Jay Chou

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Jay Chou

Chou at the premiere of Secret in Seoul, South Korea, January 2008
Chinese name 周杰倫 (traditional)
Chinese name 周杰伦 (simplified)
Pinyin Zhōu Jiélún (Mandarin)
Born (1979-01-18) 18 January 1979
Linkou, New Taipei City, Taiwan
Other name(s) Director Chou (周董)
Occupation Musician, singer-songwriter, music and film producer, actor
Genre(s) Pop, rock, R&B, hip pop, Mandopop
Instrument(s) Vocals, guitar, keyboards, fiddles, harmonica, cello, guzheng, pipa, erhu, ukulele, banjo, sitar, clarinet, recorder, beatboxing
Voice type(s) Tenor,[1] Falsetto
Label(s)
Years active 2000–present
Parents Zhou Yaozhong (周耀中; father)
Ye Huimei (葉惠美; mother)
Influenced Nan Quan Mama, Adason Lo, JJ Lin
Official Website Jay Chou@JVR Music
Jay Chou
Simplified Chinese
Traditional Chinese

Jay Chou (born 18 January 1979)[3] is a Taiwanese musician, singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and actor.

In 2000, Chou released his first album, titled Jay (2000), under the record company Alfa Music. Since then his music has gained recognition throughout Asia, most notably in regions such as Taiwan, Mainland China, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia and in western Asian communities such as in the United States and Australia. He has sold more than 30 million albums since his debut. Chou continues to write songs for other artists, work on his album and went on to win numerous awards in the music industry.[4] In 2003, he was the cover story of Time magazine (Asia version),[5] acknowledging his influence on popular culture. He has since held five world tours, performing in cities around the world to more than 10 million people.[5]

Chou debuted his acting career and made his film debut in Initial D (2005), and also since ventured into many movie projects. His first Hollywood debut is in the movie The Green Hornet, starring along with Seth Rogen and Cameron Diaz. Chou also manages his own record and management company JVR Music.

Early life

Jay Chou grew up in Linkou, Taipei County in Taiwan.[6] Both his parents were secondary school teachers: his mother, Yeh Hui-Mei (simplified Chinese: 叶惠美; traditional Chinese: 葉惠美; pinyin: Yè Huìměi), taught fine arts, while his father, Chou Yao-Chung (Chinese: 周耀中; pinyin: Zhōu Yàozhōng), was a biomedical researcher. His mother noticed his sensitivity to music and took him to piano lessons at the age of four.[6] During his childhood, he was fascinated with capturing sounds and songs with his tape recorder, which he carried everywhere with him. In the third grade, he became interested in music theory and also started cello lessons. He is an only child and loved to play piano, imitate TV actors, and perform magic tricks. His favorite composer was, and still is to this day, Chopin. His parents divorced when he was 13, which caused him to become reclusive and introverted. Although he had friends, he often preferred to be alone, listening to music, contemplating and daydreaming. At Tamkang Senior High School, he majored in piano and minored in cello. He showed talent for improvisation, became fond of pop music and began to write songs.[5][7]

Chou graduated from high school with inadequate grades for university, so he prepared for mandatory military service. However, a sports injury triggered by an unexplainable and severe back pain eventually led to the diagnosis of ankylosing spondylitis, a hereditary spine inflammation disease; as a result, he was exempted from conscription.[8][9] Meanwhile, he found himself a job as a waiter.

Early career

Chou's mum initially aspired Chou to become a music teacher, while Chou remained relatively clueless on what to do with his life. Without his knowing, a friend of his had entered both their names in a talent show called Super New Talent King in 1998. Chou played the piano accompaniment for his friend, whose singing was described as "lousy". Although they did not win, the show's host Jacky Wu—an influential character in Taiwan's entertainment business—happened to glance at the music score and was impressed with its complexity. Wu then asked who wrote it, discovered Chou and hired him as a contract composer and paired him with the novice lyricist Vincent Fang.[5] for his then record company Alfa Music. Chou then spent most of his time in Wu's studio learning music producing, sound mixing, recording and writing songs. Although he was trained in classical music, Chou combines Chinese and Western music styles to produce songs that fuse R&B, rock and pop genres. However Wu told Chou that he will help Chou to release an album after he wrote 100 songs and he will pick ten from there. Chou already had an arsenal of songs he wrote for others but had been rejected, so among those he chose 10 for his debut CD album Jay that was released in 2000. The album established his reputation as a musically gifted singer-songwriter whose style is a fusion of R&B, rap, classical music, and yet distinctly Chinese. His fame spread quickly in Chinese-speaking regions throughout Southeast Asia.[10][11][12]

Music career

2000 to 2002

Jay Chou launched his debut album "Jay" under Alfa Music in 2000. The album was promoted heavily by Jacky Wu in the entertainment shows he hosted. Jay also appeared in some of the shows himself. He frequently wears a cap and leave his head hanging low in the early days, which gives him a unique image and piques the curiosity of viewers. The debut album and Jay himself was marketed as a talented singer-composer album with a unique tune. With his collaboration with Vincent Fang and Vivian Hsu in the album, it also brought about a few hits.

After promoting the debut album shortly, Jay went into the studio for next 12 months to record and produce the next album "Fantasy". This album released in September 2001 became a big hit and sold an estimated 2 million copies in Taiwan alone. Other than being a commercial success, the album also garnered Jay 5 awards out of being nominated 10 at the much-coveted 13th Golden Melody Awards in 2002. This established Jay in the music industry. Hits such as "簡單愛" (simple love) which brings out the simplicity of love in youth with a very catchy tune, "愛在西元前" which talks about love before B.C. won Chou the Best Composer award, and "開不了口" talks about a person leaving on a space mission while he didn't get to profess his love to his loved one. All these songs are Chou's signature songs and are being sung in concerts even till today.

Chou's music became much-discussed topic because it is different from mainstream popular Chinese music at that time. It infuses themes of ancient past, futuristic space ship, and his music invokes very clear and vivid imagery to its listeners. A characteristic of his singing was also being brought up that with his rapping or singing, people often could not decipher what he is singing until they look at the lyrics. Chou says this is his signature style or infusing his singing with the music in the song to "make it blend" well together. Critics refer to his singing as "mumbling". This garnered a lot of attention and reporters often quiz Chou on his singing style. Another reason Chou came up with is that he wants the listeners to look at the lyrics because the lyrics written by Vincent Fang are very deep. All these prompted many to start listening to Chou's music in the music world. Up till this point in time, his music is mainly within the R&B genre. This album is to be looked back, the most significant part of his career which catapulted Jay into stardom.

