Taiwanese pop (simplified Chinese: 台语流行音乐; traditional Chinese: 台語流行音樂; pinyin: Tái Yǔ Liú Xíng Yīn Yuè; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Tâi-gí liû-hêng im-ga̍k) is a popular music genre sung in the Taiwanese Hokkien language/dialect. It is referred to as Tai-pop and suffured a setback during the years of martial law in Taiwan. Upon the lifting of Martial Law in Taiwan, multiple artists began to produce Taiwanese song tracks and entire albums in Taiwanese.
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Cantonese, Mandarin and Taiwanese (Hokkien) all derive from the Sino-Tibetan languages family. The historical origin of Taiwanese pop comes from a Japanese enka base instead of a Chinese shidaiqu base.[1][2] Music of this category are sometimes called "Aboriginal Taiwanese pop" to distinguish it from Mandarin pop music in Taiwan.[3] Also, because it developing from traditional Japanese enka, it is become complicated with its varieties.
While Taiwanese music has existed before the Japanese occupation of Taiwan, the "father of Taiwanese pop" or "New Music" is considered to be Chang Fu-hsing in the 1930s.[1]
After the Kuomintang relocated from mainland China to Taiwan, the phase of White Terror would begin. The process started in 1949 with the proposal of a martial law. All facets of Taiwanese culture that were not of Han Chinese origin #Politics|See here]]. As a result, native Taiwanese pop music was no longer in development.
In the 1960s, Taiwan Television station for example could air no more than 2 Taiwanese pop songs a day.[1]
The Republic of China would lift martial law in 1987 and allow native Taiwanese culture to reintegrate into society. When Taiwanese music was no longer restricted, the gap between old enka-style Taiwanese pop and modern 1980s mandopop songs was tremendous. Because of this, Taiwanese pop was thought of as music for the older generations.[1][2] This is unusual since popular music is almost globally associated with youth.
Taiwanese culture has often been overshadowed by Mandarin main-stream culture confusing outsiders with the stereotype that "Taiwanese" is "Mandarin". As far as music sales online Taiwanese pop is often clumped with "Mandarin" music and often mislabeled as such confusing many Chinese and Taiwanese Americans, and those who can't read Chinese.
Blacklist Studio would release the first native Taiwanese album in a mandopop-dominant market in 1989.
One famous male singer from the 1980s is Long-Hong Hong (洪榮宏) who is famous for his Taiwanese "One Umbrella" song (一支小雨伞) and also produces Taiwanese Christian song albums too. Another famous male singer from the 1990s is Chen Lei, who Jody Chiang (江蕙) is Taiwan's most famous singer and is often referred to as the Queen of Taiwanese pop music. She has many albums and compilations that date from the 1980s to the present. She can be referred to as the Taiwanese equivalent of Teresa Teng (below).
Stella Chang (張清芳) has produced albums entirely in Mandarin and entirely Taiwanese. She made her debut singing Taiwan's ming-ge (National, ROC) songs and is a Mandarin pop singer, but branched out into contemporary Mandarin and Taiwanese songs to reflect her heritage.
Teresa Teng (鄧麗君), although of mainland Chinese heritage, is also known to have songs in Taiwanese. Unfortunately, these songs have not made it to CDs like her Japanese, Mandarin, and Cantonese songs have. Although Teresa Teng is better known for her Mandarin albums, her songs were also influenced by Japanese Enka style and by older Taiwan ming-ge songs.
Chen Ying-Git (Chen Ying Jie) (陳盈潔), is a famous female singer of Taiwanese Hakka heritage, who has also produced albums from the 1980s through the 1990s like Jody Chiang. One of her famous songs is 海海人生. She sings a famous duet called 酒醉黑白話 with Taiwanese male singer 余天 (he also sings in Mandarin as well).
Other famous Taiwanese singers include Zhang Xiu-Qing (Jhang Shiou Ching) (張秀卿) from Pingtung, Taiwan, who is famous in the early 1990s for her song "Che Zhan" (车站) (Train Station).
In 1990, Lin Qiang launched the first successful Taiwanese album under Rock Records. It also broke away the tradition by having a new-ballad style instead of the old-enka style.[2]
In 1993, Taiwan's government opened up the broadcasting of TV or radio programs to languages other than Mandarin.[4] Chang Yu-Sheng would also discover A-mei (Note: A-mei has Taiwanese aboriginal heritage, but her music is predominantly Mandarin and is actually classified as Mandarin pop, not Taiwanese pop).
In the mid 1990s, Taiwan became one of the largest music industry in Asia. The country was the second largest music industry in Asia, in 1998 and 1999, after Japan, before falling into the fourth rank, in 2002, due to piracy. The piracy which hitting domestic singers has caused domestic repertoire as a proportion of the market, fall to 50%, in 2001, from an all-time high of around 70%, in the 1990s.[5] Sales of recorded music in Taiwan was peaked in 1997, when sales reached US$442.3 million, but by 2008, the revenue was declined sharply to US$51 million, with piracy and illegal downloads to blame. Foreign repertoire began to dominate Taiwanese music over local repertoire for the first time in the mid 2000s, as did in Hong Kong and Mainland China.[6]
Recently, native Taiwanese pop have been re-integrating into c-pop. A-mei would be labeled an Asian hero worldwide for promoting cross-trait pop music representing aboriginal Taiwanese pop with Mandopop success. Her popularity however was criticized by the Communist Party of China for promoting any sort of Taiwan independence.[7]
The most popular Taiwanese female singer to date is Jody Chiang (江蕙) from Chiayi, Taiwan, who has numerous Taiwanese albums dating from the early 1980s. She is the equivalent of Teresa Teng, except for Taiwanese music. Another famous singer in Taiwan also known for her ballads is Chen Ying-Git (陳盈潔).
Current Taiwanese pop music is becoming more influenced by Mandarin pop and include a wide variety of styles including rock, hip-hop, rap etc. Artists such as Wu Bai, Phil Chang, Jolin Tsai, Eric Moo, Show Luo Mayday and Jay Chou are known to have Taiwanese songs in their albums. Recently, Taiwanese black metal band Chthonic has risen to international prominence due to their nationalistic, anti-Chinese music.
In August 1996, IFPI Taiwan (now Recording Industry Foundation in Taiwan) introduced gold and platinum awards for music recordings in Taiwan, along with the IFPI Taiwan Chart, which was suspended in September 1999.
The sales requirements for music recordings of domestic, international repertoire and singles differ. In Taiwan, sales of domestic repertoire are higher than international repertoire and singles. Note that music recording certificate in Taiwan is awarded based on shipments.[8]
Certification | Before March 2002 | Before January 2006 | Before November 2007 | Before January 2009 | Since 1 January 2009[9] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gold | 100,000 | 50,000 | 35,000 | 20,000 | 15,000 |
Platinum | 200,000 | 100,000 | 70,000 | 40,000 | 30,000 |
Certification | Since 1 January 2009)[9] |
---|---|
Gold | 5,000 |
Platinum | 10,000 |
× Chen Xiao-Yun (陳小雲)
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