Holding a torch for two divas
Updated: 2012-02-17 18:59
By Mu Qian (China Daily)
|
|||||||||
The Chinese media's entertainment sections have been focusing on the recent sad news of two divas, the African-American singer Whitney Houston and the Taiwan singer Fong Fei-fei.
Houston died of drugs and alcohol on Feb 11, at 48 years old. Fong, 58, passed away because of lung cancer on Jan 3, though the news came out only this week due to Fong's wish not to disturb the Chinese New Year celebrations.
On Chinese online forums and micro blogs, mourners of Houston and Fong are often the same group of people, although the two stars differ greatly in styles and cultural backgrounds.
Apart from what seems to be a cosmopolitan sentiment toward women artistes, there is something else that links the two together in Chinese people's hearts.
Fong and Houston were from the first batch of pop stars from outside the mainland who made their voices heard in the 1980s, when pop music just began to enter Chinese people's lives. Fong delivered a soft, Japanese-influenced sound in the early 1980s, while Houston popularized rhythm and blues in the mid- to late 1980s.
At a time when China was less open and when the Internet did not exist, Fong's songs circulated mostly through copied tape cassettes, with hand-scribed lyrics. Her works were covered so often that a lot of her numbers became associated with other singers more than with Fong herself.
Houston's songs first appeared on Chinese radio programs dedicated to Western pop music, something pioneering at that time. Her songs were also featured in compilations of English songs for students of the English language, in which her credit was not always given.
In the 1980s, when we were desperate to grab any pop music that was available, we heard many works without knowing the singers, and it was years later that the names of those artistes were known.
Fong and Houston were never top stars in the Chinese market like their peers Teresa Teng and Michael Jackson. But their works diffused widely and paved the way for the development of the burgeoning Chinese pop music scene. Many of China's pop singers older than 35 are indebted to their influences.
Unfortunately, neither Fong nor Houston performed on the Chinese mainland during the heydays of their careers. Houston gave concerts in Beijing and Shanghai in 2004, after years of drug abuse that adversely affected her voice and mind. Fong held her first Chinese mainland concert in Shanghai in 2007, which mostly attracted people who went for nostalgia rather than music.
The entertainment industry never lacks new faces, and we had almost forgotten Fong and Houston until the news of their deaths came.
Though both Fong and Houston had been dropped from my record shelf long ago, they played important roles in my adolescence and early music education, as a member of the first Chinese generation to have grown up listening to pop.
The artists gave the best of themselves in their songs, though their life stories might not have been as perfect. Let's listen to their songs once more. I select Fong's Dreamer and Houston's Greatest Love of All.
You can contact the writer at muqian@chinadaily.com.cn.
- 'Taken 2' grabs movie box office crown
- Rihanna's 'Diamonds' tops UK pop chart
- Fans get look at vintage Rolling Stones
- Celebrities attend Power of Women event
- Ang Lee breaks 'every rule' to make unlikely new Life of Pi film
- Rihanna almost thrown out of nightclub
- 'Dark Knight' wins weekend box office
- 'Total Recall' stars gather in Beverly Hills
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Supplies pour into isolated villages |
All-out efforts to save lives |
American abroad |
Industry savior: Big boys' toys |
New commissioner
|
Liaoning: China's oceangoing giant |
Today's Top News
Health new priority for quake zone
Xi meets US top military officer
Japan's boats driven out of Diaoyu
China mulls online shopping legislation
Bird flu death toll rises to 22
Putin appoints new ambassador to China
Japanese ships blocked from Diaoyu Islands
Inspired by Guan, more Chinese pick up golf
US Weekly
Beyond Yao
|
Money power |