Chou followed the formula that works for his third album, with songs that invoke imagery, collaborating with lyricist Vincent Fang, "mumbling" singing and mainly R&B tunes. His third album "Eighth Dimensions" is still a commercial success. With it, he held the world concert tour "The One".

2003 to 2004

In 2003, Chou released his fourth album 'Ye Hui Mei" named after his own mother. After the release of this album, he attended the Golden Melody Awards for his previous album's nomination. The album "Eighth Dimension" was nominated for 5 categories but won none. Chou didn't took this too lightly, as he wrote on his next album the song "外婆" that he actually takes the Golden Melody Awards too seriously. Ironically, his then-current album "Ye Hui Mei" will win a Golden Melody "Best Album of the year" award in 2004.

"Ye Hui Mei" was both a commercial and musical success. The album features songs on Mafia and drug lords "以父之名" which at first hearing was very unorthodox but it displays Jay's creative writing and producing ability. This album can be seen as Jay's second milestone because it gained extremely positive reaction from both critics of his music and supporters of his music. Jay also wanted to prove that he is a versatile artist and not only writes R&B songs, he ventured into more rock-flavoured tunes such as "晴天" which is one of the most played songs of the year. This song gained widespread popularity and high school students started learning guitar to play the drift of the song's intro.

Musical style

"Chrysanthemum Terrace" (菊花台)
An example of Chou using Chinese style music.

"Nunchucks" (雙截棍)
A combination of Chinese style music and rap.

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Chou's compositions are loosely categorized as pop music. While many of his works fall into contemporary R&B, rap, and rock genres, the term "Chou Style" (Chinese: 周氏風格; pinyin: zhōu shì fēnggé)[13] has been popularized to describe his trademark cross-cultural music and his insistence on singing with slurred enunciation. Taipei Times once described the meaning of "Chou Style": "In what has become the archetypal Chou style, Taiwan's favorite son blends pop, rap, blues and a smorgasbord of esthetic elements of world music to create his dream-like never-never land ..."[14]

He regularly fuses traditional Chinese instruments and styles with R&B or rock to form a new genre called "Zhongguo feng" (simplified Chinese: 中国风; traditional Chinese: 中國風; pinyin: Zhōngguó fēng), which literally means "Chinese Style Music",[a] some of which are written in the Pentatonic Scale as opposed to the more common seven-note scale (Diatonic Scale) to accentuate an oriental style. Besides his own culture, he also incorporated Spanish guitar in "Red Imitation" (Chinese: 紅模仿; pinyin: hóng mófǎng), American techno/electronica in "Herbalist's Manual" (Chinese: 本草綱目; pinyin: Běncǎo Gāngmù), rap with subtle classical music undertones in "Reverse Scales" (Chinese: 逆鱗; pinyin: nìlín), Blues style in "Free Tutorial Video" (Chinese: 免費教學錄影帶; pinyin: Mian Fei Jiao Xue Lu Ying Dai) and Bossanova style in "Rosemary" (Chinese: 迷迭香; pinyin: mídiéxiāng), to name a few. Sound effects from everyday life are frequently woven into his music, such as bouncing ping pong balls, touch tone phone dialing, helicopter blades, dripping rain, and radio static noise (Musique Concrète).[b]

His formal musical training is evident by the use of classical textures in his compositions. For example, counterpoint was used in "Perfection" (Chinese: 完美主義; pinyin: wánměizhǔyì) and "Sorry" (Chinese: 對不起; pinyin: duìbuqǐ), while polyphony can be found in "The Wound That Ends War" (Chinese: 止戰之殤; pinyin: zhǐ zhàn zhī shāng) and "Twilight's Chapter Seven" (Chinese: 夜的第七章; pinyin: yè de dì-qī zhāng).

Chou's albums have been noted for the lack of change compared to his earlier works, yet he firmly stated that he will not alter his style: "They say I've been standing still ... but this is the music I want, and I don't see what I want by moving ahead."[15] To demonstrate his point, he named his 2006 album Still Fantasy after his 2001 album Fantasy. His use of relaxed enunciation has been criticized as "mumbling"[16] which he also insisted will not change;[17] however, recently he has adopted clearer pronunciation for certain songs, particularly more traditional Chinese style songs, such as "Faraway" (Chinese: 千里之外; pinyin: qiānlǐ zhīwài) which features Fei Yu-ching and "Chrysanthemum Terrace" (Chinese: 菊花台; pinyin: júhuā tái).[18]

Lyrics

Chou is more often a singer-composer than a lyricist. Several "regulars" write the lyrics for most of his music, but the content and style is unified with his own personality and image, covering a diverse range of topics and ideas. Vincent Fang accounts for more than half of the lyrics in his albums, helping to establish an important element in Chou's music: the use of meaningful, imagery- and emotionally rich lyrics, sometimes written in the form of ancient Chinese poetry with reference to Chinese history or folklore.[c] In addition to writing romantic hits,[d] he also touches on war, the Bible, sports, and martial arts.[e] Vivian Hsu is a singer herself and has helped with Chou's earlier hits,[f] while Huang Jun Lang (Chinese: 黃俊郎; pinyin: Huáng Jùnláng) is noted for his work surrounding unusual themes (such as a detective story and chess game).[g][citation needed]

Chou himself has written lyrics for many ballads,[h] but has also discussed societal ills such as drug addiction in "Coward" (Chinese: 懦夫; pinyin: nuòfū) and loss of the rural countryside to urbanization in "Terrace fields" (Chinese: 梯田; pinyin: tītián). Domestic violence discussed in "Dad, I am back" (Chinese: 爸,我回來了; pinyin: bà, wǒ huílai le) received a great deal of commotion since he was the first to bring up this taboo subject in Sanscript music,[19] which helped solidify his status as a pioneer and a unique pop singer capable of approaching serious issues. In the songs "Maternal grandmother" (Chinese: 外婆; pinyin: wàipó) and "Listen to Mother" (Chinese: 聽媽媽的話; pinyin: tīng māma de huà), he voiced his high regard for family values. He addressed personal issues about his failure to enter university in "Split" (Chinese: 分裂; pinyin: fēnliè), his resentment towards the paparazzi in "Besieged From All Sides" (Chinese: 四面楚歌; pinyin: sìmiànchǔgē), "Rice Fragrance" (Chinese: 稻香; pinyin: dào xiāng), a song from his 9th album Capricorn encourages people not to give up their dreams even when facing difficulties in life, the sadness of becoming a clown in "Uncle Joker"(Chinese: 喬克叔叔; pinyin: Qiao Ke Shu Shu) and highlighted the importance of individuality in "Popular Imitation" (Chinese: 紅模仿; pinyin: hóng mófǎng).[citation needed]

Chinese cultural elements

Chou leads a new trend of music which combines western musical elements and Chinese literature terms. Because of this unique combination, he makes distinction between himself and other musicians by leading a "China Wind"[20] in Asian music history. The success of his Western-Chinese musical combination is built on his marketing strategies and the musical elements involved in his works.

