[{"@context":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"BlogPosting","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/chien-yao-wikipedia\/#BlogPosting","mainEntityOfPage":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/chien-yao-wikipedia\/","headline":"Chien Yao – Wikipedia","name":"Chien Yao – Wikipedia","description":"before-content-x4 Taiwanese lyricist after-content-x4 Chien Yao (born June 21, 1961 in Taiwan) is a Taiwanese lyricist and author, known for","datePublished":"2018-06-20","dateModified":"2018-06-20","author":{"@type":"Person","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/author\/lordneo\/#Person","name":"lordneo","url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/author\/lordneo\/","image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/c9645c498c9701c88b89b8537773dd7c?s=96&d=mm&r=g","url":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/c9645c498c9701c88b89b8537773dd7c?s=96&d=mm&r=g","height":96,"width":96}},"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Enzyklop\u00e4die","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","width":600,"height":60}},"image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","width":100,"height":100},"url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/chien-yao-wikipedia\/","wordCount":2335,"articleBody":" (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});before-content-x4Taiwanese lyricist (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4Chien Yao (born June 21, 1961 in Taiwan) is a Taiwanese lyricist and author, known for supporting and beginning the careers of many artists. Yao is known to write about female sentiments.[1] He has supported the careers of many A-list singers. Yao had served in Dian Jiang Records and Sony Music Taiwan, and had been the GM of EMI Records Taiwan, Virgin Records Taiwan, and Music Nation Group Taiwan. Yao is currently retired from executive positions and serves as an exclusive writer for Warner Chappell Music, Hong Kong Limited Taiwan Branch.Table of Contents (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4Early life[edit]Early career[edit]Songwriting[edit]Other productions[edit]Other appearances[edit]Style[edit]Female perspective[edit]Collector[edit]Literary works[edit]Awards and recognition[edit]References[edit]Early life[edit]Yao grew up in a veteran family from Tainan. From a very young age, his love for arts has developed and he was very active in participating in all kinds of arts contest. Although he never received any recognition then, the contests allowed him to reinforce his passion for arts and develop his own perspective. With Industrial Design as his major, Yao studied in Tainan Kunshan College (now Kunshan Technology University), he started his career being a car salesman in Honda. Yao suffered from health problems and had to quit his job. Yao decided that he should engage in something that he is passionate about. When the Taiwanese pop music industry was booming in the early 1980s, Yao quickly found himself a marketing job in the industry.1984-1987Hai Li Records1987-1995Dian Jiang Records1995-1997Sony Music Taiwan, Director of Local Market1997-1998Sony Music Taiwan, Director1999-2002Virgin Records, General Manager2002-2005EMI Records, General Manager2008-2009Music Nation Group Taiwan, General Manager2005-NowMusic Nation Ursa Major Limited, General ManagerEarly career[edit]Initially, Yao worked at Haili Records as the Recording Administrative Assistant. He worked with Ling Jiang. Yao incorporated Murong Xi’s poem \u201cRegretless Youth \u7121\u6028\u7684\u9752\u6625\u201d, and the album was financially successful. After that album, Yao went to Dianjiang Records, a record label at the time, to manage Stella Chang’s album. Nana Chiang’s \u201cJin Sheng Zui Tong De Ge \u4eca\u751f\u6700\u75db\u7684\u6b4c\u201d was his debut work.He used to go to Japan very often, and on one occasion, after heard a Japanese Enka \u201cYakushya\u201d, wrote Taiwanese lyrics, dubbing that song. That was Yao’s first attempt to write in Taiwanese. The song that would later on lead to Yao and Jody Chiang’s collaboration.