Chris Lee (Li Yuchun album)

Chris Lee is the third studio album by Chinese singer Li Yuchun, released on December 22, 2009 by Taihe Rye.[1]

Chris Lee
Studio album by
ReleasedDecember 22, 2009
GenreMandopop
Length44:27
LanguageChinese
LabelTaihe Rye
ProducerY.Z. Tan
Li Yuchun chronology
Youth of China
(2008)
Chris Lee
(2009)
The Literary Youth Who Can Dance
(2011)

Track listing

No.TitleLyricsMusicLength
1."My Love" (阿么)Li YuchunLi Yuchun4:07
2."Let’s Meet at, the Next, Crossing" (下个, 路口, 见)Li YuchunLi Yuchun3:30
3."Frequent Flyer" (常旅客)Li YuchunLi Yuchun4:45
4."Piece by Piece" (一点一点)Li YuchunLi Yuchun4:15
5."The Pedals" (脚踏板)Li YuchunLi Yuchun4:03
6."Little Kid" (小朋友)Li YuchunLi Yuchun3:25
7."The Little Universe" (小宇宙)Li YuchunYan dandan, Mr. L3:46
8."Seeking Everywhere" (千域千寻)Zhao JianuoLi Yuchun4:09
9."Serve It Right" (活该)Li YuchunDrew Peters, Chris Peters3:35
10."Live" (籁赋)Li YuchunLi Yuchun3:51
11."At Least You Have Me" (还有我疼你)L.T.L.T.5:21
Total length:44:27

Music videos

  1. Let’s Meet at, the Next, Crossing 下个, 路口, 见
  2. Little Kid 小朋友
  3. Amo 阿么
  4. At Least You Have Me 还有我疼你
gollark: Perhaps we are in the same time zone, or same country, or same constituency, or even same village, or same house, or same room.
gollark: It is 17:02:33 for me too!
gollark: Phrasing it as "the EVIL CAPITALISTS want us to unlockdown because they only care about the economy" is ridiculous - *we need to produce things* and people will probably become increasingly unhappy/crazy as time spent at home drags on.
gollark: Unfortunately the UK does not appear to *have* a plan, and the government is completely refusing to explain anything it's going to do.
gollark: Locking everything down just effectively puts the whole thing on pause, but at great cost, which makes sense as a way to buy time for launching another strategy.

References

  1. Britannica Book of the Year 2011 - Page 96 - 2011 - She recorded and released her first studio album, Huanghou yu mengxiang (“The Queen and the Dreams”), in September 2006, and more discs followed, including her self-titled Li Yuchun (or Chris Lee) in 2009. Her concerts were wildly popular and included several annual shows titled “Why Me,” which were staged to thank her fans—mostly teenage girls—many of whom referred to themselves as “yumis,” or “corns,” a play on the Chinese characters for the term yu mi, which can be ...
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