Teresa Teng (Sometimes spelled Teresa Tang or Teresa Deng ; Traditional Chi… Read Full Bio ↴Teresa Teng (Sometimes spelled Teresa Tang or Teresa Deng ; Traditional Chinese: 鄧麗君 ; Simplified Chinese: 邓丽君 ; Hanyu Pinyin: Dèng Lìjūn ; Wade-Giles: Teng Li-chün) (January 29, 1953 - May 8, 1995) was one of the most famous Taiwanese singers. She used to perform on the Japanese market under the name of テレサ・テン (Japanese transcription Teresa Ten)
She was born in Yunlin County, Taiwan to a Chinese mainlander family. Her father side was from Hebei province, China; her mother side was from Shandong province, China.
She recorded several famous songs, including When Shall You Return? (Simplified Chinese: 何日君再来; pinyin: Hé Rì Jūn Zài Lái) (one of the revamped songs she sang). In addition to her Mandarin repertoire, she also recorded songs in the Taiwanese language (a variant of Min Nan), Cantonese, Japanese, Indonesian (in 1977) and English.
In 1983, she released her most-acclaimed album Light Exquisite Feeling (淡淡幽情) containing 12 poems from Tang and Song dynasties with various composers turning them into songs, such as Wishing We Last Forever/Shuǐ diào gē tóu (水调歌头) and How Many Worries/Yu Mei Ren (几多愁/虞美人).
She covered many Japanese songs, including her own originals such as Airport (空港) and I Only Care About You (時の流れに身をまかせ)or (我只在乎你); most of which were re-written in Chinese lyrics, some in tribution to original artists like Southern All Stars.
Her songs have been covered by other singers, most notably Faye Wong who released a tribute album (The Decadent Sound of Faye) consisting entirely of cover songs originally done by Teresa Teng.
She died from an asthma attack while on a trip to Thailand at the age of 42 on May 8, 1995. She was buried at a mountainside tomb on Jinbaoshan, Taipei County in Taiwan. A memorial was built at the tomb with a white statue of Teng and her stage clothes on display, with her music playing in the background. The tomb is well visited by her fans, a notable departure from traditional Chinese culture shunning visits to burial sites.
A house which she bought in 1986 in Hong Kong at No. 18 Carmel Street also became a site of pilgrimage for her fans soon after her death. Plans to sell the home to finance a museum in Shanghai was made known in 2002 [2], and subsequently sold for HK 32 million. It closed on what would have been her 51st birthday on January 29, 2004.
She was born in Yunlin County, Taiwan to a Chinese mainlander family. Her father side was from Hebei province, China; her mother side was from Shandong province, China.
She recorded several famous songs, including When Shall You Return? (Simplified Chinese: 何日君再来; pinyin: Hé Rì Jūn Zài Lái) (one of the revamped songs she sang). In addition to her Mandarin repertoire, she also recorded songs in the Taiwanese language (a variant of Min Nan), Cantonese, Japanese, Indonesian (in 1977) and English.
In 1983, she released her most-acclaimed album Light Exquisite Feeling (淡淡幽情) containing 12 poems from Tang and Song dynasties with various composers turning them into songs, such as Wishing We Last Forever/Shuǐ diào gē tóu (水调歌头) and How Many Worries/Yu Mei Ren (几多愁/虞美人).
She covered many Japanese songs, including her own originals such as Airport (空港) and I Only Care About You (時の流れに身をまかせ)or (我只在乎你); most of which were re-written in Chinese lyrics, some in tribution to original artists like Southern All Stars.
Her songs have been covered by other singers, most notably Faye Wong who released a tribute album (The Decadent Sound of Faye) consisting entirely of cover songs originally done by Teresa Teng.
She died from an asthma attack while on a trip to Thailand at the age of 42 on May 8, 1995. She was buried at a mountainside tomb on Jinbaoshan, Taipei County in Taiwan. A memorial was built at the tomb with a white statue of Teng and her stage clothes on display, with her music playing in the background. The tomb is well visited by her fans, a notable departure from traditional Chinese culture shunning visits to burial sites.
A house which she bought in 1986 in Hong Kong at No. 18 Carmel Street also became a site of pilgrimage for her fans soon after her death. Plans to sell the home to finance a museum in Shanghai was made known in 2002 [2], and subsequently sold for HK 32 million. It closed on what would have been her 51st birthday on January 29, 2004.
一曲情未了
鄧麗君 Lyrics
邓丽君 演唱
多少相思 多少烦恼
有谁知道 有谁知道
我的相思烦恼
花儿开了 花儿谢了
春光也会老
问你可曾记得百花深处
一曲情未了
多少歌声 多少欢笑
留在河边 留在山腰你的歌声欢笑
花儿开了 花儿谢了
春光也会老
问你可曾记得百花深处
一曲情未了
爱你多少 恨你多少
你可知道 你可知道
为你虚度良宵
花儿开了 花儿谢了
春光也会老
问你可曾记得百花深处
一曲情未了
一曲情未了
多少相思 多少烦恼
有谁知道 有谁知道
我的相思烦恼
花儿开了 花儿谢了
春光也会老
问你可曾记得百花深处
一曲情未了
多少歌声 多少欢笑
留在河边 留在山腰你的歌声欢笑
花儿开了 花儿谢了
春光也会老
问你可曾记得百花深处
一曲情未了
爱你多少 恨你多少
你可知道 你可知道
为你虚度良宵
花儿开了 花儿谢了
春光也会老
问你可曾记得百花深处
一曲情未了
一曲情未了
Lyrics © O/B/O APRA AMCOS
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
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@wonnielee7455
一曲情未了....🎶
@pingcheung4001
好好聽,鄧小姐嬌柔唱功,無人可及。❤❤❤❤
@楊勝彬-x5w
鄧麗君一曲情未了 多少相思 多少煩惱 有誰知道 有誰知道 我的相思煩惱 花兒開了花兒謝了 春光也會老 問你可曾記得百花深處 一曲情未了music多少歌聲 多少歡笑 留在河邊留在山腰 你的歌聲歡笑 花兒開了 花兒謝了 春光也會老 問你可曾記得百花深處 一曲情未了music 愛你多少 恨你多少 你可知道 你可知道 為你虛度良宵 花兒開了花兒謝了 春光也會老 問你可曾記得百花深處 一曲情未了 一曲情未了 一曲情未了 一曲情未了
@evonlee2921
哇!你的(一曲情未了)虽然并没有看到邓丽君的人影也不知道是不是邓丽君的声音一,但看到风景做为主题曲也不错也是顶好看的?可以说合格啦!
@葉家伶-p4c
還是李雅芳唱的比較好聽😂