Chen Da (singer) (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Chen Da (singer)" in English language version.

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archive.today

  • Wang Ying-fen gives Chen Da's year of birth as 1905 and the year he died as 1981. See: Wang Ying-fen, "Taiwan: From Innocence to Funny Rap," in: Simon Broughton, Mark Ellingham et al. (eds.), World Music, Vol. 2: Latin and North America, Caribbean, India, Asia and Pacific. An A-Z of the Music, Musicians and Discs, New Edition. London (Rough Guides Ltd.) 2000, p.239). – Another source gives the year he was born as 1906. See: "Chen Da" (biographical data), in: Musicians of Taiwan, published by NCFTA (see in: external links http://musiciantw.ncfta.gov.tw/tw/profile.aspx?id=M039 Archived 2014-05-02 at archive.today). – A third source, the Historical Dictionary, confirms the year 1905 and gives the date of his death as April 11, 1981. (Online version found on the following government website: "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-05-01. Retrieved 2012-10-10.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link). - See "External links" section.

cca.gov.tw

nrch.cca.gov.tw

  • Wang Ying-fen gives Chen Da's year of birth as 1905 and the year he died as 1981. See: Wang Ying-fen, "Taiwan: From Innocence to Funny Rap," in: Simon Broughton, Mark Ellingham et al. (eds.), World Music, Vol. 2: Latin and North America, Caribbean, India, Asia and Pacific. An A-Z of the Music, Musicians and Discs, New Edition. London (Rough Guides Ltd.) 2000, p.239). – Another source gives the year he was born as 1906. See: "Chen Da" (biographical data), in: Musicians of Taiwan, published by NCFTA (see in: external links http://musiciantw.ncfta.gov.tw/tw/profile.aspx?id=M039 Archived 2014-05-02 at archive.today). – A third source, the Historical Dictionary, confirms the year 1905 and gives the date of his death as April 11, 1981. (Online version found on the following government website: "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-05-01. Retrieved 2012-10-10.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link). - See "External links" section.

dyu.edu.tw

cd.dyu.edu.tw

  • "1978年,林懷民為了創作《薪傳》。到了錄音室,老先生放下月琴,問今天要唱什麼。 林說,唱〈唐山過台灣〉的故事。陳達用他蒼涼沙啞的嗓音,即興的唱出這首《思想起祖先鹹心過台灣》..." ( Transl.:) "In 1978, Lin Huai-min decided to create (sc. the dance theater performance) Legacy. He went to the recording room (sc.with Chen Da). The old man put down the yueqin (i.e. his moon guitar) and asked what he should sing today. Lin said, Sing "Tangshan guo Taiwan de gushi" 唱〈唐山過台灣〉的故事. Chen Da, with his desolate hoarse voice, improvised the song "Sixiang qi zuxian xian xinguo Taiwan"《思想起祖先鹹心過台灣》..." – Quoted in: Chengguo zhanshi 成果展示 , "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-05-05. Retrieved 2012-10-10.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

my-world-guide.com

ncfta.gov.tw

musiciantw.ncfta.gov.tw

  • Wang Ying-fen gives Chen Da's year of birth as 1905 and the year he died as 1981. See: Wang Ying-fen, "Taiwan: From Innocence to Funny Rap," in: Simon Broughton, Mark Ellingham et al. (eds.), World Music, Vol. 2: Latin and North America, Caribbean, India, Asia and Pacific. An A-Z of the Music, Musicians and Discs, New Edition. London (Rough Guides Ltd.) 2000, p.239). – Another source gives the year he was born as 1906. See: "Chen Da" (biographical data), in: Musicians of Taiwan, published by NCFTA (see in: external links http://musiciantw.ncfta.gov.tw/tw/profile.aspx?id=M039 Archived 2014-05-02 at archive.today). – A third source, the Historical Dictionary, confirms the year 1905 and gives the date of his death as April 11, 1981. (Online version found on the following government website: "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-05-01. Retrieved 2012-10-10.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link). - See "External links" section.

npue.edu.tw

tcim.npue.edu.tw

  • Speaking of Chen Da's performances, P.-S. Tsai (蔡佩珊) notes his use of "Hengchun folk tunes (恆春民謠 Hengchūn minyao)... coupled with improvised lyrics (配上即興歌詞 pèi shàng jíxìng gēcí)." See: Pei-Shan Tsai (Cài Pèishān 蔡佩珊),"從民謠看台灣女性的堅韌-以《青蚵仔嫂》為例 (Cóng mínyáo kàn Táiwān nǚxìng de jiānrèn --- yǐ "qīng hézǐ sǎo" wéi lì / Recognizing the tenacity of Taiwan's women in folk music --- "Qīng hézǐ sǎo / Green oyster Sister" as an example)," in: [1][permanent dead link]. (This is the online copy of a printed article.)

