retrieved on 3 May 2009.
- ^
hk-dk.dk. "
www.hk-dk.dk
Archived
2008-05-27 at the
Wayback Machine
."
Foreign Influence in TV & Film.
Retrieved on 30 March 2008.
- ^
Ho, W (2014). "Music education curriculum and social change: a study of popular music in secondary schools in Beijing, China".
Music Education Research
.
16
(3): 267?289.
doi
:
10.1080/14613808.2014.910182
.
S2CID
142989927
.
- ^
"Hua Chenyu's peerless performances"
. 7 January 2019.
- ^
Rupke, N; Blank, G (2009). "
"Country Roads" to Globalization: Sociological Models for Understanding American Popular Music in China".
Journal of Popular Culture
.
42
: 126?146.
doi
:
10.1111/j.1540-5931.2009.00574.x
.
- ^
Tricks, H (2014). "The Pacific Age".
The Economist
.
- ^
20世?最具影?力的100位中文流行歌星http://www.wendangwang.com/doc/fa1768162f50703b09b516cb
- ^
RTHK. "
RTHK immortal legends
Archived
3 March 2016 at the
Wayback Machine
."
RTHK program archive.
Retrieved on 31 December 2007.
- ^
Chinese Music Awards.
華語金曲30年30人
Archived
14 November 2013 at the
Wayback Machine
- ^
H?ng Moon (2010).
"Ngh? s? c?a th?p nien: 5 nhom nh?c nam C-POP đinh đam nh?t"
[Artist of the decade: Top 5 C-POP boybands].
Hoa H?c Tro Magazine
(in Vietnamese). Vol. 875. Vietnam
. Retrieved
6 March
2016
.
Chung ta chu?n b? v??t qua c?t m?c 2010 va chinh th?c khep l?i th?p nien đ?u tien c?a th? k? 21. 10 n?m qua, teen Vi?t đa nhanh nh?y ti?p c?n v?i nh?ng c?n song am nh?c đ? b? d?n d?p t? kh?p n?i. B?t đ?u v?i Teenpop c?c ki nhi nh?nh đ?n t? US & UK thong qua kenh am nh?c MTV, n?i ti?p la dong C-Pop lang m?n qua cac b? phim "th?n t??ng" đai Loan, va gi? la K-Pop tr? trung đ?y h?ng kh?i ? hoa chung trao l?u Hallyu cung teen kh?p chau A. Chinh teen Vi?t la ch?t xuc tac m?nh nh?t giup V-Pop thay đ?i, hi?n đ?i h?n, chuyen nghi?p va g?n g?i h?n v?i xu h??ng am nh?c chung c?a th? gi?i.
Hay cung H2T ch?n l?a ra "Ngh? s? c?a th?p nien" (Artists Of The Decade) ? Nh?ng nhan v?t tieu bi?u nh?t, nh?ng nhom nh?c đinh đam nh?t đa va đang co s?c ?nh h??ng m?nh m? t?i đ?i s?ng am nh?c c?a teen Vi?t.
External links
[
edit
]
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Stylistic origins
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Styles
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Regional variants
| Africa
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The Americas
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Asia
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Europe
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Related topics
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