In early 21st century, the People's Republic of China was in an economic transition model. The new generation was looking for a consumption pop culture which would reflect individual uniqueness in the social circumstance.[21]

The traditional Chinese cultural elements involved in Chou's music contribute to his status in Asian popular music culture. The blowing "China Wind" in his music leads a new trend of Chinese pop music which involves a vast amount of traditional Chinese components, rather than simply following Western music format. Chou's China Wind is highlighted in his lyrics and the use of traditional musical instruments in his music. Lyricist Vincent Fang has worked with Jay Chou since 2000. Fang's work is featured by addressing Chinese traditional elements, such as poetry and Confucianism. His representative work "Chrysanthemum Terrace" (Chinese:菊花台, pinyin: juhua tai), released in 2006, shows a vast amount of cultural elements. In this work, Fang puts images which indicate certain traditional ideas to build the an ancient monarchy setting. He uses chrysanthemum as a metaphor of love. In the line "Chrysanthemums broken, scattered across the floor, your smile has faded" (Chinese: 菊花残 满地烧 你的笑容已泛黄)).

Chou also uses traditional musical instruments, combining traditional Chinese elements of music with Western pop.

Collaborations

Chou began as a songwriter for other singers and continued this area of work even after he debuted his own career in singing. He has composed frequently for Jolin Tsai, Landy Wen, and occasionally for other Taiwanese singers such as Coco Lee, S.H.E, Vivian Hsu, Leehom Wang, Will Liu, Valen Hsu, and Hong Kong pop stars Edmond Leung, Gigi Leung, Jordan Chan, Edison Chen, Karen Mok, Leo Ku, Eason Chan, and Joey Yung, as well as a one-time collaboration with Howard Su. He has also written for singers outside of his generation—over one dozen songs for his mentor Jacky Wu, later also for Taiwanese singer Jody Chiang, and Hong Kong singers Jacky Cheung, Andy Lau, Aaron Kwok, and Kenny Bee.[22][23][24][25]

He initiated the band Nan Quan Mama in 2004, selecting band members and overseeing their album production. The group has been noted for sounding too similar to their mentor;[26] as a result, Chou has reduced his involvement in the band,[27] but continues to help increase their exposure to mass audiences by inviting them as guests performers for his own concerts and music videos.[28][29][30][31]

He has performed live duets with Landy Wen,[29] Jolin Tsai,[32] and former girlfriend news anchor Patty Hou,[33] but only two studio recordings of duets have been formally placed in his own albums: "Coral Sea" (Chinese: 珊瑚海; pinyin: shānhú hǎi) in 2005 with Lara Veronin (of Nan Quan Mama)[34] and "Faraway" (Chinese: 千里之外; pinyin: qiānlǐ zhīwài) in 2006 features Fei Yu-Ching, who began his career in the 1970s.[35]

Besides working with singers, Chou's longest-running collaboration is with lyricist Vincent Fang, as they both started their careers in the music field in 1998. The compilation album Partners (Chinese: 拍檔; pinyin: pāi dàng) featured 12 songs, each consisting of Chou's musical and Fang's lyrical compositions.[36] Fang has written the words to more than 40 of Chou's songs, was the chief editor of Chou's book Grandeur de D Major (Chinese: D調的華麗; pinyin: D diào de huálì), and is now Chou's business partner (together with Chou's manager JR Yang) for the record company JVR Music.[37][38]

Jay Chou was also featured in Cindy Yen's (袁詠琳) song "Sand Painting" (畫沙) released in October 2009.

Jay Chou collaborated with Kobe Bryant on "The Heaven and Earth Challenge"(天地一鬥) in order to "promote youth creativity, as well as an upcoming slam-dunk competition in China." The song was released at a press conference before the NBA All-Star Game on 20 February 2011.[39]

World tours

Jay Chou's 3D enhanced stage at his Singapore concert in 2010, as part of his The Era World Tour
Chou's 2007 tour outfit exhibited at the Hard Rock Cafe 40th anniversary tour in Seattle, 2011

Jay held his first series of five solo concerts, titled Fantasy Concert (范特西演唱會), with the first stop on 11 January 2001 at Taoyuan Arena, Taiwan. Followed by two shows at the Hong Kong Coliseum, one in Malaysia and ended in Singapore on 10 February 2002. His second concert tour, The One Concert (The One 演唱會) commenced on 28 September 2002 at Taipei Municipal Stadium, followed by 11 stops and ended at Shenzhen Stadium, China on 3 January 2004.

Two more series of world tours followed: Incomparable Concert (無與倫比演唱會) in 2004 and Jay Chou 2007 , Las Vegas, Toronto and Vancouver. In 2010, to celebrate Jay's 10 year career in the entertainment industry, he embarked on his fifth series of concert tour titled, New Era World Tour (超時代演唱會), with the first stop of three concerts from 11 to 13 June 2010 at Taipei Arena, followed by 24 stops ending in Malaysia on 5 March 2011.

He has kicked off his World Tour, "Opus Jay World Tour" in 2013 starting with Shanghai as its first stop.

World tours/Live (DVD) album releases

Movie career

Chou formally entered the film industry in 2005 with the release of the movie Initial D (頭文字D). He has since acted in three other movies, directed one film and more than a dozen music videos. Chou, who once said "I live because of music",[40] ventured into movies because he felt the need for a new challenge. As fans have grown concerned that movies will compromise his music career, Chou has repeatedly reassured that movies are a source of inspiration and not a distraction; at the same time, he realizes the need to balance both careers and maintain his place in the music field to garner the continued support of fans.[41][42][43][44]

