A-Mei

A-Mei
A-Mei performing during her Amit First World Tour in Taipei, March 2010
Background information
Chinese name 張惠妹 (traditional)
Chinese name 张惠妹 (simplified)
Pinyin Zhāng Huìmèi (Mandarin)
Born Kulilay Amit
(1972-08-09) 9 August 1972
Beinan, Taitung, Taiwan
Other names Chang Hui-mei
Ethnicity Puyuma
Alma mater National Taitung Junior College
Occupation Singer, songwriter
Years active 1996–present
Nationality Taiwanese
Genre(s) Pop, rock
Instrument(s) Vocals, guitar, drums
Voice type(s) Mezzo-soprano
Label(s) EMI
Manager(s) Mei Entertainment
Partner(s) Sam Yao (2011–present)
Parents Chang Tou-li (father)
Wang Yu-mei (mother)
Siblings Saya Chang (sister)
Website starmei.com
Awards
Golden Melody Awards
Best Mandarin Female Singer
2002 Truth
2010 Amit
2015 Faces of Paranoia
Best Mandarin Album
2010 Amit
Song of the Year
2010 Bold for My Love
MTV Asia Awards
Favorite Artist Taiwan
2002, 2004

Kulilay Amit (simplified Chinese: 张惠妹; traditional Chinese: 張惠妹; pinyin: Zhāng Huìmèi, born 9 August 1972[1][2]), better known by her stage name A-Mei, is a Taiwanese Puyuma singer-songwriter. In 1996, she made her singing debut and released her album, Sisters. Her albums, Truth (2001), Amit (2009), and Faces of Paranoia (2014), each won her a Golden Melody Award for Best Mandarin Female Singer, and made her one of the singers who won the category the most times. Having sold more than 50 million records, she has achieved success in Mandarin-speaking world, and she is often referred to as the "Queen of Mandopop".[3]

Life and career

1972–1996: Early years and career beginnings

A-Mei was born in a Puyuma family in Beinan, Taitung, Taiwan.[4][5] In 1992, A-Mei moved to Taipei and took part in the Five Lights Star Singing Contest presented by the Taiwanese TV program Five Lights Awards; she made it all the way through to the finals but lost in the final round.[6] In 1993, she attended the singing contest again and won.[7] After that, she joined her cousin's band in 1995 and started to perform in pubs in Taipei.[6] Her pub performance impressed Taiwanese music producer Chang Yu-sheng and Chang Hsiao-yen, the head of Taiwanese record label Forward Music of the time. In March 1996, she signed a recording deal with Forward Music.

1996–2000: Forward Music

After she signed a recording deal with Forward Music, A-Mei's voice appears on Chang Yu-sheng's album, Red Passion, which released in July 1996, and she sang a duet song titled Love Most Hurt Most. In December 1996, she released her debut album, Sisters. The title song featured A-Mei's mother and sisters as background vocals. In June 1997, A-Mei released her second studio album, Bad Boy. The album earned her two Golden Melody Award nominations for Best Pop Vocal Album and Best Mandarin Female Singer. In January 1998, A-Mei embarked on her first solo concert tour, which visited Taiwan, Hong Kong and Singapore, and released a cover album in April 1998, which included many classic songs she planned to perform during the tour. In October 1998, she released her third studio album, Holding Hands, in which she collaborated with Taiwanese singer-songwriter David Tao. The album earned her a Golden Melody Award nomination for Best Mandarin Female Singer.

In June 1999, A-Mei released her fourth studio album, Can I Hug You, Lover?. The album earned her a Golden Melody Award nomination for Best Mandarin Female Singer. In July 1999, A-Mei embarked on her second concert tour, which visited Taiwan, mainland China, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Malaysia. In April 2000, she released a live album titled Time to Say Goodbye, A-Mei Hong Kong Live. In May 2000, she sang the National Anthem of the Republic of China at the presidential inauguration ceremony of Chen Shui-bian, angering the government of the People's Republic of China which subsequently banned her from visiting mainland China for a few years.[8] In December 2000, she released her fifth studio album, Regardless, which is the last studio album released by Forward Music. The album earned her a Golden Melody Award nomination for Best Mandarin Female Singer.

2001–2006: Warner Music

After she signed a recording deal with Warner Music Taiwan in June 2001, A-Mei released her sixth studio album, Truth, in October. The album earned her two Golden Melody Award nominations for Best Pop Vocal Album and Best Mandarin Female Singer and won Best Mandarin Female Singer. In September 2001, Forward Music released a compilation album, Journey, which includes all unreleased songs A-Mei recorded when she was signed under Forward Music. In August 2002, she released her seventh studio album, Fever. The album earned her two Golden Melody Award nominations for Best Pop Vocal Album and Best Mandarin Female Singer. In the same month, she embarked on her third concert tour, A-Class Entertainment World Tour, which visited Taiwan, mainland China, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Australia and United States. In the same year, she won a MTV Asia Award for Favorite Artist Taiwan.

In June 2003, she released her eighth studio album, Brave. In September 2004, A-Mei released her ninth studio album, Maybe Tomorrow. The album earned her a Golden Melody Award nomination for Best Mandarin Female Singer. The music video of the song, Love Is the Only Way was nominated Best Music Video of the Year. In 2005, she decided to take a short break and headed to Boston for a three-month language study through Boston University's Center for English Language & Orientation Programs. In late 2005, she returned to the stage and performed a medley at the Golden Horse Awards Ceremony. In February 2006, she released her tenth studio album, I Want Happiness?. The album earned her a Golden Melody Award nomination for Best Mandarin Female Singer. In December 2006, she produced a musical, In Love with Carmen, which was performed twice at Taipei Arena.

