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Composer of the famous song Tomorrow Will Be Better

The composer of "Tomorrow Will Be Better" is Luo Dayou.

"Tomorrow Will Be Better" is a song sung by stars in Taiwan, China. It was written by Luo Dayou, Zhang Dachun, Li Shouchuan, Qiu Fusheng, Xu Naisheng, Zhang Sylvia, and Zhan Hongzhi. It was composed by Luo Dayou and arranged by Chen Zhiyuan. It was collected in 1985 Released on the single album.

1986 is the Year of World Peace. The creators of "Tomorrow Will Be Better" hope to imitate the model of the stars of "We Are The World" singing for charity to echo the theme of the Year of World Peace.

As a result, Luo Dayou, Sylvia Chang and other Taiwanese singers*** jointly created this song, and came forward to convene ***60 Chinese singers from Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore and Malaysia** *Singing together. These singers span different regions and different record companies, breaking the restrictions on signings. Among them are Li Zongsheng, Tsai Chin, Su Rui, Pan Yueyun and other singers and artists.

Luo Dayou's acting experience

Luo Dayou (TayuLo) was born on July 20, 1954 in Taipei City, Taiwan Province. He is a Hakka in Miaoli County, Taiwan Province. His ancestral home is Mei County District, Meizhou City, Guangdong Province, China. Taiwanese male singer, songwriter, musician, and writer, known as the "Godfather of Taiwanese Pop Music."

In 1972, he joined the student band as a keyboardist.

In 1974, he composed his first song "Song".

In 1976, he officially entered into commercial music creation.

In 1981, he served as a record producer for the first time and produced the song "Childhood".

In 1982, he released his first album "Zhihu Zhe Ye", which broke the popular folk music style at the time and led Taiwanese pop music to an unprecedented trend of criticism and reflection. Subsequently, the album "Future Master" was released, which carried out unprecedented criticism on the nation, current situation, tradition, and society.

After writing "Tomorrow Will Be Better" in 1985, he left Taiwan and went to Hong Kong to develop.

In 1988, his first literary work "Yesterday's Suicide Note" was published.