Acting

Jay Chou at a promotional event for Kung Fu Dunk in January 2008

Entry into acting was an unexpected move for Chou.[42] His high school English teacher thought he was capable of very few facial expressions,[5] and the director of Hidden Track (2003, a movie in which Chou had a cameo role) said that his strong individualistic personality will not make him a good actor.[45] In 2005, Chou's first role as the lead actor in Initial D served two purposes: to launch his acting debut, and to increase his exposure to Japanese audiences.[46] This film is based on the Japanese comic Initial D, where Chou played Takumi Fujiwara, a gifted touge racer who is quiet and rarely shows expression. Some reviewers criticized his bland acting[47] while others felt he performed naturally, but only because the character's personality closely mirrored his own.[48][49] His performance in Initial D won him Best Newcomer Actor in Golden Horse Awards and Hong Kong Film Awards.[50][51] Chou's second film was Curse of the Golden Flower (2006). As a supporting character, he drew much of the attention of Chinese reporters; Chou's involvement in this movie was announced in its own press conference,[52] separate from the meeting held for Chow Yun-fat, Gong Li, and the other actors. Chou portrayed Prince Jai, the ambitious second eldest prince and general of the Imperial army whose personality epitomizes Xiao (孝), the Chinese virtue of filial piety. In this internationally released film, North American audiences saw Chou for the first time. According to Chinese movie critics, comments about his acting ranged from "lacks complexity"[53] to "acceptable,"[54][55] but was critically praised by Western reviewers.[56][57][58][59][60] His performance in Curse of the Golden Flower was nominated Best Supporting Actor in the Hong Kong Film Awards.[61] In the 2008 film Kung Fu Dunk, Chou portrayed a kung fu student and dunking prodigy, and the film earned over ¥100 million (US$14.7 million).[62]

Chou portrayed Kato in The Green Hornet, directed by Michel Gondry and released in January 2011, after Hong Kong actor Stephen Chow withdrew from the project; the film grossed over $228 million worldwide.[63] MTV Networks' NextMovie.com named him one of the 'Breakout Stars to Watch for in 2011'.[64]

In May 2011, Chou started filming for a new movie, The Viral Factor directed by Dante Lam and starred various well known artistes such as Nicholas Tse. The movie was released in theatres over Asia on 17 January 2012. With most of the scenes shot in the Middle Eastern and Southeast Asian countries, earlier filming process has been slightly disrupted due to political conflicts in the Middle East.

Directing

Chou at the 2007 Shanghai Film Festival

Chou acquired his first directing experience in 2004 through music videos. He initially experimented with a song by the group Nan Quan Mama titled "Home" (Chinese: ; pinyin: jiā) where he was involved throughout the entire process from research to editing. After learning the difficulties of being a director, he refused to direct again even at the request of his record company.[65] However, his interest resurfaced again as he directed music videos for 4 of the 12 songs in own album November's Chopin in 2005,[66] and later television advertisements.[67][68] By 2006, he had taken responsibility for the storyboard, directing, and editing of music videos for all his songs.[41] It is unclear how the public appraises his work, since music videos are rarely the subject of critical review; however, director Zhang Yimou said that Chou's directing abilities may surpass his own in the future, after viewing several of Chou's music videos.[52][69]

In February 2007, Chou finally directed his first movie Secret. The story he wrote is based loosely on his relationship with a high school girlfriend, with a plot focused on music, love, and family.[70] He stars as the lead actor of the film with Gwei Lun-Mei as the female lead, and Hong Kong veteran actor Anthony Wong as Chou's father. Despite previous experience in filming music videos, Chou admits that movies are more challenging due to storyline and time constraints.[70] This movie was released in July 2007.[71]

In 2013, Jay Chou released his second directed movie release; movie-musical The Rooftop. This movie generated a more muted response compared to his directorial debut, however box office receipts in mainland China have been good.

Other works

Book: Grandeur de D Major

Chou published his first book titled Grandeur de D Major (simplified Chinese: D调的华丽; traditional Chinese: D調的華麗; pinyin: D diào de huálì) on 25 November 2004.[k] This 200-page book features a prologue written by his family, friends, and co-workers; the main section is a compilation of his personal attitudes, philosophies, and recollections of childhood experiences along with pictures from his music videos, many of which have never been released; and lastly, a list of the artist's major awards, musical and lyrical compositions, and discography. For the usually low-profile singer, this book revealed his personality and convictions that has served as the basis of his musical and public image. He demonstrated a strong appreciation of family values with an especially deep connection with his mother and maternal grandmother. His confidence and dedication towards music is evident as he dedicated 2 out of 7 chapters to music: the current state of the industry, his composition methodology, and the importance of individualism to his success in music. This pride is contrasted against his modesty and self-assessed naïveté about many aspects in life, particularly regarding relationships and marriage.

Endorsements

Chou has been a spokesperson for popular brands such as Pepsi (2002–2007), Panasonic (2001–2005), Motorola (since 2006), M-Zone/China Mobile (since 2003), Levi's (2004–2005), Deerhui (sporting goods, since 2003), Metersbonwe Group (casual wear, since 2003), Colgate (2004–2005), popular computer game Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos (2002), and science and nature magazine National Geographic (2005).[72][73] To maximize the celebrity branding effect, advertisements are nearly always linked to his music and TV commercials are occasionally directed by him.[67][68] He acted as the tourism ambassador for Malaysia in 2003.[74][75] In April 2008, Jay signed with Sprite and collaborated with artistes such as Angela Chang and JJ Lin in commercials. He also did a Sprite commercial with Kobe Bryant and specially wrote a song named "天地一斗 (Battle of the Incomparable)" featuring Kobe Bryant for the commercial. In June 2011, Jay expanded his area of endorsement into the field of technology, becoming the designer and spokesperson of the "N43SL Jay Chou Edition" laptop of ASUS Computers. The laptop is most notable for its lid design, sound system, start-up and shut-down tones, and a unique 'J' font for its key. All of which, except for the sound system, are designed and composed by Jay himself.

Accolades

From the launch of his music career in 2000, singer-songwriter, and producer awards in Asia.[4] The highly coveted Golden Melody Awards in Taiwan[j] awarded "Best Album" for his debut CD Jay (2000) in 2001, and five awards (including "Best Album", "Best Composer", and "Best Producer") in the following year for the album Fantasy (2001). However, failure to win "Best Album" for three consecutive years has left him disheartened with award ceremonies. Although he continues to win more than 20 awards per year from various organizations in Asia, Chou has stated he will rely more on album sales as an indicator of his music's quality and popularity.[76] In 2004, 2006, 2007 and 2008, he was awarded Best-Selling Artist in Taiwan by World Music Awards for the albums Common Jasmin Orange, Still Fantasy and On the Run.[77]

Chou has won the Favorite Male Artist of the 20th Golden Melody Awards in Taiwan. He did not attend the event to collect the award because he was on tour in China at the time.

Media and public relations

Public image

Jay Chou at the premiere of Secret in Seoul, South Korea, on 10 January 2008.

