Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Wang_Luobin> ?p ?o }
- Wang_Luobin abstract "Wang Luobin (王洛宾; 28 December 1913 – 14 March 1996) was a renowned Chinese songwriter. He specialized in publishing Mandarin-language songs based on the music of various ethnic minorities in western China. Wang was born in Beijing on 28 December 1913. He graduated from the Music Department of Beijing Normal University in 1934 and actively participated in the Second Sino-Japanese War on China's behalf beginning in 1937 in Shanxi Province. In 1938, in Lanzhou in Gansu Province, Wang published his first Xinjiang-inspired song, "The Girl from Dabancheng". He took up residence in northwestern China for more than 50 years since then, and devoted his time there to transcribing, adapting, collecting and revising western Chinese folk songs. In all, Wang wrote seven operas and edited six songbooks, and published some 700 Xinjiang-style songs, the most famous of which include "Alamuhan" (阿拉木汗, inspired by a Uyghur song), "Awariguli" (also supposedly an Uyghur song), "Flowers and Youth" (pinyin: Hua'er Yu Shaonian, a Hui Muslim folk song), "In that place wholly faraway" (a song from Qinghai Province), "Lift Your Veil" (掀起你的盖头来), "Duldal and Maria" (a Kazakh folk song), "Mayila", and "The Crescent Moon Rises" (半个月亮爬上来; pinyin: Ban Ge Yueliang Pa Shang Lai).Wang began to win accolades for his work towards the end of his life. In 1993, "At a Faraway Place" and "The Crescent Moon Rises" were selected as the Chinese music classics of the 20th century. A year later, in July 1994, Wang received the Award for Outstanding Contributions to the Exchange of Western and Eastern Cultures from UNESCO. Wang was made the honorary town head of Dabancheng in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region by the local government in December of that year.When Wang tried to copyright “Xinjiang-style” songs he had published, a controversy evolved about whether he had stolen these folk songs from minority peoples’ traditions, i.e. whether he had actually “composed” (chuàngzuò 创作) them, or just “transcribed” (jìlù 记录) and “added [Chinese] lyrics” (yìpèi 译配) to traditional songs. In 1994 Sidiⱪ Haji Rozi, who now lives in the USA, published an article in the Ürümqi keqilik geziti (Wūlǔmùqí wǎnbào 《乌鲁木齐晚报》) titled “Song Thief Wang Luobin, Stop Stealing!”.Wang married Huang Yulan in Lanzhou in 1945 and had three sons, Wang Haiyan, Wang Haixing and Wang Haicheng. Huang died in 1951 as a result of tuberculosis. Wang had lived in Australia for a period of time with his son Haiyan who immigrated in 1981, and stated that some of his later work was inspired by the Australian landscape and natural flora and fauna.Wang died of cancer on 14 March 1996 at the age of 83. His songs continue to be popular today, and modern adaptations of them have been recorded by the Beijing Angelic Choir, a Chinese children's choir that has earned recognition both at home and abroad; by China's popular Twelve Girls Band; and by the famous Chinese rock singer Dao Lang, who is known for his western China-themed pop music.".
- Wang_Luobin award UNESCO.
- Wang_Luobin country China.
- Wang_Luobin genre Music_of_China.
- Wang_Luobin occupation Songwriter.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageExternalLink 35@67960.htm.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageExternalLink www.wangluobin.org.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageID "2120452".
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageLength "4968".
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageOutDegree "41".
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageRevisionID "668975850".
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Australia.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Beijing.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Beijing_Angelic_Choir.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Beijing_Normal_University.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Cancer.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Category:1913_births.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Category:1996_deaths.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Category:Chinese_songwriters.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Category:Musicians_from_Beijing.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Category:Peoples_Republic_of_China_musicians.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Category:Republic_of_China_musicians.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink China.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_folk_music.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Dabancheng.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Dabancheng_District.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Dao_Lang.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Folk_music.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Folk_song.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Gansu.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Hui_people.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink In_that_place_wholly_faraway.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Kazakhs.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Lanzhou.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Lift_Your_Veil.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Mandarin_Chinese.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Music_of_China.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Muslim.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Peoples_Republic_of_China.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Pinyin.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Qinghai.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Second_Sino-Japanese_War.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Shanxi.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Songwriter.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink The_Girl_from_Dabancheng.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Tuberculosis.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Twelve_Girls_Band.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink UNESCO.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Uyghur_people.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Uyghurs.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Wang_(surname).
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Xinjiang.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Xinjiang_Uyghur_Autonomous_Region.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLink Zai_Na_Yaoyuan_De_Difang.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageWikiLinkText "Wang Luobin".
- Wang_Luobin awards "UNESCO Outstanding Contributions to the Exchange of Western and Eastern Cultures".
- Wang_Luobin birthDate "1913-12-28".
- Wang_Luobin birthPlace Beijing.
- Wang_Luobin children "Wang Haiyan, Wang Haixing, Wang Haicheng".
- Wang_Luobin deathDate "1996-03-14".
- Wang_Luobin genre Chinese_folk_music.
- Wang_Luobin genre Music_of_China.
- Wang_Luobin hasPhotoCollection Wang_Luobin.
- Wang_Luobin influences "music of Xinjiang".
- Wang_Luobin name "Wang Luobin".
- Wang_Luobin occupation Songwriter.
- Wang_Luobin origin China.
- Wang_Luobin origin Peoples_Republic_of_China.
- Wang_Luobin simpchinesename "王洛宾".
- Wang_Luobin spouse "Huang Yulan".
- Wang_Luobin tradchinesename "王洛賓".
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Chinese_name.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_Chinese-language_singer_and_actor.
- Wang_Luobin wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Wang_Luobin subject Category:1913_births.
- Wang_Luobin subject Category:1996_deaths.
- Wang_Luobin subject Category:Chinese_songwriters.
- Wang_Luobin subject Category:Musicians_from_Beijing.
- Wang_Luobin subject Category:Peoples_Republic_of_China_musicians.
- Wang_Luobin subject Category:Republic_of_China_musicians.
- Wang_Luobin hypernym Songwriter.
- Wang_Luobin type Agent.
- Wang_Luobin type Article.
- Wang_Luobin type Artist.
- Wang_Luobin type MusicalArtist.
- Wang_Luobin type Person.
- Wang_Luobin type Article.
- Wang_Luobin type Songwriter.
- Wang_Luobin type Songwriter.
- Wang_Luobin type MusicGroup.
- Wang_Luobin type Person.
- Wang_Luobin type Agent.
- Wang_Luobin type NaturalPerson.
- Wang_Luobin type Thing.
- Wang_Luobin type Q215627.
- Wang_Luobin type Q483501.
- Wang_Luobin type Q5.
- Wang_Luobin type Person.
- Wang_Luobin comment "Wang Luobin (王洛宾; 28 December 1913 – 14 March 1996) was a renowned Chinese songwriter. He specialized in publishing Mandarin-language songs based on the music of various ethnic minorities in western China. Wang was born in Beijing on 28 December 1913. He graduated from the Music Department of Beijing Normal University in 1934 and actively participated in the Second Sino-Japanese War on China's behalf beginning in 1937 in Shanxi Province.".