ntu.edu.tw

homepage.ntu.edu.tw

  • Regarding this last figure, 140,000, see: Günter Schubert and Axel Schneider, Taiwan an der Schwelle zum 21. Jahrhundert: Gesellschaftlicher Wandel, Probleme und Perspektiven eines asiatischen Schwellenlandes. Institut für Asienkunde, 1996, p.118. Regarding the White Terror, many US publications supply information. See for instance: Ming-sho Ho and Jeffrey Broadbent, Introduction to Taiwanese Society, Culture, and Politics. (Book publication, also online: http://homepage.ntu.edu.tw/~msho/book.files.B10.pdf[permanent dead link])

taipeitimes.com

tku.edu.tw

tkutimes.tku.edu.tw

  • All quotes referring here to Li Shuangze are from Hu Ying-hsueh. See: Ying-hsueh HU, "Musical Feast at the 'Zoo'," in: Tamkang Times, No.598. March 1, 2005 (printed version, published by Tamkang University; also online: [2].

web.archive.org

  • Wang Ying-fen gives Chen Da's year of birth as 1905 and the year he died as 1981. See: Wang Ying-fen, "Taiwan: From Innocence to Funny Rap," in: Simon Broughton, Mark Ellingham et al. (eds.), World Music, Vol. 2: Latin and North America, Caribbean, India, Asia and Pacific. An A-Z of the Music, Musicians and Discs, New Edition. London (Rough Guides Ltd.) 2000, p.239). – Another source gives the year he was born as 1906. See: "Chen Da" (biographical data), in: Musicians of Taiwan, published by NCFTA (see in: external links http://musiciantw.ncfta.gov.tw/tw/profile.aspx?id=M039 Archived 2014-05-02 at archive.today). – A third source, the Historical Dictionary, confirms the year 1905 and gives the date of his death as April 11, 1981. (Online version found on the following government website: "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-05-01. Retrieved 2012-10-10.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link). - See "External links" section.
  • See: "Taiwan (Republic of China)". Archived from the original on 2011-06-05. Retrieved 2012-10-10. (listed in the External links section).
  • "1978年,林懷民為了創作《薪傳》。到了錄音室,老先生放下月琴,問今天要唱什麼。 林說,唱〈唐山過台灣〉的故事。陳達用他蒼涼沙啞的嗓音,即興的唱出這首《思想起祖先鹹心過台灣》..." ( Transl.:) "In 1978, Lin Huai-min decided to create (sc. the dance theater performance) Legacy. He went to the recording room (sc.with Chen Da). The old man put down the yueqin (i.e. his moon guitar) and asked what he should sing today. Lin said, Sing "Tangshan guo Taiwan de gushi" 唱〈唐山過台灣〉的故事. Chen Da, with his desolate hoarse voice, improvised the song "Sixiang qi zuxian xian xinguo Taiwan"《思想起祖先鹹心過台灣》..." – Quoted in: Chengguo zhanshi 成果展示 , "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-05-05. Retrieved 2012-10-10.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

webs.com

chrisroughan.webs.com

  • Chris Roughan, in his article on "Campus Folk Movement", published online in: http://chrisroughan.webs.com/taiwancampusfolk.htm. Roughan supplies this version of the origine of the Let's Sing Our Songs movement: "'Where are our own songs?' Li Shuangze asked the audience in a 1976 Western music concert at Tamkang University. 'On my journeys to the Philippines, Taiwan, the US and Spain, I found that youngsters around the world drink Coca-Cola and sing English songs. But where are our own songs?' This incident was later recorded as the Tamkang Event. / Li's call to "sing our own songs" awakened his generation. The ripple effect came in a series of reports published in the Tamkang school magazine which stimulated a vibrant climate for song writing and gradually resulted in the campus folk song movement. Exchanges between students from different schools also helped to expand the scale of the movement." http://chrisroughan.webs.com/taiwancampusfolk.htm

worldcat.org

  • Journal of Music in China, Vol. 4 (2003), p. 119. ISSN 1092-1710.