Faye Wong Sing And Play Rar

In the four years that followed, Faye Wong would not return, ignoring Live Nation's offer of 100m-HKD, and even rejecting the 3m-yuan offer for a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to sing at the Beijing Olympics opening ceremony on her birthday —the Beijing native was the unanimous choice of netizens, receiving over 63% of the tens of millions. Faye Wong - Download songs & albums online ♫ ♬ MP3MIXX.COM - Largest music collection. Sing and Play: 2003: 10: download Sing and Play mp3: Faye Wong (cd1.

Faye Wong (王菲)
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 1997
GenreMandopop
Length40:39
LabelEMI
Faye Wong chronology
Help Yourself
(1997)
Faye Wong (王菲)
(1997)
Sing and Play
(1998)
  1. Faye Wong - Download songs & albums online ♫ ♬ MP3MIXX.COM - Largest music collection, millions of tracks. Sing and Play: 2003: 10: download Sing and Play mp3: Faye Wong (cd1) 2001: 11: download Faye Wong (cd1) mp3: Faye Wong (cd2) 2001: 5: download Faye Wong (cd2) mp3: Coming Home: 1993: 10.
  2. Faye wong - sing and play (1998) faye wong photo 王菲.

Faye Wong Sing And Play Rare

Faye wong album

Faye Wong Wikipedia

Faye Wong (王菲) is a self-titled album by Chinese singer Faye Wong. Her first recording with EMI, it was recorded in Beijing and released in 1997, around the time that she relocated to Beijing after several years of success in Hong Kong.[1]

All tracks are sung in Mandarin. This album is filled with feelings of lethargy, languor, drowsiness and disengagement, yet most of the songs sound warm and sweet.

The album continued Wong's collaboration with the Cocteau Twins, which began with Random Thoughts in 1994 and Fuzao in 1996. They wrote the fourth track on this album, 'Amusement Park', especially for Faye Wong. Track 8 'Reminiscence' (or 'Nostalgia') is a cover of 'Rilkean Heart' from their 1996 album Milk and Kisses.[2]

Track 5, 'Mortal World', was composed by Miyuki Nakajima. Nakajima had also written Wong's 1992 breakthrough song 'Fragile Woman'. 'Mortal World' was also a hit single and became the closing song with which Wong would end her concerts thereafter. Nakajima re-recorded the song in Japanese as 'Streams of Hearts' (清流, Seiryū) on her 1998 album Be Like My Child.

This album has several covers, including a limited edition 3D cover.[3]

The album sold better in Taiwan and mainland China than in Hong Kong, which was hit at that time by the Asian financial crisis, and where Wong's old company Cinepoly released a compilation of her old songs to compete with EMI.

Track listing[edit]

No.TitleEnglish titleLength
1.'麻醉' (Mázuì)'Perversity'4:00
2.'你快樂(所以我快樂)' (Nǐ kuài lè (suǒyǐ wǒ kuài lè))'Happy Together' OR 'You Are Happy So I Am Happy'4:18
3.'悶' (Mèn)'Bored'4:12
4.'娛樂場' (Yúlè chǎng)'Hangout'3:26
5.'人間' (Rén jiān)'Another Paradise' OR 'Mortal World'4:45
6.'我也不想這樣' (Wǒ yě bù xiǎng zhè yàng)'Unwilling'4:57
7.'小題大作' (Xiǎo tí dàzuò)'Fussy'3:27
8.'懷念' (Huáiniàn)'Nostalgia'3:21
9.'扑火' (Pū huǒ)'Infatuation'4:15
10.'雲端' (Yún duān)'Silver Lining'3:54

References[edit]

  1. ^Stan Jeffries Encyclopedia of world pop music, 1980-2001 2003 p224 'A very private person, Wong shunned the many TV and newspaper appearances that her peers craved. As a result, she caused something of a sensation when, in 1996, she announced that she was married and expecting her first child. The impending birth did little to diminish her popularity. In May 1997 she signed with EMI, through which, with the resources that were now behind her, she became instantly more accessible to the public. In the same year she won a Billboard award for most popular Asian singer and played a show in Taiwan to an audience of 20,000 fans. '
  2. ^Cocteau Twins AtlasArchived April 10, 2004, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^Faye Wong 1997 at Josh Cheung's discography[unreliable source?]
And
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Faye_Wong_(1997_album)&oldid=1014532119'
Fable (寓言)
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 2000
GenreMandopop, Cantopop
Length57:02
LabelEMI
Producer
  • Faye Wong
  • Alvin Leong
Faye Wong chronology
Lovers & Strangers
(1999)
Fable (寓言)
(2000)
Separate Ways
(2001)

Fable[1][2][3][4] (alternatively Legend[5]Chinese: 寓言; pinyin: Yùyán) is a 2000 Mandarin album by Beijing-based C-pop singer Faye Wong.