Despite living under continual media scrutiny, Chou's public image has changed little over the years as he emphasizes individuality as his "personal philosophy".[5][78] In his music, this is also evident as he fuses Chinese and Western styles and explores topics unconventional for a pop singer, which have been described as "authentic" and "revolutionary".[5][11][12] The media describes a hard-working[79] perfectionist[5] with clear self-direction[80] who is occasionally regarded as competitive[81] and a "control freak".[5] There is a misunderstanding about his nickname "Chairman Chou" (Chinese: 周董; pinyin: Zhōu dǒng), used by both the press and fans to underscore his domineering personality and impact on Asian music,[82] but also points at his musical talent.[19][79] Yet the origin of this nickname emerges from his fever of collecting antiques as the word "董" comes from "antique" in Chinese (古董). Outside of music, Chou is reported as shy, quiet,[80][83] modest, and views filial piety as "the most important thing".[84] In-line with his aim to present a positive image,[15] he is a non-smoker, non-drinker, and does not go to nightclubs.[85] Government officials and educators in Asia have awarded him for his exemplary behaviour,[86] designated him a spokesperson in the youth-empowerment project "Young Voice" in 2005 and an anti-depression campaign in 2007,[87][88] His lyrics for two songs[i] has been incorporated into the school syllabus to inspire motivational and filial attitudes.[89][90][91][92] In November 2007, Chou was criticized for attending the funeral of Taiwanese gang leader Chen Chi-li to console Chen's son Baron Chen, whom Chou met while filming Kung Fu Dunk.[93][94][95] In 2011 Chou performed on the New Year's Gala program on China's Central Television.[96]

Response to the news media and paparazzi

As with other stars, Chou has expressed a strong dislike of the paparazzi. In the early years of his career, unwanted attention by the media was usually dealt with by avoidance. In-line with his quiet nature, he frequently wore baseball caps and hoods while lowering his head and evading eye contact during interviews.[83] In recent years however, he has been less passive about the invasion of his privacy. To discourage the paparazzi from taking unsolicited pictures, Chou is known to photograph the paparazzi that follow him.[97] He openly calls the paparazzi "dogs" and tabloids "dog magazines", as shown in his lyrics for "Besieged From All Sides" (Chinese: 四面楚歌; pinyin: sìmiànchǔgē). The media have also accused Chou of evading compulsory military service[98] by feigning to suffer from ankylosing spondylitis. Later that year he was acquitted after providing the relevant medical records and letters from the army confirming a lawful exemption from draft dated before the start of his music career.[99]

Despite constant harassment and stalking by the media, he does acknowledge that not all media attention is unwelcome.[100] Coverage by international journals and news agencies such as Time,[5] The Guardian,[101] and Reuters[78] help ascertain his influence on mainstream culture. An editorial written by Kerry Brown of Chatham House named Chou as one of the 50 most influential figures in China, one of only three singers on a list dominated by politicians and corporate owners.[102] At the end of 2009, he was included on JWT's annual list of 100 Things to Watch in 2010.[103]

Fanbase

Chou's wax statue at Madame Tussauds Hong Kong

It is difficult to estimate the size and global spread of Chou's fanbase. Jay's fanbase originated from Taiwan and grew extensively to other mandarin-speaking regions. The Chinese-speaking populations of China, Hong Kong, Macau, Singapore, and Malaysia make up a significant percentage of Chou's fans. Despite rampant piracy issues in this region of Asia, particularly in China, every album Chou has released so far has surpassed 2 million sales. According to Baidu, the most popular internet search engine in China, Chou is the number one searched male artist in 2002, 05, 06 and 07.[104][105][106][107]

Currently, Chou remains largely unknown outside of Asia, except in cities with large Chinese speaking immigrant populations such as Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, Seattle, Vancouver, Toronto, Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide and Brisbane. He has held concerts in major venues such as the Acer Arena (Sydney – 3 July 2009), HP Pavilion at San Jose (San Jose – 31 December 2010), Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena (Los Angeles – 8 January 2011), MGM Grand (Las Vegas—25 December 2002), Rogers Arena (Vancouver – 23 December 2010),[5] Shrine Auditorium (Los Angeles—18 December 2004),[108] Galen Center (Los Angeles—24 December 2007) and the Air Canada Centre (Toronto – 18 December 2008). His intention to increase his prominence in the Western world beyond Chinese audiences is clear. In 2006, Chou composed and sang the theme song for Fearless, a movie released in major theatres in most English-speaking countries,[109] though the impact to his fame has been minimal. His role in Curse of the Golden Flower (limited release) marks his acting debut in North America. Despite having a supporting but important role in the story's plot, the North American version of the official posters only featured a view of his back, greatly contrasting the Asian versions where his face and name were clear and placed between the leading actor and actress. Although Chou is still far from being well known to English audiences, this movie has brought him international exposure. Chou gained further exposure to western audiences in his starring role as crimefighter Kato in January 2011's The Green Hornet.

Discography

Filmography

Films

Year Title Chinese Title Role Notes
2003 Hidden Track 尋找周杰倫 Himself Cameo appearance
2005 Initial D 頭文字D Takumi Fujiwara Main lead
2006 Curse of the Golden Flower 滿城盡帶黃金甲 Prince Jai (Prince Yuanjie (王子元杰 Wángzǐ Yuánjié)) Supporting role
2007 Secret 不能說的秘密 Jay – Ye Xiang Lun – 葉湘倫Main lead; First self-directorial debut film; director, writer and producer
2008 Kung Fu Dunk 功夫灌籃 Fang Shi Jie – Fong Sai Kit – 方世杰 Main lead
2009 The Treasure Hunter 刺陵 Qiao Fei[110] Main lead
2010 True Legend 蘇乞兒 God of Wushu / Drunken God Supporting role
2011 The Green Hornet 青蜂俠 Kato Main lead; First Hollywood debut film
2012 The Viral Factor 逆戰 Jon Wan Main lead
Abba 阿爸 Himself Cameo appearance
2013 The Rooftop 天台 Wax 浪子膏 Main lead; director, screenwriter and producer

Television series

Year Title Chinese Title Role
1999 Thyme Fried Fish 百里香煎魚 Musician
2003 Blue Star
2010 Pandamen 熊貓人 Detective Leo Lee[111]
Director
Mr.J Channel MR.J頻道 Himself – Host[112]

[113] [114]

