Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - Blue and white porcelain, the pinnacle of ancient songs: do you feel the misty rain?

Blue and white porcelain, the pinnacle of ancient songs: do you feel the misty rain?

Fan Qi Stephy Ke punch cards

"The sky is blue and it's raining. I'm waiting for you."

I was deeply attracted when I heard this lyric many years ago. In just two sentences, I outlined a misty and rainy scenery in the south of the Yangtze River, and a story about a man and a woman waiting to meet. And its title "Blue and White Porcelain" is a specialty of Jingdezhen in my hometown, which deepened my preference for this song.

Jay Chou wrote the song Blue and White Porcelain in 2007, which received rave reviews as soon as it came out and became a classic in Jay Chou. On February 6th, 2008, Jay Chou sang this song at the 2008 CCTV Spring Festival Gala. On July 5th of the same year, the song won three awards: Best Song Award, Best Lyrics Award and Best Composition Award at the 19 Taiwan Golden Melody Awards Ceremony.

Why will it become a classic that is difficult to surpass?

Vincent Fang's beautiful ancient lyrics and Jay Chou's exquisite composition make this song beautiful, delicate and poetic.

MV tells the story of life and death love that spans a period of reincarnation from ancient times to modern times, adding a little love to this song.

Regarding the lyrics of this song, I like this paragraph best:

The style of Jay Chou's songs is gentle, elegant and free from vulgarity, which always reminds people of the same gentle misty rain in the south of the Yangtze River.

Vincent fang spent a long time composing its lyrics, from the earliest bronzes to Ru Ci, and finally determined that it was named after blue and white porcelain. At the same time, MV also launched a love story of ancient and modern reincarnation around the blue and white vase.

Jingdezhen blue-and-white porcelain is known as "white as jade, bright as a mirror, thin as paper and endless in sound", which is the representative work of China porcelain. The elegant charm pattern on the bottle body is outlined, and the graceful style perfectly expresses the misty rain in the south of the Yangtze River. This is also irreplaceable by other things, for example, bronzes are too thick and mottled, and the colors of Ru Ci are too simple and pure.

Only blue and white porcelain is elegant, graceful and full of charm.

What I like most about this song is the sense of scene it creates.

The lyrics use words such as rice paper, sandalwood, kitchen smoke, moonlight, blue and so on to shape the scenes in traditional culture thousands of years ago, especially the sentence "Outside the curtain, the banana provoked the shower and the knocker provoked the copper rust, and I passed by the Jiangnan town to provoke you. In splash-ink landscape painting, you are hidden in the depths of ink, which makes the love story full of reverie and leaves a lot of suspense. The word "provoke" tells the hazy realm of both men and women in love.

Listening to Jay Chou's elegant and delicate singing sounds, it seems to bring us back to the ancient south of the Yangtze River, where apricot blossoms and spring rains are continuous. What happened to the couple who fell in love dimly?

It has a story but no ending, perhaps just like MV is the tragic ending of Where Are You Going, or is it another happy ending?

This is left to each listener to daydream, because the protagonist in the story has faded out of the splash-ink landscape painting.

Do you like this representative ancient song?

Welcome to write your answer in the comments section.

The 80th article of the writing camp in Qi Dynasty was clocked in 1 103, with a total of 123 122 words.