Global Chinese Pop Chart
The Global Chinese Pop Chart (全球华语歌曲排行榜, quánqiú huáyŭ gēqŭ páihángbàng) is a Chinese language pop music chart compiled by 7 Chinese language radio stations across Asia. It was founded in 2001 by Beijing Music Radio, Shanghai Eastern Broadcasting (zh), Radio Guangdong, Radio Television Hong Kong, Hit Fm Taiwan, subsequently replaced by Taipei Pop Radio, and Malaysia's 988 FM.[1]
The chart's definition of "Chinese language" covers all three main genres of C-pop: Mandopop, Cantopop and Hokkien pop.
Number-one songs
Awards
The awards and concert take place in the first week of September each year
- 2001 - Beijing Capital Indoor Stadium
- 2002 - Guangdong Tianhe Stadium
- 2003 - Shanghai Indoor Stadium
- 2004 - National Taiwan University Gymnasium
- 2005 - Kuala Lumpur's Putra Indoor Stadium
- 2006 - Singapore,
- 2007 - Hong Kong
- 2008 - Hong Kong
- 2009 - Beijing Exhibition Center
- 2010 - Hong Kong Coliseum
gollark: You'll memorize stuff naturally if you actually *use* them a lot.
gollark: Well, memorizing things is mostly stupid nowadays.
gollark: They more encourage obeying when anyone is watching and otherwise ignoring the rules.
gollark: Anyway, I don't think instilling more obedience to authority is a particularly *good* thing, and in any case schools are... kind of inconsistent at that.
gollark: We actually had a history teacher who spent a few lessons talking about Brexit (back in 2016), which was interesting.
References
- Billboard - 23 Sep 2000 - Page 57 Vol. 112, No. 39 "By Winnie Chung, Hong Kong — The first-ever unified Chinese pop music chart in Asia will officially make its debut Sept. 30. Seven Asian regional radio stations have pooled resources to set up the new Global Chinese Pop chart. They are Radio Television Hong Kong (RTHK), Beijing Music Radio, East Radio Shanghai, Radio Guangdong, Taiwan-based Broadcasting Corp. of China, Radio Corp. of Singapore, and Malaysia's Radio Rediffusion."
External links
- Beijing Music Radio
- Guangdong 993 FM
- Hong Kong Radio and Television
- Shanghai Eastern Broadcasting
- Taipei HitFM (original Taipei member)
- Taipei FM91.7 (new Taipei member)
- Singapore 933FM
- Malaysia 988FM
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.