What is your most played song? Why?
Thanks for the invitation!
This question is very interesting, because the answer to this question cannot be explained clearly in a few words.
In a long life, everyone has different experiences, different living environments, and different social experiences in each period, from birth to school days to adulthood to old age. These differences will create Different personal orientations and preferences. For example, when listening to songs, one likes to listen to this type of songs in one period, and then likes to listen to another type of songs in another period. People of every generation listen to different songs, which reflect the characteristics of that era. The following is an example of the music that I like to listen to when I am 60 years old:
In our student days, there were no recorders, TV series, let alone computers, so there was no "single loop" "The songs that I often listen to are "The East is Red", "Chairman Mao's Words to Remember" (the episode of the movie "Tunnel War"), "My Motherland" (the episode of the movie "Shangganling"), etc. I remember that my brother could play "Chairman Mao's Words to Remember" on the flute at that time. I learned to play this song on the flute from my brother. Speaking of which, my brother is still my first teacher. Unfortunately, he can no longer play other songs, and many years later, he can only play this song. I am better than my brother at this point.
When I was in middle school, I remember that the school assigned a female teacher named Yue. She was our Chinese teacher and our class teacher. Because she was young, she was responsible for the school's publicity work and also played gymnastics music on the radio. Every day after getting up in the morning, after doing exercises at noon, and after school in the afternoon, the school's loudspeaker would play "Old Landlord Checking the Shop" over and over again (it should have been a gramophone at the time, so it could only be played over and over artificially). I never tire of listening to it, so much so that many classmates in school can sing this song. After many years, I still feel so good when I occasionally hear this song, and I can still recall the scene at that time.
When I first started working, my unit had a gramophone with many records. I often listened to songs such as "Japanese Children's Group Song", "Red Sun Shines on the Frontier", "Honghu Water, Waves Beat Waves", " "Take Lei Feng's Gun", "Song of Karamay", "Chairman Mao Sends Someone Here", etc. Of course, it’s not a single cycle, where you put one record to the end and then change it to another.
Later, after the screening of the North Korean movie "Flower Girl", the songs we often listened to were "Flower Girl" and other interludes; "The Song of Raz" and "The Song of Lida" were all over the streets; "The Song of Duqiu" became popular for a long time after the Japanese movie "The Hunt" was released.
These classic songs are still saved in my computer, and I occasionally open them to enjoy them.
I’m not afraid of everyone’s jokes. I am an old “antique” who has a special liking for Chinese local operas. My most played singles are the treasures of our Chinese nation, namely local operas.
I like the arias such as "Sit down, mother-in-law" from the Henan opera "Chao Yang Gou"; I also like the arias "Qi Jie" from Xiao Cang Wa from the opera "Juanma Tuan";
I also like the opera "Liu Qiao'er" "Qiaoer, I have been betrothed to the Zhao family since I was a child" and other arias;