词条 | Zhi Hu Zhe Ye |
释义 |
| name = Zhi Hu Zhe Ye | type = Studio | artist = Lo Ta-yu | cover = Zhi_Hu_Zhe_Ye_(Lo_Ta-yu album).jpg | alt = | caption = Standard artwork (Taiwanese vinyl edition pictured) | released = 1982 | recorded = | venue = | studio = | genre = | length = | label = Rock Records | producer = | prev_title = | prev_year = | next_title = | next_year = }}{{Infobox Chinese|title=Zhi Hu Zhe Ye |c=之乎者也 |p=Zhī hū zhě yě |tp=jhih hu jhě yě |w=chih1 hu1 che3 yeh3 |mi={{IPAc-cmn|zhi|1|h|u|1|zh|e|3|ie|3}} |gr=jy hu jee yeh |bpmf=ㄓˉ ㄏㄨˉ ㄓㄜˇ ㄧㄝˇ }}Zhi Hu Zhe Ye ({{zh|c=之乎者也|p=Zhī hū zhě yě}}) is the 1982 debut album of Taiwanese singer Lo Ta-yu.[1] The title of the album consists of a meaningless phrase made solely of four grammatical Chinese particles from Classical Chinese. The phrase functions as an adjective; if someone's Chinese is "Zhi hu zhe ye", it means it is stale and archaic.[2] The album broadened the horizons of Chinese music and set a new model for Chinese songwriting. The album had four hit singles: the title song "Zhi hu zhe ye" ({{lang|zh|之乎者也}}), "Lukang, the Little Town" ({{lang|zh-tw|鹿港小鎮}}), "Love Song 1980" ({{lang|zh-tw|戀曲1980}}), and "Childhood" ({{lang|zh|童年}}), previously sung by Sylvia Chang in her 1981 album Childhood. The singles from the album remain among Lo Ta-yu's best known songs in mainland China.[3][4] Internationally, the album was released in 1982 as Selective Works of Lo Ta-yu ({{lang|zh-hant|羅大佑作品選}}) by Fontana Records with two additional tracks, "Foolishly Waiting" ({{lang|zh|痴痴的等}}) and "Deaf-Blind" ({{lang|zh-hant|盲聾}}). Track listing
ReceptionThe book Taiwan Popular Music — 200 Best Albums ({{lang|zh-tw|台灣流行音樂 200最佳專輯}}) (2009, enlarged from a 1994 list) by National Taiwan University (NTU) students and Ma Shih-fang ({{lang|zh-tw|馬世芳}}), a radio DJ at News 98, ranked this album number one of their "top 20 Taiwan popular albums from 1975 to 1992".[5] References1. ^Topics 1997 - Volume 27, Issues 6-10 - Page 24 "Another Taiwanese with a pan-Chinese vision has been Lo Ta-yu, who began his career with a rebellious album in 1982. The title of the ground-breaking Chih Hu Che Yeh" 2. ^Mobo C. F. Gao Mandarin Chinese: An Introduction 2000 p.122 "Zhi hu zhe ye has now become a set phrase to refer to classical Chinese. The best way to describe someone who uses too much archaic and stale language is to say that his or her language is too zhi hu zhe ye.11 More function words in ..." 3. ^光華畫報 - Volume 28, Issues 1-6 2003- Page 73 "Tunes popularized in the 1980s such as "Love Song 1980" and "Zhi Hu Zhe Ye" can still drive demand for Luo Ta-you's one-man concerts every year in Beijing and Shanghai. " 4. ^Top of the pops A new book offers the first list of Taiwan’s best pop and rock albums from the past 34 years By David Chen STAFF REPORTER 5. ^{{cite news |title=Top of the pops |first=David |last=Chen |url=http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/feat/archives/2009/04/06/2003440333/3 |work=Taipei Times |date=6 April 2009 |accessdate=15 February 2014 }} 2 : 1982 albums|Mandarin-language albums |
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