[2]Over the decade of Yao’s career at Dianjiang, he helped various artists, including Nana Chiang, Sky Wu, Jody Chiang, Monique Lin, etc. His work \u201cI’m Willing \u6211\u9858\u610f\u201d in 1994, written for Faye Wong, has reached and remained on the KTV charts since then. Eventually, Dianjiang was acquired by EMI, and Yao went to Sony Music to be the General Manager for Chinese pop music. Under his management, Yao assisted in the careers of artists such as Coco Lee, Harlem Yu, and Leehom Wang. (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4In 1998, Virgin Music invited Yao to be the General Manager, in charge of the Chinese music business under the whole Virgin Group. Yao assisted artists Elva Hsiao, Maggie Chiang, Angela Hou, Sandy Lam, Stanley Huang, Rene Liu, Ailin Dai during his employment.Yao left Virgin Music in 2005 and served as the General Manager for Music Nation Ursa Major Limited, and the Vice President for Le Music, managing artists like Xiaoming Huang, Quan Yuan, and Coco Lee.Songwriting[edit]In the 1980s, Yao’s \u201cThe Dull-Ice Flower \u9b6f\u51b0\u82b1\u201d was popular in the Chinese music industry[citation needed]. In 1989, a Taiwanese director Li-Kuo Yang produced the movie \u201cThe Dull-Ice Flower\u201d. As the theme song, being too hard for the children actors to learn, Li-kuo Yang sought the assistance of Yao. Yao wrote a new song for the movie, which met success, winning “Best Original Film Song” from Golden Horse Awards in the same year.[3]After that, Yao continued musical productions and worked with singers such as Monique Lin, Stella Chang, Sky Wu, Jody Chiang, Coco Lee, Leehom Wang, Harlem Yu, Sandy Lam, Rene Liu, etc. His works include Jody Chiang’s \u201cLife of an Artist \u85dd\u754c\u4eba\u751f\u201d, Stella Chang’s \u201cLa California \u52a0\u5dde\u967d\u5149\u201d, Sky Wu’s \u201cSharing \u5206\u4eab\u201d, Winnie Hsin’s \u201cScent \u5473\u9053\u201d, Faye Wong’s \u201cI’m Willing \u6211\u9858\u610f\u201d, Harlem Yu’s \u201cJust for You \u53ea\u6709\u70ba\u4f60\u201d, and Coco Lee’s \u201cDi Da Di\u201d, etc. Later in the years, Yao would produce songs Hsiao’s \u201cThe Most Familiar Stranger \u6700\u719f\u6089\u7684\u964c\u751f\u4eba\u201d, Karen Mok’s \u201cLove \u611b\u60c5\u201d, Ailing Dai’s \u201cMr. Right \u5c0d\u7684\u4eba\u201d, Tanya Chua’s \u201cJi Nian \u7d00\u5ff5\u201d, \u201cStranger \u964c\u751f\u4eba\u201d, and Maggie Chiang’s \u201cHow I Envy You \u6211\u591a\u9ebc\u7fa8\u6155\u4f60\u201d.Other productions[edit]In 2006, Yao was awarded with Best Original Film Song by Hong Kong Film Award with \u201cPerhaps Love \u5982\u679c\u611b\u201d. He also served as the Music Director of \u201cAmber \u7425\u73c0\u201d, a multimedia musical that was successful[citation needed] in China, Hong Kong and Singapore, and \u201cMo Shan\u9b54\u5c71\u201d, a children’s theater production. He also worked with Subaru China on its annual theme song \u201cWo Xing Wo Lu \u6211\u884c\u6211\u8def\u201d in 2011. \u00a0 Invited by Director Han Xiao in 2016, Yao produced the music for the documentary \u201cMasters in the Forbidden City\u201d. He collaborated with many young musicians and used softer melodies to express the craftsmen’s attitude towards life.