Culture

Voice of debate

By Chen Nan ( China Daily ) Updated: 2015-01-20 07:36:05

"I believe that good singing is not only about belting high and loud notes, and while the 500 voters don't agree with me, there are evidently many who do. I am performing for the millions who are watching this show from far-off and diverse places-and it's always fun to present an alternative view, isn't it?" she adds.

Since the first season of I Am a Singer aired in April 2013, it has been a great success, attracting a number of veteran and new singers to compete on the Hunan TV show. Previous participants of the same show, including the seasoned diva Huang Qishan, young Hong Kong singer G.E.M. and Malaysian singer Shila Amzah, have enjoyed a big boost in their careers after performing on it.

The first Singaporean singer to participate, Chan says that she was biased against the reality-show genre in the past-not liking the idea of professional singers having to compete against each other.

However, an old friend who had handled public relations for Chan's first Mandarin album, Heartache, which took the Taiwanese market by storm in 1994, convinced her.

As one of the most established singers in her home country, Chan has achieved critical acclaim in singing and acting since 1993. She also had launched a successful career in Hong Kong, Taiwan and on the Chinese mainland by releasing more than 20 Mandarin and Cantonese albums from 1993 to 2004.

Her career in China rose to a higher level after playing the leading role in the musical, titled Snow. Wolf. Lake. Directed by and starring Hong Kong singer Jacky Cheung, the musical won commercial and critical success in both the Cantonese version in 1997 and the Mandarin version in 2005.

As a kid, Chan loved anything that has to do with the performing arts. She started her dream of being a professional performer at Lasalle College of the Arts' faculty of drama in 1991. Then she dropped out after two years because she was offered a recording contract and moved to Taipei. Working alone overseas was tiring and sometimes lonely for Chan. However, the experience made her a stronger person, she says.

But then she took a break from her singing career, staying away from the industry for six years. In 2006, she went back to Lasalle College of the Arts to complete her studies as a mature student, fulfilling a longtime wish.

"I felt that I could translate my years of practicing the performing arts into something academic and it was a good time for me to take stock, reflect and try to put into words what I had been doing all this time," she says.

Ever since her comeback in 2011, Chan has done musical, sellout concerts in Hong Kong and Singapore, released albums and acted in two movies.

"I am not here to win," Chan says of the Hunan TV competition, "but to experience the dynamism and high production values of this music program. So far, it has not failed me in this respect. I wanted to make sure that I use this platform to showcase who I am now and what I do best."

 

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