In this article I intend to take you with me on my exploration of Chinese music. I will first talk about why I think listening to music is so good and then I will share some songs I like. In upcoming articles, I will share much more, this is just a warm-up.

> For Chinese, modern songs in Mandarin and Cantonese exhibit very different behaviour with respect to the extent to which the melodies affect the lexical tones. In modern Mandarin songs, the melodies dominate, so that the original tones on the lyrics seem to be completely ignored. In Cantonese songs, however, the melodies typically take the lexical tones into consideration and attempt to preserve their pitch contours and relative pitch heights.


Where To Download Chinese Mp3 Songs For Free


Download Zip 🔥 https://geags.com/2y7NZH 🔥



When it comes to your Chinese studies, introducing variety into your activities is a great way to balance your skills and keep up your motivation. You can only read your textbook for so long before your mind starts to wander, and you also need listening, speaking, and vocabulary practice. To add some motivational spice to your studies, try learning Chinese by exploring popular Chinese songs.

Laurier is a Canadian musician who has been learning Chinese for about five years. He has 700k+ followers on TikTok and almost 300k followers on Douyin. With his sharp videos, impressive language abilities, and stellar voice, Laurier has wowed viewers all over the world with his covers of popular Chinese songs.

I could barely make out any tones in that song at all! I wish I could find the thread here (I tried to search for it), but there was a lively discussion about whether songs have tones in them. Many Chinese people say "yes," while many non-Chinese people say, "No."

I was talking with my tutor yesterday about Chinese songs (this one in particular, which somehow became extremely internet-famous in the USA: =cnrxJtJcSew). And I said, "Chinese songs are hard for me to understand, because the tones are gone!" And he replied, "Well, the tones are there, but you just can't hear them!" That's far from the first time I've heard someone say that, and I just can't hear the tones.

if tones are so important in chinese as to even distinguish shades of meaning, how can a chinese sing a song? in music every syllable has its own note/tone, so when we sing a song, we must disregard the appropriate tone and apply the musical note to that chinese character... for example we must say "zai"(in...at...) with a falling pitch, but what if the note in the song necessitates us to pronounce "zai" with rising pitch????...

That's why it is hard writing Chinese lyrics .... rather hard for Mandarin songs (4 tones) .... and very hard for Cantonese songs (9 tones). And don't forget to maintain the rhyme.

If the tone of a character do not match the tone of song, it is easy to be mistaken as another character. Experienced singers may tweak the tone slightly as the last remedy. In most cases, native speakers could deduce the correct character by the term or the whole sentence when listening to such songs.

May 31, 2012 at 08:00 PM  Has anybody seens any Chinese music arranged for the violin (not the erhu) ? I thought I had seen books of Chinese folk songs in my wanderings on the internet but I cannot find anything now.

The Sh Jng  or Book of Songs (or Book of Odes) is made up of short poems. Although we must assume they were sung, we do not know the tunes that went with any of these songs. Indeed we know very little about China's earliest music in general, except for the instruments used to play it. We do know that music was popular, that some music was used in rituals, and that Confucius and others placed great value upon it.

The first of these categories, Songs of the States, has attracted most interest from modern readers because of their informality and because of the glimpse they are believed to give us into Chinese life three thousand years ago. It is hard to estimate how popular most of these songs were or for how long, but they are usually assumed to have been widely known folk songs of the early Zhu period, in other words between about 1100 and 600 BC.

The Book of Songs was among the many works destroyed by the First Emperor. After his death it was reconstructed from memory, but apparently a memory more of the songs as heard than as written, so that different new transcriptions were not always written in identical characters.

Provided here are a mere four of the folksongs to give a sense of the kind of material and style involved. As elsewhere on this web site, the Chinese is presented in traditional and simplified characters, respectively blue and red. The English translations are my own in order to make them available without copyright considerations, and they may be freely reprinted for educational purposes. To each translation I have added a few notes seeking to explain, if not really justify, my interpretive choices. No effort has been made to render them singable.

The medium of pop music greatly helped make sense of my experience in China, and I wrote a lot of Chinese-language songs myself, becoming the subject of features in China Daily and Guangdong Television. I have also given in-depth interviews about the process.

One of the most famous Taiwanese pop singers of recent times, Teresa Teng tragically died in 1995 from a severe respiratory attack. But she left behind a wonderful collection of folk songs and ballads.

That is great knowleged of songs from your sharing and i am looking for song foe my daughter actually pei wo gan re chu that i find your blog.

would like to know your opinion which one os better mandarin or japanese for this song.

where can i have the minus one for this song.

thanks and wait for your reply

jennie

About Universal Music Group

At Universal Music Group, we exist to shape culture through the power of artistry. UMG is the world leader in music-based entertainment, with a broad array of businesses engaged in recorded music, music publishing, merchandising and audiovisual content. Featuring the most comprehensive catalogue of recordings and songs across every musical genre, UMG identifies and develops artists and produces and distributes the most critically acclaimed and commercially successful music in the world. Committed to artistry, innovation and entrepreneurship, UMG fosters the development of services, platforms and business models in order to broaden artistic and commercial opportunities for our artists and create new experiences for fans. 006ab0faaa

business studies grade 12 study guide 2022 pdf download free download

the night manager new episodes download

railwagonlocation

14th round 20 80 condominium pdf download

woman scream mp3 free download