Liang Wern Fook
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- This is a Chinese name; the family name is Liang (梁).
Liang Wern Fook | |
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Background information | |
Born | 1964 |
Origin | Singapore |
Occupation(s) | Writer, musician and researcher |
Dr Liang Wern Fook (simplified Chinese: 梁文福; pinyin: Liáng Wénfú; born 1964 in Singapore) is a Singaporean writer, musician, and researcher in Chinese literature and pedagogy. He was one of the pioneer figures in the xinyao (Singaporean Chinese folk songs) movement in the 1980s and 1990s.
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[edit] Biography
[edit] Early life
Liang grew up in a music-loving household, along with his two younger siblings. His father, a journalist, and his mother, an acupuncturist, were always playing the records of singers like Bai Guang and Zhou Xuan.
Liang received his primary and secondary school education at Catholic High School. He started taking piano lessons at the age of 10, and went on to attain a Grade 8 certificate. Liang wrote his first song at the age of 16, and he became more prolific once he started attending Hwa Chong Junior College (now Hwa Chong Institution), often performing with schoolmates in addition to heading the student council and Chinese society drama club. Many of the songs he wrote then, mainly about friendship and camaraderie, are still popular among the school's students today during gatherings, where different singing groups would often perform together.
Liang later attended the National University of Singapore, where he was the top student for both his major, Chinese studies, and in the Arts faculty in 1988. In 1989, he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts with Honours in Chinese Literature, and in 1992, a Master of Arts.[1] In 1992, he married Liu Xiu Mei, a former Chinese language teacher of The Chinese High School, whom he met in university. They have no children.
[edit] Musical and writing career
As a singer-songwriter, Liang's first song "Sing a Song for Hwa Chong" (唱一首华初的歌) was written in 1981 after he lost in an inter-school debating competition at Hwa Chong Junior College.[2] His first commercial song, "A Song for You" (写一首歌给你) was released in 1984 on the Ocean Butterflies (海蝶音乐) label. During his xinyao phase from 1986 to 1992, he released five albums, some of which sold as many as 20,000 copies. Among these, Door (门) was the first Singaporean Mandarin album to be completely composed and written by the same artiste. The song "One Step At A Time" (一步一步来) sat for six weeks at the top of the charts in 1987, while "Love's Refuge" (恋之憩) was at the top for 29 weeks in 1986, an unbroken record for a local pop song.[3] To date, Liang has over 200 musical compositions and songs to his name.
Liang's particularly iconic composition is the song "Negotiations And Love" (情商). He penned this in the aftermath of the Tiananmen Incident on June 4, 1989, and Taiwanese singer Wen Zhang recorded it. The song became popular in Singapore, Taiwan and mainland China.
He has composed television serial theme songs for the then Singapore Broadcasting Corporation, now MediaCorp. Since the 1990s, Liang has also written hits for Cantonese and Mandarin pop stars such as Jacky Cheung, Andy Lau, Leon Lai, Tony Leung, Alex To, Eric Moo, Kit Chan, Joi Chua and Stephanie Sun. In 1996, he produced and composed the songs for Singapore's first Chinese musical December Rains (雨季).[3] In the following year, Liang wrote the theme song "Are You Still There" (你是不是还在) for Singapore film Track (轨道).[4] In August and September 2007, Liang's songs were featured in a local Chinese musical "If There're Seasons", presented by The Theatre Practice.
Liang is also a poet, essayist and a former columnist for Lianhe Zaobao. He has over ten publications in various genres of creative writing. His works, such as the essay collection, The Last Years of Kreta Ayer (最后的牛车水, 1998) ; poetry collection In Fact I am in Love with Time (其实我是在和时光恋爱, 1989); and short story collection The 21 Dreams of Liang Wern Fook (梁文福的21个梦, 1992) showed a new direction for Singapore Chinese literature. These books recorded the changes in modes of feeling and expression brought about by the peer pressure and complexity of life in a post-modern society.[3]
Today, Liang runs a Chinese language enrichment centre for primary and secondary school students, set up in 1997, with his wife. He is still involved in the music business through writing one to six songs a year. He would offer his work to the singer whom he thinks is most suitable for the tune. His most recent popular hit was Joi Chua's "Watch The Sunrise With Me" (陪我看日出), released in 2004.
[edit] Academic career
Liang went into academia in 1990, when the xinyao movement started to become more commercialised. Peers like Eric Moo ventured abroad to develop their careers as pop stars. Others, like Billy Koh of Ocean Butterflies and Paul Lee Wei Shiong, set up their own companies and started to groom new talent. Liang, instead, chose to pursue his PhD at Nanyang Technological University (NTU), writing a thesis on the poems of Tang dynasty poet Meng Haoran. He graduated with a PhD in Chinese studies in 1999.
Currently, Liang teaches once a week as an adjunct assistant professor at NTU's Chinese studies department. He also lectures at the National University of Singapore and the National Institute of Education.
[edit] Honours
In 1988, Liang received gold medal awards from both the National University of Singapore's Arts and Social Sciences Faculty and the Nanyang Technological University's Chinese Studies Department.
In 1990, Liang was voted "Most Popular Writer" by local students in a poll organized by Lianhe Zaobao. In 1992, he received the National Arts Council's first Young Artist Award. He won the Singapore Book Prize in 1996. In a 2003 poll conducted by the Composers and Authors Society of Singapore (Compass), Liang was voted "Person Who Best Represents the Xinyao Spirit". The same poll placed seven of his songs among "the ten greatest xinyao songs", with "Friendship Forever" (细水长流) in top position.[3]
Apart from these, Liang's other achievements include: Sing Music Highest Honour Award (1997), Xinyao Festival Best Lyrics and Music Award (1989), Singapore Hits Highest Honour Award (1994), Singapore Hits Best Local Lyrics Award (1995; 2001; 2003; 2005) and the Meritorious Award from Compass (1999), and Best Original TV Series Theme Song at the Asian Television Awards (2002).[5]
[edit] See also
[edit] Notes
- ^ 梁文福 (In Mandarin). Victoria Junior College. Retrieved on 2007-08-06.
- ^ 梁文福 (In Mandarin). Xujialiang.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-06.
- ^ a b c d Tommy Koh et al. (2006), Singapore: The Encyclopedia, Editions Didier Millet and National Heritage Board, ISBN 981-4155-63-2
- ^ 梁文福的传略 (In Mandarin). Inkui.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-06.
- ^ Compass: Dr Liang Wern Fook (pdf). Composers and Authors Society of Singapore. Retrieved on 2007-08-06.
[edit] References
- Hong Xinyi. "The original campus superstar", The Straits Times, 6 August 2007.
- Nanyang Technological University: Profile of Liang Wern Fook. Nanyang Technological University. Retrieved on 2007-08-06.
[edit] External links
Persondata | |
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NAME | Liang, Wern Fook |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | Writer, musician and researcher |
DATE OF BIRTH | 1964 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Singapore |
DATE OF DEATH | |
PLACE OF DEATH |