Notes

  • a.^ Examples of Chou's Chinese style R&B: "East Wind Breaks" (東風破), "Hair Like Snow" (髮如雪), "Faraway" (千里之外). Examples of Chinese style rock: "Nunchucks" (雙截棍), "Dragon Fist" (龍拳), "Golden Armor" (黃金甲).
  • b.^ Examples of sound effects used in Chou's music: ping pong balls in "Class2 Grade3" (三年二班), touch-tone phone dialing in "Blue Storm" (藍色風暴), helicopter blades in "My Territory" (我的地盤), dripping rain in "You Can Hear" (妳聽得到), and radio static noise in "Nocturne" (夜曲).
  • c.^ Examples of Oriental-style lyrics by Vincent Fang: "Shanghai 1943" (上海一九四三), "Wife" (娘子), and "Chrysanthemum Flower Platform" (菊花台).
  • d.^ Examples of romantic lyrics by Vincent Fang: "Love Before Anno Domini" (愛在西元前), "Nocturne" (夜曲), "Common Jasmin Orange" (七里香), and "Perfectionist" (完美主義) .
  • e.^ Vincent Fang's lyrics discuss war in "The Last Campaign" (最後的戰役) and "Wounds That End War" (止戰之殤), the Bible in "Blue Storm" (藍色風暴), sports in "Bullfight" (鬥牛) and "Class2 Grade3" (三年二班), and martial arts in "Nunchucks" (雙截棍) and "Ninja" (忍者).
  • f.^ Examples of Vivian Hsu's work: "Adorable Woman" (可愛女人), "Tornado" (龍捲風), and "Simple Love" (簡單愛).
  • g.^ Unusual themes of Huan Jun Lang's lyrics: detective story in "Twilight's Chapter Seven" (夜的第七章), a chess game in "Checkmate" (將軍).
  • h.^ Examples of romantic lyrics by Jay Chou: "Black Humor" (黑色幽默), "Silence" (安靜), "Iron Box Of An Peninsula" (半島鐵盒), "Fine Day" (晴天), "Excuse" (藉口), "Black Sweater" (黑色毛衣), and "White Windmills" (白色風車).
  • i.^ "Snail" (蝸牛) and "Listen To Mother's Words" (聽媽媽的話)
  • j.^ Golden Melody Awards: "...the Chinese pop music industry's equivalent of the Grammy Awards in the US are held annually to award professionals making music in Mandarin, Taiwanese, Hakka and any of Taiwan's Aboriginal languages."[115]
  • k.^ A similar book was published in Japanese, titled Grandeur de D major—Jay Chou Photo Essay (ISBN 4-901873-50-4).