[4][5]Other than these contributions on music, Yao also engaged himself in film productions. In 2012, Yao produced \u201cMelody \u8173\u8dbe\u4e0a\u7684\u661f\u5149\u201d, which is an animated movie that incorporated his scriptwriting, novel story, and music. The story used love letters to tell the story of a long-distance relationship between Taipei and Beijing.[6] In 2017, Yao was inspired by his own experiences in art collection, and invited Director Hao-Hsuan Hsu to film and produce the movie \u201cAh-Art\u201d.[7] This movie was later selected by Toronto Reel Asian Film Festival as the movie representative of Taiwan.[8]Other appearances[edit]Yao has been engaged in fashion and exhibitions. In 2007, he organized the “Southeast Asian Art Exhibition”. Other than this particular exhibition, Yao’s involvement in the promotion and organization of artistic events has continued over the years.In 2013, Yao published “Sense It”, expressing his personal perspective on fashion, taste, and lifestyle. In 2014, Yao compiled columns he wrote for Crown Culture Corp. and published \u201cMei Li De Xiang Yu \u7f8e\u9e97\u7684\u76f8\u9047\u201d. Other than publishing literature, Yao also participated as the panel judge for “Chinese Million Star”. Currently, Yao is informally retired, but is still occasionally involved in the music industry, arts, and literatureStyle[edit]Yao has been influenced by the writings of Tien-wen Chu and Eileen Chang when he was reading their novels at a young age. He has been influenced by them, with his writing style following a pattern of describing the environment first, followed by actions, then writing out the people’s state of mind.[9]Yao’s lyrics are mostly about revelation and liberation from emotions after ending a relationship. In his later career, Yao has the habit of reading his lyrics out loud, for the purpose of detecting phony terms and revising the words to be more colloquial.[10]Female perspective[edit]In Yao’s work, observations of female emotions are often seen. He personally believes that his frequent association with female artists is just a coincidence, as the artists in the record label at the time were all women (Jody Chiang, Nana Chiang, Monique Lin, Shu-chin Tseng, etc.)Yao’s lyrics often include themes of women’s empathy and sentiments. Singers like Rene Liu, Elva Hsiao, Coco Lee, Winnie Hsin, and Tanya Chua often respect him and see him as their teacher and brother[citation needed].When being asked to compare himself with Jonathan Lee, another songwriter who’s highly acclaimed for his understanding of women, Yao thinks that Lee writes about women from a male perspective, whereas he himself writes from a female perspective[citation needed].Collector[edit]Other than music, Yao is also active in culture and arts in general. In his house in Taipei, there is a wall in the living room that’s dedicated to what he claims to be the collection of “Greatest Asian oil paintings in the 20th century”. His house in Beijing is also full of artworks that he gathered from around the globe. The insights and perspectives he’s provided in his written articles have been cited by many art history scholars and students from Central Academy of Fine Arts and National Tsing Hua University[citation needed].Literary works[edit]Other than written critics on arts, Yao also published several literary works like prose writing and novels. In 2010, he compiled his published columns into the novel \u201cWo Yuan Yi \u6211\u9858\u610f\u201d, which is a love story about the letter correspondences between Beijing and Taichung. In 2012, he published a fictional romantic novel \u201cMelody \u8173\u8dbe\u4e0a\u7684\u661f\u5149\u201d, along with its animated movie. In 2013, his work \u201cSense It\u54c1\u5473\u201d was published In 2018, his newest publication \u201cAs Song, As Life\u201d was published by UNITAS Publishing Co. Over the years, Yao has published six books in total. He also has numerous appearances online, such as on shixiang.xin to discuss about Eileen Chang’s work, and also on \u201cGe Ci Shi Guang \u6b4c\u8a5e\u6642\u5149\u201d, the page he built on Douban.com to share his lyrical writings.SongsSinger\u4eca\u751f\u6700\u75db\u7684\u6b4c\u3001\u6709\u4f34\u7684\u5fc3\u3001\u5169\u500b\u4eba\u7684\u6708\u4eaeNana Chiang\u52a0\u5dde\u967d\u5149\u3001\u7c3e\u5f8c\u3001\u8209\u68cb\u4e0d\u5b9a\u3001\u8a8d\u771f\u7684\u773c\u775bStella Chang\u5206\u4eab\u3001\u6700\u611b\u662f\u4f60\u3001\u6709\u5922\u6709\u670b\u53cbSky Wu\u6211\u9858\u610fFaye Wong\u5473\u9053\u3001\u5922\u5916\u3001\u7121\u5948\u3001\u6211\u4e5f\u6703\u611b\u4e0a\u5225\u4eba\u7684Winnie Hsin\u76f4\u89ba\u3001\u5fc3\u60c5\u5361\u7247\u3001\u591a\u60f3Jeff Chang\u9760\u8fd1\u3001\u53ea\u6709\u70ba\u4f60\u3001\u8b93\u4f60\u5abd\u5abdNEW\u4e00\u4e0b\u3001\u8b93\u81ea\u5df1HIGHHarlem Yu\u6211\u662f\u5982\u6b64\u611b\u4f60\u3001\u53ef\u4ee5\u52c7\u6562\u53ef\u4ee5\u6eab\u67d4\u3001\u611b\u96e3\u6c42\u3001\u5929\u5929\u591c\u591cMonique Lin\u516c\u8f49\u81ea\u8f49\u3001\u4fe1\u4efbLeehom Wang\u5f80\u65e5\u60c5\u3001Di Da Di\u3001\u81ea\u5df1\uff08\u96fb\u5f71\u300c\u82b1\u6728\u862d\u300d\u4e2d\u6587\u4e3b\u984c\u66f2\uff09Coco Lee\u6700\u719f\u6089\u7684\u964c\u751f\u4eba\u3001\u9032\u884c\u5f0f\u3001\u5730\u4e0b\u9435\u3001CappuccinoElva Hsiao\u76fc\u4f60\u5728\u6b64\u3001\u98db\u7684\u7406\u7531\u3001\u975e\u611b\u4e0d\u53efSandy Lam\u96fb\u53f0\u60c5\u6b4c\u3001\u611b\u60c5Karen MokI’m Sorry\u3001Dear Friend\u3001\u6070\u597d\u7684\u5bc2\u5bde\u3001\u7737\u6200Shunza\u89aa\u611b\u7684\u4f60\u600e\u9ebc\u4e0d\u5728\u8eab\u908a\u3001\u6211\u5011\u90fd\u662f\u6709\u6b4c\u7684\u4ebaMaggie Chiang\u964c\u751f\u4eba\u3001\u7d00\u5ff5\u3001\u4e0b\u4e00\u6b21\u611b\u60c5\u4f86\u7684\u6642\u5019\u3001\u6df1\u4fe1\u4e0d\u7591Tanya Chua\u5c0d\u7684\u4eba\u3001\u5206\u5206\u79d2\u79d2\u3001\u6211\u8a72\u5f97\u5230Ailin Dai\u9ed1\u7684\u610f\u5ff5\u3001\u4f60\u8eab\u908aStanley Huang\u5206\u958b\u65c5\u884c\u3001\u807d\u662f\u8ab0\u5728\u5531\u6b4c\u3001\u8d8a\u611b\u8d8a\u7f8e\u9e97Rene LiuAwards and recognition[edit]\u201cPerhaps Love \u5982\u679c\u611b\u201d, Winner of Hong Kong Film Award for Best Original Film Song (2006)\u201cThe Dull-Ice Flower \u9b6f\u51b0\u82b1\u201d, Winner of Golden Horse Awards for \u201cBest Original Film Song\u201d (1989)\u201cWhen Dreams Come True \u660e\u6708\u5e7e\u6642\u5713\u201d was nominated for \u201cBest Lyricist\u201d in the 4th Golden Melody Awards (1992)\u201cJiu Shang Xin Qin \u820a\u50b7\u65b0\u60c5\u201d was nominated for \u201cBest Lyricist\u201d in the 3rd Golden Melody Awards (1991)[11]References[edit] (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4"},{"@context":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"BreadcrumbList","itemListElement":[{"@type":"ListItem","position":1,"item":{"@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/#breadcrumbitem","name":"Enzyklop\u00e4die"}},{"@type":"ListItem","position":2,"item":{"@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki21\/chien-yao-wikipedia\/#breadcrumbitem","name":"Chien Yao – Wikipedia"}}]}]