【世界名人评价黄家驹】介绍名人beyond的英语作文
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解决时间 2021-02-01 18:45
- 提问者网友:疯孩纸
- 2021-02-01 11:45
【世界名人评价黄家驹】介绍名人beyond的英语作文
最佳答案
- 五星知识达人网友:青尢
- 2021-02-01 12:58
【答案】 To some, Beyond are the greatest Chinese rock band ever. To others, they are inglorious, latter-day sellouts. Indisputable, however, is Beyond's surprising longevity in Hong Kong's fickle music scene. In May the band celebrated their 20th anniversary with five capacity concerts at the Hong Kong Coliseum, and they've added three more shows at the same venue for this weekend. There is good reason for the hype: the concert series represents the first time the band has performed together since they took a solo-career sabbatical in 1999.
For fans, the shows have been especially poignant. Late vocalist Wong Ka-kui?killed in an accident in 1993 at the age of 31?has been resurrected in the form of a life-size video projection, alongside his former band mates. This eerie guest appearance takes place during the performance of Wong's Fighting War for 20 Years. Ka-kui played the music on an acoustic guitar and hummed along. We added our instruments and sang the lyrics, says bassist Ka-keung, Wong's 38-year-old brother. This then became a song that our full band performed. So we got the idea that we wanted to bring him onstage with us as well.
It's hard to overstate the importance of Beyond to Hong Kong music fans under 40. In a scene long dominated by insubstantial teen idols, Beyond have been the Beatles, the Clashand Oasis rolled into one. To this day they remain the only Hong Kong band to have made the transition from underground obscurity to mainstream stardom. From their first single?1987's Songs of Yesterday?they've achieved this by espousing an openhearted, socially aware brand of rock that compensates for its occasional ham-fistedness with endearing sincerity. Through 27 albums, their songs of protest and peace have touched on everything from human rights to China's social contradictions to the aspirations of ordinary Hong Kongers. One of their most famous songs, 1990's Days of Glory, is about Nelson Mandela: Today there's only a battered body left to welcome the days of glory/ Holding on tight to freedom. For many of Hong Kong's apolitical youth, it was the first time they had heard of the South African leader.
Today, sitting in their landmark Kowloon studio?where the walls are covered with two decades of messages from fans?the boys from Beyond are in an affable and unapologetic mood. It's a technique to be able to strike a balance between rock and commercial music, says Paul Wong, the band's 39-year-old guitarist. Once you decide to produce albums, undergrounders call you rock traitors, but the public doesn't even know who you are yet. Every day you're struggling between commercialization and your dream, which we had to remember very clearly. [That dream] was to change the music industry and the situation [in Hong Kong].
The record companies didn't make things easy, either. It's like they kept pouring buckets of cold water over our heads, says Yip Sai-wing, 39, Beyond's drummer. We wrote a lot of songs for them, but they'd always say the songs wouldn't work. Some wouldn't even listen to our songs. They'd just take a look at us and reject us on the spot. We had to make a lot of compromises to meet their requests. We attracted a wide public [later] ... then we were able to slowly turn back to doing what we wanted.
After this weekend's concerts, Beyond will embark on a world tour, playing to mainly Chinese audiences in Asia, Australia, Canada and the U.S. When we feel as if we've performed to all our fans around the world, as a thank youto them, then the tour will end, says Ka-keung. But it looks as though there might be more of Beyond on the way. A new generation of devotees is emerging, with many longtime fans now bringing their children to the shows. Our dream now is to capture the third generation?our fans' grandchildren, laughs Yip. Then we can be the Hong Kong Rolling Stones. For now, it seems, nothing can stop Beyond?not even death.
For fans, the shows have been especially poignant. Late vocalist Wong Ka-kui?killed in an accident in 1993 at the age of 31?has been resurrected in the form of a life-size video projection, alongside his former band mates. This eerie guest appearance takes place during the performance of Wong's Fighting War for 20 Years. Ka-kui played the music on an acoustic guitar and hummed along. We added our instruments and sang the lyrics, says bassist Ka-keung, Wong's 38-year-old brother. This then became a song that our full band performed. So we got the idea that we wanted to bring him onstage with us as well.
It's hard to overstate the importance of Beyond to Hong Kong music fans under 40. In a scene long dominated by insubstantial teen idols, Beyond have been the Beatles, the Clashand Oasis rolled into one. To this day they remain the only Hong Kong band to have made the transition from underground obscurity to mainstream stardom. From their first single?1987's Songs of Yesterday?they've achieved this by espousing an openhearted, socially aware brand of rock that compensates for its occasional ham-fistedness with endearing sincerity. Through 27 albums, their songs of protest and peace have touched on everything from human rights to China's social contradictions to the aspirations of ordinary Hong Kongers. One of their most famous songs, 1990's Days of Glory, is about Nelson Mandela: Today there's only a battered body left to welcome the days of glory/ Holding on tight to freedom. For many of Hong Kong's apolitical youth, it was the first time they had heard of the South African leader.
Today, sitting in their landmark Kowloon studio?where the walls are covered with two decades of messages from fans?the boys from Beyond are in an affable and unapologetic mood. It's a technique to be able to strike a balance between rock and commercial music, says Paul Wong, the band's 39-year-old guitarist. Once you decide to produce albums, undergrounders call you rock traitors, but the public doesn't even know who you are yet. Every day you're struggling between commercialization and your dream, which we had to remember very clearly. [That dream] was to change the music industry and the situation [in Hong Kong].
The record companies didn't make things easy, either. It's like they kept pouring buckets of cold water over our heads, says Yip Sai-wing, 39, Beyond's drummer. We wrote a lot of songs for them, but they'd always say the songs wouldn't work. Some wouldn't even listen to our songs. They'd just take a look at us and reject us on the spot. We had to make a lot of compromises to meet their requests. We attracted a wide public [later] ... then we were able to slowly turn back to doing what we wanted.
After this weekend's concerts, Beyond will embark on a world tour, playing to mainly Chinese audiences in Asia, Australia, Canada and the U.S. When we feel as if we've performed to all our fans around the world, as a thank youto them, then the tour will end, says Ka-keung. But it looks as though there might be more of Beyond on the way. A new generation of devotees is emerging, with many longtime fans now bringing their children to the shows. Our dream now is to capture the third generation?our fans' grandchildren, laughs Yip. Then we can be the Hong Kong Rolling Stones. For now, it seems, nothing can stop Beyond?not even death.
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- 1楼网友:枭雄戏美人
- 2021-02-01 13:54
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