Hello my friends, I would like to focus interest this month on HONG KONG POPS and CANTO-POPS and would love to learn from music friends and readers. Please contribute your stories if you can about your own experiences watching or performing with them in Singapore, in Hong Kong or in other countries. Photographs too are most welcome. Thank you.
Colin Colin:
I can only mention the 1st music band from Hong Kong that sort of introduced me to their music scene were The Wynners featuring Alan Tam, followed by Sam Hui.
Then all these HK songs and their bands were available on cassettes. And the Old Bugis Street that time frequently air-played these HK hits. I remember a cassette stall playing Shanghai Bund, the theme song by Francis Yip.
Fond memories...
Andy Young:
Colin Colin yes, that's right. Wynners were really winners. And Alan Tam with Sam Hui. That's what we need to keep the memories flowing. Thanks Colin. You've contributed much. Bugis Street too. Cheers. Shanghai Bund belongs to Frances Yip. Wow!
Fred Ching:
Thanks for this interesting topic Brother Andy. Sam Hui sang beautifully and flawlessly at most of his concerts that I have attended in Singapore. Was listening to this album in my car stereo when this classic came on..
Regarded as a legend in Cantopop and movies scene from the 1960’s to 1990’s, Sam popularised Cantopop songs by striking a chord with the everyday man. His songs and lyrics echo the trials, tribulations and triumphs of the ordinary working man and has made him much - loved performer across the region. Thanks for the good memories, Sam.👍❤️🥰..
Andy Young:
Fred Ching thanks for continuing the thread of the HK Pop and Canto-Pop story. I am not familiar with Sam Hui but your writeup is informative and helps. I hope to read more about him.
I have also been listening to your video, Fred but don't understand Cantonese. The video dramatization is meaningful. Thanks.
I went to see Francis Yip when she performed in Singapore on a few occasions. Others include Grace Chang, Chan Poh Choo, Sit Kat Yin, Sam Hui。
Andy Young:
Stephen Han it's interesting that you are just as familiar with Canto-pop as you are with the Western pop stars. Thanks for the support.
AN A COINCIDENCE INDEED: COCO LEE HAS PASSED AWAY JUST AS WE ARE DISCUSSING CANTO-POP. Do feel free to write about this lovely lady who graced the 90s and beyond in both the East and the West. May she REST IN PEACE. Condolences to her family.
Chow Wen Hing:
A coincidence indeed Andy, and a sad day for music lovers worldwide, especially the circumstance of her passing. Depression is definitely a condition to be taken seriously as it is non-discriminatory. It can inflict the rich or the poor, the famous or the ordinary. RIP Coco Lee 😢
Andy Young:
Chow Wen Hing thanks. It's true. Easy to get depressed nowadays with the world situation and how media is conducted daily on the Web. We all do need to be careful.
It was when I happened to go see "Mr Boo The Private Eyes" that I became interested in Sam and The Lotus. I liked the guitar interlude so much that I tried to find out the chords and how to play the interlude. I'm afraid it was not in the 60s but in the late 70s.
Then started listening to other singers and bands. It was not easy to do so in Japan those days. I got the tapes and CDs when I visited SG. I remember singing Sam's Japanese Girls at Europa Singapore, a live house in Marine Parade long time ago. I want to sing his Drifter Song but my dream hasn't come true; the language is difficult.
Hiroshi Deguchi hello! Your story intrigues me, and I'm sure other readers too. Thanks for taking me nearer to Canto/HK pop. I shall check out Sam Hui's Japanese Girls and Drifter Song. That's the problem with some pop song listeners in Singapore, ie: not understanding the Chinese dialects nor Mandarin songs. Appreciate your sharing Hiroshi. 🙏👍 Thanks. A whole new world for me...
Andy Young:
Thanks for the generous contribution of HK music stories from AUDIE NG, COLIN COLIN, FRED CHING, HIROSHI DEGUCHI, JIMMY CHNG, IRENE YAP. These stories, for a non-Cantonese speaker, are exceptionally interesting. And thanks also to CHOW WEN HING, STEPHEN HAN, for their comments.
Colin Colin
ReplyDeleteYen Chow
Raymond Cho
Chee Chien
Stephen Han
Roop Singh
John Cher
Fred Ching
Freda Hanum
Jalani Mohamed
Moody Cash
Ser Kiong Tan
Ann Rowena Lim
Yip Dick
THANKS TO THE ABOVE READERS WHO LIKE/LOVE THIS POST
Hi Andy,
ReplyDeleteAt still a young age, I got to listen to Wynners band [Alan Tam, Kenny Bee] through the records and the big cassette tapes given by my uncle [listening in th car during our trip to Malaysia to visit my grand parents during our school holidays.]
For Alan Tam songs I usually picked up to sing at Karaoke sessions. For Sam Hui songs, from a comedy show called, 'The Private Eyes', my mom took me to watch...
Hey Andy,
ReplyDeleteThe chat does explain some about Canto/HK Pop but it's not enough. Surely there are many more that are missing.
Perhaps you can explore the fans of Canto Pop and tap their knowledge of the music of the 60s-80s.
Yes, Belinda,
ReplyDeleteLots on the blog already but I'm just exploring this Chat Format.
With You Tube and other video-media runways, blogs may not survivie much in future.
Thanks for response.
Thank you, just like to add to our buddy Hiroshi's comment, just for information you can sing Sam Hui's English version of the DRIFTER'S SONG... Sam did his English version when he was in Canada, for the benefit of his man Canadian fans.
ReplyDeleteHiroshi, it's as close and enjoyable as his Canto-Pop version.
Try our best for our friend to enjoy Sam's to the fullest.
ReplyDeleteI love his melody and canton lyrics, they're really meaningful; I try to listen intently, it still touches me today.
It's a tremendous dialect. Very intense, deep and colourful, if we can only try to comprehend it.
By the way, do you speak Cantonese, maybe I need to learn from you?
Thanks to all who wrote in early to comment.
ReplyDeleteI don't speak Cantonese, only a smattering of Hokkien and Teochew.
Hi Andy,
ReplyDeleteI am not familiar with Canto/HK Pop.
I listen less.
ReplyDeleteHullo, Andy Young!
Your blog is a source of nostalgia as I love the pop music of the 1950/60s and remember some of our Singapore pop singers.
Thanks for persisting with it!
💪🙏
[From Juliana Lim's posting.]
Stephen Han
ReplyDeleteYour explanation on Hong Kong music is excellent.
I saw Kenny Bee live in Kuching in the 70's. I remember he sang Sheena Easton's For your eyes only. In Singapore, I only saw Teresa Teng at the Neptune but she's Taiwanese...and Ding Mercado from the Philippines at the Top of the Mandarin.
ReplyDeleteThank you STP for your comments.
ReplyDeleteAppreciate your visits on this blog.
It's readers and friends like you that keep me going.