TIBETAN singer Zahi Bing Zo gave a brilliant performance rapping in the Tibetan language at the second season of Sing! China, the Chinese reality talent search show, in 2017.
TIBETAN singer Zahi Bing Zo gave a brilliant performance rapping in the Tibetan language at the second season of Sing! China, the Chinese reality talent search show, in 2017. The performance wowed the judges, one of whom was renowned Chinese pop singer Jay Chou who was mesmerized, and exclaimed that “rapping in Tibetan language is so powerful!”
Between Dreams and Reality
The word “hip-hop” originated in the late 1970s and became very popular in the early 1980s. This music genre is characterized by a rhyming speech that is chanted along melodic beats in sync with the pace of the vocal delivery. It focuses on stress, sentence structures, and flows. The Tibetan language adapts well to rapping due to the way sentences can be modulated in speech and stress in it with shifting tonal inflections.
In the daily life of monks in Tibetan monasteries, the debate on Buddhists’ understanding of religious doctrines looks like freestyle rapping to outsiders. When expressing their own ideas, the monks usually pace back and forth in open spaces or in the shade of trees, clapping hands that have prayer beads intertwined with them, and their speech is rhythmic. The scene is similar in some ways to a rap performance.
Tibetan hip-hop singers write a large proportion of songs on the local people and their folklife. Tibetan rapper Losang Jigme (stage name Mr. Jin) used to study at a college in Wuhan, central China’s Hubei Province. His song Mama Made Butter Tea was popular among other students from Tibet.
More than a decade has gone by since the birth of Tibetan hip-hop. Like many of his peers, Mr. Jin is influenced by Enimem and 2pac, two legendary American rappers. His songs went viral online recently for their catchy melodies and intelligible lyrics. Mr. Jin said that most of his inspiration comes from his own life as well as the joys and sorrows of other ordinary people.
Denne historien er fra January 2019-utgaven av China Today (English).
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Denne historien er fra January 2019-utgaven av China Today (English).
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THE centenary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) was marked by a grand gathering held on July 1 at Beijing’s Tian’anmen Square.
A Similar History Has United Us
— Interview with Carlos Miguel Pereira, Ambassador of Cuba to China
The CPC's 100 Years of “Routine Miracles”
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An Open Xinjiang with Multi-Ethnic Beliefs
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Xinjiang in My Eyes
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Stability and Development Are the Strongest Evidences of Human Rights
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BRI Nexus Promoting Multilateralism in a Post-Pandemic World
BORN of centuries-long interactions between China and other civilizations along the ancient Silk Road, the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) appears as the quintessential manifestation of multilateralism on the world stage since the Second World War which was, sad to say, one of quite a different kind.
Tourism Boosts Rural Revitalization in Ili
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Xinjiang's Cotton Industry Gets Smart
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