Current location - Music Encyclopedia - QQ Music - His good friend Bao Yucheng told reporters: "I went to the countryside with him. Those scenes moved me very much. I have never felt that way before. When we arrived at the Muslim School, the students
His good friend Bao Yucheng told reporters: "I went to the countryside with him. Those scenes moved me very much. I have never felt that way before. When we arrived at the Muslim School, the students
His good friend Bao Yucheng told reporters: "I went to the countryside with him. Those scenes moved me very much. I have never felt that way before. When we arrived at the Muslim School, the students would surround the car (in which Su Erdong was riding). He asked for autographs. (When listening to him singing,) Many students shed tears. Now not only the Hui people, but also the Uyghurs and Kazakhs in Xinjiang love him from the bottom of their hearts. His love further inspired Surdon’s creative enthusiasm. Soon, he raised his own funds to produce and publish VCDs such as "Hui People", "Hui Girls", "Gamei with Red Hijab", "Brother's Pomegranate Flower", etc. Listening to "Hui Girl", people seem to see beautiful and charming Hui girls; when "Mother's Heart" sings "My mother's heart is in her children, and her children's hearts are in stones" in "Mother's Heart", it makes countless Hui mothers feel sad. In tears; "Children Entering School" shows the new generation of Hui people who love knowledge and are studious and progressive. His songs are widely spread in the northwest and have also spread to many other places where the Hui people live. Mr. Ma Zheli, a Hui citizen in Beijing, said that in addition to his own love of listening to Su Erdong's songs, his ten-year-old son also loves to listen to them. Because some of Su Erdong's songs are not only good to listen to, but also have great educational significance. He said: "Some of (Su Erdong's) songs talk about (some of) the history of the Hui people, and some promote concepts such as filial piety, determination, benevolence, and environmental protection. I think they have great positive significance. Therefore, I often listen to my children (his songs)." Some music critics believe that Su Erdong's songs absorb the rhythm of "Hua'er" and the advantages of other ethnic songs, coupled with the rhythm of modern music, making it The song is full of fashion and life. For example, "Hui People" we heard below is a representative work. After becoming famous, Su Erdong still liked to sing among the folk. He rarely required payment for his performances, and sometimes he paid his own fare. He said that folk is his soil, his root, and the source of his creation. Many of his songs come from the experience of grassroots life and inspiration from the masses. He hopes to enrich people's lives with singing and let them understand the Hui people and their culture through singing. He also hopes to have more opportunities in the future to go out to the public, sing for grassroots people, and get more inspiration from them.