The album can be considered in three sections. The first five tracks deal with certain aspects of Buddhism, incorporating motifs from fairy tales, especially Cinderella. The next three are radio-friendly pop songs. The next two, 'Farewell Firefly' and 'Book of Laughter and Forgetting,' are somewhat more complex musically; they are sung in Mandarin and are followed by alternate versions in Cantonese, 'Firefly' and 'Love Letters to Myself.'

The first five songs form a song cycle and were composed by Faye Wong herself, marking her further development as a songwriter.[6] Three of them featured as the final segment of every performance in Wong's 2010–2012 Comeback Tour.

All the lyrics on the album are by Lin Xi, and tracks 1–5 were produced by Zhang Yadong, both of whom were regularly collaborating with Wong during this period of her career.[6]Alvin Leong produced tracks 6–12.

Track listing[edit]

No.TitleUnofficial translationLength
1.'寒武紀' (Hánwǔjì)'The Cambrian Age'5:15
2.'新房客' (Xīn Fángkè)'New Tenant'5:11
3.'香奈兒' (Xiāngnài'ér)'Chanel'4:52
4.'阿修羅' (Āxiūluó)'Asura'4:57
5.'彼岸花' (Bǐ'àn Huā)'Flower on the Other Shore'/ 'Flower of Paradise'5:16
6.'如果你是假的' (Rúguǒ Nǐ Shì Jiǎde)'If You Were False'3:57
7.'不愛我的我不愛' (Bù Ài Wǒ De Wǒ Bù Ài)'I Won't Love Anyone Who Doesn't Love Me'4:20
8.'你喜歡不如我喜歡' (Nǐ Xǐhuān Bùrú Wǒ Xǐhuān)'Your Likes Are Not as Important as Mine'4:02
9.'再見螢火蟲' (Zàijiàn Yínghuǒchóng)'Farewell Firefly'5:09
10.'笑忘書' (Xiào Wàng Shū)'Book of Laughter and Forgetting'/ 'Book of Exhilaration'4:27
11.'螢火蟲' (Yìhngfóchùhng)'Firefly'5:09
12.'給自己的情書' (Kāp Jihgéi Dīk Chìhngsyù)'Love Letter to Myself'4:27

All songs are in Mandarin except for tracks 11 and 12, which are Cantonese versions of tracks 9 and 10 respectively.

Japanese bonus tracks
No.TitleLength
13.'Eyes on Me' (Almighty Radio Mix)3:59
14.'香奈兒' (Japanese version)4:59
Korean bonus track
No.TitleLength
13.'Eyes on Me'5:42

Other versions[edit]

A 'Deluxe' version included a VCD with footage of Faye Wong's commercial for Head & Shoulders shampoo.[7]

References[edit]

  1. ^Stan Jeffries, Encyclopedia of world pop music, 1980–2001, 2003, p225. 'Her album Fable, released in October, began to focus on Wong's faith, as the first part of the album centred on the teachings of Buddhism. In 2001, Wong, now enthralled by the Buddhist faith, began to focus on the Japanese market and in April appeared on the front cover of Frau magazine. By the summer she was singing 'Separate Ways,' the theme song to the popular Japanese TV drama Usokoi, and in October she performed live in the country for the first time. In the following month she was named Artist of the Month on MTVChina. She also released the 'Buddhist' single in Hong Kong. In November a double release, Loving, Kindness and Wisdom, highlighted Wong's devotion to her newfound faith, as the first part of the album featured Buddhist chants. Later in November a 'best of' album was released.'
  2. ^Shane Homan Access All Eras: Tribute Bands and Global Pop Culture −2006 p224 '... almost exclusively on contributions from Hong Kong-, Beijing- and Singapore-based composers along with her own compositions on Sing and Play (1998), Only Love Strangers (1999), Fable (2000), Faye Wong (2001) and To Love (2003).'
  3. ^CMJ New Music Report – 2001 12 31p 44 'FAYE WONG Fable'
  4. ^FableArchived 21 April 2005 at the Wayback Machine, EMI Japan. Retrieved 2012-01-07.
  5. ^Anthony Fung and Michael Curtin, “The Anomalies of Being Faye (Wong): Gender Politics in Chinese Popular Music,” International Journal of Cultural Studies 5, no. 3 (September 2002) 'Legend'
  6. ^ abChan, Boon (28 October 2011). 'Faye's back'. The Straits Times. Singapore. p. C2.
  7. ^专辑:王菲--《寓言》 (in Chinese). sina.com. Retrieved 7 January 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
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