References

  1. "Male Vocal Range and Voice Types". Retrieved 2010-09-03. 
  2. (Chinese) Government Information Office (Taiwan) Winners of the 13th Golden Melody Awards. 28 April 2004. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
  3. (Chinese) JVR Music Jay Chou's profile Retrieved 2011-05-17
  4. 4.0 4.1 "Detailed award list (external link) by Jay Chou Studio". Jaychoustudio.com. Retrieved 2011-02-21. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 5.8 5.9 5.10 Drake, Kate (2003-03-03). "Cool Jay". Time (Asia). Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 "Jay Chou: Asia's reluctant superstar". CNN. 2008-09-08. Retrieved 2009-02-21. 
  7. (Chinese) Chou, Jay (2004-11-01). Grandeur de D Major. China: Hua Ren Ban Tu. pp. 8, 12. ISBN 957-29371-4-6. 
  8. (Chinese) "Jay Chou discusses the wonder of life in illness 二度造访心情电视 周杰伦谈病痛中的精彩人生" (News article). sina.com.cn. 2003-04-28. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  9. (Chinese) "Jacky Wu: Jay Chou takes 12 painkillers 吴宗宪:周杰伦一度服12颗止痛药" (News article). zaobao.com. 2006-02-25. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  10. (Chinese) "King of the new generation 周杰伦:新声代之王". sina.com.cn. 2007-01-08. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  11. 11.0 11.1 Chung, Oscar (2005-01-10). "The Stars of East Asia Rising". Government Information Office, Taiwan(ROC). Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  12. 12.0 12.1 "Jay—A Revolutionary Musician". china.org.cn. 2005-11-04. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  13. (Chinese) ""Still Fantasy" Two million albums sold recognized for Jay Chou 《依然范特西》两百万销量力证周董". ccwb.net. 2006-10-11. Archived from the original on 5 May 2007. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  14. Phipps, Gavin (2004-08-29). "CD Reviews". The Taipei Times. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  15. 15.0 15.1 "Taiwan's performing artists feed Asia's appetite for pop". Taipei City Government. 2004-11-15. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  16. (Chinese) "Jay Chou does not pronounce clearly, resulting in a request for a clearer version of "Dragon Fist"". People's Daily. 2003-12-26. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  17. (Chinese) "Vincent Fang discusses music/ Revealed that Jay Chou intentionally enunciates poorly 方文山畅聊音乐 透露周杰伦唱歌故意咬字不清". music.tom.com. 2007-03-15. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  18. (Chinese) "Jay Chou interview/ Being a director gives a greater sense of personal achievement than music 周杰伦接受专访全交代 称做导演比音乐有成就感". cnnb.com.cn. 2006-09-20. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  19. 19.0 19.1 "Aiyo, Aiyo, Jay Chow 唉唷,唉唷,周杰倫". chinatimes.com, Mass-age. 2007-02-28. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  20. Blowing in the China Wind: Engagements with Chineseness in Hong Kong's Zhongguofeng Music Videos
  21. Western Style, Chinese Pop: Jay Chou's Rap and Hip-Hop in China
  22. (Chinese) Chou, Jay (2004-11-01). Grandeur de D Major (Book). China: Hua Ren Ban Tu. pp. 204–211. ISBN 957-29371-4-6. 
  23. (Chinese) "Kenny Bee prepares new album/ Jay Chou writes "A Ghost's Love Poem" 钟镇涛筹备新专辑 周杰伦献曲《魔鬼的情诗》". tom.com. 2006-12-11. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  24. (Chinese) "梁咏琪谈感情心情愉快 声称要感谢周杰伦". ent.qq.com. 2007-01-08. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  25. (Chinese) "Jay Chou and Vincent Fang writes song for Joey Yung/King and queen collaborate for the first time 周杰伦方文山为容祖儿写歌 天王天后首度合作". Eastday. 2007-05-17. Retrieved 2007-06-28. 
  26. (Chinese) "南拳媽媽:一個周杰倫和四個小周杰倫的夏天". People's Daily. 2004-05-31. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  27. (Chinese) "南拳妈妈"驱逐"周杰伦 新专辑体现自己风格". sina.com.cn. 2006-08-03. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  28. (Chinese) ""Jay Chou and Friends" April concert in Chongqing Olympic Sports Centre "周杰伦和他的朋友们"四月唱响重庆奥体". sina.com.cn. 2007-03-05. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  29. 29.0 29.1 Jay 2004 Incomparable Live DVD. In Jay 2004 Incomparable Live DVD無與倫比演唱會 [DVD liner notes] (2004). Taipei, Taiwan [R.O.C.]: Alfa Music International Co., Ltd.
  30. Maltose Candy 麥芽糖. In Huo Yuan Jia 霍元甲 [DVD liner notes] (2006). Taipei, Taiwan [R.O.C.]: Alfa Music International Co., Ltd.
  31. Twilight's Chapter Seven 夜的第七章. In Golden Armor 黃金甲 [DVD liner notes] (2006). Taipei, Taiwan [R.O.C.]: Alfa Music International Co., Ltd.
  32. (Chinese) "Beautiful Jolin Tsai/ Jay Chou and his father attends concert 美豔蔡依林 周董父子搶著看". Epoch Times. 2004-11-21. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  33. (Chinese) "Patty Hou versus Jolin Tsai/ Who makes Jay Chou happier 侯佩岑Vs蔡依林 誰更能討得"周董"歡心". People's Daily. 2005-02-23. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  34. Coral Sea 珊瑚海. In November's Chopin 十一月的蕭邦 [CD liner notes] (2005). Taipei, Taiwan [R.O.C.]: Alfa Music International Co., Ltd.
  35. Faraway 千里之外. In Still Fantasy 依然范特西 [CD liner notes] (2006). Taipei, Taiwan [R.O.C.]: Alfa Music International Co., Ltd.
  36. Partners. In Partners 拍檔 [CD liner notes] (2002). Taipei, Taiwan [R.O.C.]: Alfa Music International Co., Ltd.
  37. (Chinese)"Jay Chou is certain of his direction/ Establishes his entertainment kingdom 周杰倫動向確定 欲打造娛樂全方位王國". epochtimes.com. 2007-04-04. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  38. (Chinese) "Lyrics-music partners (part 1) Jay Chou Vincent Fang 詞曲黃金拍檔(上)周杰倫 方文山寫出創作4部曲". showbiz.chinatimes.com. 2006-09-27. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  39. "Jay Chou and Kobe Bryant's musical collaboration". Asia Pacific Arts. 2011-02-22. 
  40. (Chinese) Chou, Jay (December 2004). Grandeur de D Major. Hua Ren Ban Tu. p. 109. ISBN 957-29371-4-6. 
  41. 41.0 41.1 (Chinese) "Jay Chou on the director's road周杰倫攻陷導演路". Mingpao. 2007-01-07. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  42. 42.0 42.1 (Chinese) "Plans to slowly distance from movies and "other occupations"/ Jay Chou will return to music 規划逐漸遠离電影等"副業" 周杰倫要回歸音樂". /Sohu. 2007-03-29. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  43. (Chinese) "Jay Chou: the joy in filming cannot be found in music anymore 周杰倫:拍電影的興奮感在做音樂時已經找不回來". Epoch Times. 2006-04-10. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  44. (Chinese) "The invincible Jay Chou: it's good to be number one". ent.tom.com. 2006-12-14. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  45. (Chinese) "Director Lin Ai Wah: Jay Chou's individual style is too strong/ Not a good actor导演林爱华:周杰伦个人风格太强烈 不是好演员". ent.anhuinews.com. 2003-11-25. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  46. "Jay Chou promotes film "Initial D" in Japan". People's Daily. 2005-08-29. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  47. Elley, Derek (2005-07-28). "Initial D". Variety. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  48. Chyn, Stina (2005-09-21). "Initial D". Film Threat. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  49. "Initial D [2005]". Beyond Hollywood. 2005-07-06. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  50. "Jay Chou impresses Zhang Yimou". China Daily. 2006-03-22. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  51. "25th Hong Kong Film Awards Unveiled". crienglish.com. 2006-04-08. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  52. 52.0 52.1 (Chinese) "Zhang Yimou compliments the directing potential of Jay Chou: will surpass me in the future 张艺谋赞周杰伦有导演潜质:将来会超过我". sina.com.cn. 2006-03-22. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  53. (Chinese) "滿城盡帶黃金甲 ". KingNet. 2006-12-22. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  54. (Chinese) "《满城尽带黄金甲》:金玉其外,败絮其中". thebeijingnews.com. 2006-12-16. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  55. (Chinese) "《满城尽带黄金甲》:没什么可说的" (Movie review). sina.com.cn. 2006-12-15. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  56. Molayeme, Ester (2006-12-04). "Film Review: CURSE OF THE GOLDEN FLOWER". IndependentFilm.com. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  57. Berardinelli, James (2006-12-22). "Curse of the Golden Flower". Reelviews. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  58. Wilmington, Michael (2006-12-22). "Movie review: 'Curse of the Golden Flower'". metromix.com. Archived from the original on 6 November 2007. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  59. Hilbrenner, Jill (2006-12-22). "Curse of the Golden Flower". LondonNet. Archived from the original on 23 May 2007. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  60. Hall, Phil (2006-12-22). "Curse of the Golden Flower". Film Threat. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  61. (Chinese) "Exclusive: 26th annual Hong Kong Film Awards nominee list 独家:第26届香港电影金像奖完全提名名单揭晓". sina.com.cn. 2007-02-01. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  62. Landreth, Jonathan (28 September 2009). "China gets LeBron James' 'Game'". Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 22 October 2009.  (subscription required)