2007–2014: EMI / Gold Typhoon

In April 2007, A-Mei signed a three-year recording deal with EMI Taiwan.[9] In August 2007, she released her eleventh studio album, Star. The album earned her three Golden Melody Award nominations for Best Mandarin Album, Best Mandarin Female Singer, and Song of the Year for A Moment, which is a duet song with Taiwanese signer Jam Hsiao. In November 2007, she embarked on her fourth solo concert tour, Star Tour, which visited Taiwan, Mainland China, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Japan, Canada and United States. In March 2008, she embarked on an opera tour, Turandot, in Japan.

In June 2009, A-Mei released her twelfth studio album, Amit. The album won four Golden Melody Awards for Best Mandarin Album, Best Mandarin Female Singer, Best Album Producer, and Song of the Year for Bold for My Love. The music video of Bold for My Love was nominated for Best Music Video of the Year. In November 2009, she embarked on her fifth concert tour, Amit First Tour, which visited Taiwan, Mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau, Japan, Singapore, and Malaysia. In April 2011, she released her thirteenth studio album, R U Watching?. The album earned her a Golden Melody Award nomination for Best Mandarin Female Singer. In September 2011, she embarked on her sixth concert tour, which visited Taiwan, mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau, Singapore, Malaysia, Australia, United Kingdom and United States. In July 2013, A-Mei became one of the judges of Chinese talent show, The Voice of China (season 2), along with Wang Feng, Na Ying, and Harlem Yu.

2014–present: EMI / Universal Music

After Universal Music Group acquired EMI, it became one of Universal's record labels. In June 2014, A-Mei signed a recording deal with EMI Taiwan, and was selected as the Chief Brand Officer for the record label. In July 2014, she released her fourteenth studio album, Faces of Paranoia. The album won Golden Melody Award nominations for Best Mandarin Female Singer and Song of the Year with the song, Faces of Paranoia and won Best Mandarin Female Singer. In April 2015, she embarked her seventh concert tour, Utopia World Tour, which visited Taiwan, Mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau, Singapore, Malaysia, Japan, Thailand, New Zealand, Australia, Canada and United States. In April 2015, she released her fifteenth studio album, Amit 2. The album earned her five Golden Melody Award nominations for Best Mandarin Album, Best Vocal recording Album, Best Mandarin Female Singer, Best Album Producer, and Song of the Year with the song, Matriarchy. In August 2015, she became one of the guest judges of the Chinese talent show, The Voice of China (season 4). In October 2016, she appeared on the Chinese variety show, Sound of My Dream. In December 2016, she embarked the upgraded version of her seventh concert tour, Utopia 2.0 Carnival World Tour, as the celebration of her 20th anniversary of her singing career, which visited Taiwan, Mainland China, Macau, Singapore, Malaysia, Spain, Italy, United Kingdom, Canada and United States.

On January 15th, 2017, 66,000 tickets for 6 concerts of Utopia 2.0 Carnival World Tour held in Kaohsiung Dome sold out in 8 minutes, accordingly the organizer announced the addition of 2 shows, and 22,000 tickets of which sold out in 45 seconds, creating a new record of box office and boosted the development of Kaohsiung's tourism industry. On the last day of her 20th anniversary of debut (December 12), she released her nineteenth studio album, Story Thief. On December 30, the final show of the Utopia World Tour was completed in Shanghai, China, setting a personal record of 104 concerts during one single tour, becoming the record holder of the most shows during one single tour among Chinese female singers and Taiwanese singers.

On May 16th, 2018, her album Story Thief earned 6 nominations, and won Best Music Video for Left Behind, which directed by Lo Ging-zim.

Discography

  • Sisters (1996)
  • Bad Boy (1997)
  • Holding Hands (1998)
  • Can I Hug You, Lover? (1999)
  • Regardless (2000)
  • Truth (2001)
  • Fever (2002)
  • Brave (2003)
  • Maybe Tomorrow (2004)
  • I Want Happiness? (2006)
  • Star (2007)
  • Amit (2009)
  • R U Watching? (2011)
  • Faces of Paranoia (2014)
  • Amit 2 (2015)
  • Story Thief (2017)

References

  1. ":: Xinhuanet - English ::". news.xinhuanet.com. Retrieved 2017-05-29.
  2. "張惠妹A-Mei 8月9號生日". VOGUE時尚網 (in Chinese). Retrieved 2017-05-29.
  3. "Mandopop queen A-Mei dazzles Singapore crowd with 'Utopia 2.0 Carnival World Tour'". Retrieved 2018-10-01.
  4. "2010 : A-MEI". Ministry of Culture, Republic of China. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 29 December 2014.
  5. Chen, Christie (29 December 2014). "A-Mei concert tickets sell out in 12 minutes". Central News Agency. Retrieved 29 December 2014.
  6. 1 2 Xinhua News (originally from Askmen.com). Always A-Mei, xinhuanet.com, 11 December 2003; retrieved 23 July 2007.
  7. Han Cheung (7 October 2018). "The five lights to stardom". Taipei Times. Retrieved 7 October 2018.
  8. "China bans Taiwan's Madonna". BBC News. 24 May 2000. Retrieved 2007-05-03.
  9. "A-Mei Signs with EMI". English.cri.cn. Retrieved 2012-04-11.
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