  63. Wallace, Lewis (7 August 2009). "Green Hornet Gets Its Kato: Asian Pop Star Jay Chou". Wired. Retrieved 22 October 2009. 
  64. Evry, Max (5 January 2011). "25 Breakout Stars to Watch for in 2011". Next Movie. Retrieved 11 April 2011. 
  65. (Chinese) Chou, Jay (December 2004). Grandeur de D Major. Hua Ren Ban Tu. p. 106. ISBN 957-29371-4-6. 
  66. Huo Yuan Chia. In Huo Yuan Chia 霍元甲 [DVD liner notes] (2006). Taipei, Taiwan [R.O.C.]: Alfa Music International Co., Ltd.
  67. 67.0 67.1 "Jay Chou ready to direct again". youth.cn. 2006-05-10. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  68. 68.0 68.1 (Chinese) "Jay Chou gives advice for eye health 周杰伦闪亮护眼心得大揭密 四招全搞定". sina.com.cn. 2007-03-20. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  69. "Jay Chou impresses Zhang Yimou". Xinhua. 2006-03-22. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  70. 70.0 70.1 (Chinese) "Jay Chou directs for the first time/ "The Secret That Cannot Be Told" filmed in his high school 周杰伦首次执导 《不能说的秘密》回母校取景". sina.com.cn. 2007-02-23. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  71. "Singer Jay Chou's directorial debut to be released in late July". Associated Press. 2007-06-08. Retrieved 2007-06-28. 
  72. (Chinese) "Asia king Jay Chou is the spokesperson for National Geographic 周杰倫代言國家地理風雲榜". epochtimes.com. 2005-11-03. Archived from the original on 2007-09-29. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  73. (Chinese) "National Geographic and Jay Chou's music, classics are worth considering! (...) 國家地理頻道和周杰倫的音樂,經典值得考驗! 周董自我詮釋代言國家地理風雲榜超屌" (News article). National Geographic (Taiwan). 2005-11-04. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  74. "Now to woo back tourists". Straits Times (Singapore). 2003-06-04. 
  75. (Chinese) "Endorsements (under Profile)". jay2u.com. Retrieved 2006-03-30. 
  76. "For every album I hope to improve from my last, sell more than my last, ... better sales means more people like the music..."(Chinese) Chou, Jay (December 2004). Grandeur de D Major. Hua Ren Ban Tu. p. 113. ISBN 957-29371-4-6. 
  77. "Jay Chou bags hat-trick of World Music Awards". Channel NewsAsia. 2008-11-12. Retrieved 2008-11-12. 
  78. 78.0 78.1 "Taiwan singer Jay Chou looks East to crack the West" (News article (PDF file)). Reuters/Epoch Times. 2005-06-27. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  79. 79.0 79.1 "Jay Chou Encourages Young Hopefuls". china.org.cn. 2004-06-14. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  80. 80.0 80.1 "Mandarin R&B Singer Hits It Big". china.org.cn/China Daily. 2003-09-09. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  81. The Ice King Thaws. V Mag (Malaysia). 2004-12-28. "I love competing with myself because I feel that this will force me to improve as a singer. For one, I would definitely love to win more awards" 
  82. Taylor, Chris (2004-01-05). "An Industry on the Edge". Taiwan Review. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  83. 83.0 83.1 Woodworth, Max (2004-10-01). "All Hail Jay". The Taipei Times. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  84. "Jay Chou says he's still a mommy's boy". Associated Press/China Daily. 2006-02-13. 
  85. Chou, Jay (2004-11-01). Grandeur de D Major (in Chinese). China: Hua Ren Ban Tu. p. 10. ISBN 957-29371-4-6. 
  86. "Emulate Singer Jay Chou". New Straits Times. 2005-01-28. 
  87. (Chinese) "Jay Chou is the spokesperson for Young Voice/ Encourages youths to express their opinions 周杰伦代言青少年网 鼓励青少年发表观点". ent.163.com. 2005-10-08. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  88. (Chinese) "周杰伦拍公益广告呼吁帮助忧郁症患者 周杰伦担任公益活动代言人" (News article). ent.sina.com.cn. 2007-07-06. Retrieved 2007-11-12. 
  89. Xu, Xiaomin (2005-03-24). "Echos of ancient sacrifice". Shanghai Star. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  90. "Pop songs approved for classes". ShanghaiDaily/Eastday. 2005-03-16. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  91. (Chinese) "The Jay Chou effect again "Listen to your mother" used by primary school teacher 周董新歌「聽媽媽的話」,成小一生教材". ETtoday. 2006-11-04. Archived from the original on 2007-05-10. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  92. "Jay Chou's Song Used as Teaching Materials". china.org.cn. 2006-11-03. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  93. "Editorial: Gangsters, gangsters everywhere". The Taipei Times. 2007-11-09. Retrieved 2007-11-12. 
  94. "陳啟禮告別式 周董獻唱致意? (Will Mr. Chou sing his respects at Chen Chi-li's funeral?)". Sina News (in Chinese). 2007-10-16. Archived from the original on 19 October 2007. Retrieved 2007-11-12. 
  95. "周杰倫弔陳啟禮 慰陳楚河喪父痛 (Jay Chou mourns Chen Chi-li, consoles Chen Chuhe on the loss of his father)". PChome Magazine (in Chinese) (TVBS). 2007-10-31. Retrieved 2007-11-12. 
  96. CCTV New Year's Gala Liveblog, shanghaiist, 2 February 2011
  97. (Chinese) "Jay Chou and the paparazzi in a direct confrontation 周杰倫與狗仔隊打埋身戰". Singtao Daily (Hong Kong). 2005-12-23. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  98. "Pop singer Jay Chou accused of evading military service". Associated Press/Sina. 2006-02-24. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  99. (Chinese)"Jay Chou faked medical records to evade military service? The courtroom restores his innocence 周董利用假病历逃兵? 出庭应讯法院还清白". yule.sohu.com. 2006-11-10. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  100. "[one] cannot take a clear-cut stance against them (the paparazzi) ... because they help you promote your name ... and [the paparazzi] will write about what the populace is most interested in."(Chinese) Chou, Jay (December 2004). Grandeur de D Major. Hua Ren Ban Tu. p. 79. ISBN 957-29371-4-6. 
  101. Heawood, Sophie (2006-04-21). "We're Not Listening Until You Sing In English". London: The Guardian (UK). Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
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  103. JWT, JWT (2009-12-26). JWT Top 100 Things to Watch in 2010. marketwire. Retrieved 2009-12-26 
  104. (Chinese) Baidu's Top Searches 2002
  105. (Chinese) Baidu's Top Searches 2005
  106. (Chinese) Baidu's Top Searches 2006
  107. (Chinese) Baidu's Top Searches 2007
  108. Quah, Junie (2005-03-02). "Jay Chou in LA: An Incomparable Breakthrough". UCLA Asia Institute. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  109. "Jay Chou pens theme song for new Jet Li movie 'Fearless'". Associated Press. 2006-11-01. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 
  110. "Jay Chou to star in action film 'Ci Ling'". Channel NewsAsia. November 21, 2008. Retrieved October 22, 2009. 
  111. "Jay Chou creates super-pandamen". Xinhua News Agency. 18 February 2009. Retrieved 22 October 2009. 
  112. "Hides manhood pretending to be woman, Alan Luo asks if Director Chou loves him". Chinatimes/translation: JayChouStudio. 2010-10-30. Retrieved 2010-11-02. 
  113. Jay Chou at imdb.com
  114. Jay Chou at chinesemov.com
  115. Woodworth, Max (2005-05-29). "The red carpet rolls out for Golden Melody Awards". The Taipei Times. Retrieved 2007-06-02. 

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