In 2000, the song won the Excellent Song Award of the Seventh Five-One Project of Spiritual Civilization Construction;
Yo, descendants of the mountains; Love the sun;
The sun loves you; People in the mountains;
The mountain road here is eighteen bends; The waterway here is the ninth ring road;
The folk songs here are arranged in pairs; The folk songs here are strung together;
Eighteen bends; The family's gold and silver village was unearthed in the bend;
Nine rings; Even out of the Tujia jewelry beach;
Yes; Without these eighteen bends;
No mountain girl is as beautiful as water; Without these nine chains;
There is no such thing as a sea of people in China;
Eighteen bends; Nine rings;
Eighteen bends; Nine rings;
Curved ring; The ring is curved;
All around the water and mountains of Tujia nationality; The mountain road here is eighteen bends;
The waterway here is the ninth ring road; The folk songs here are arranged in pairs;
The folk songs here are strung together; Row by row;
Discharged the bitterness and sweetness of Tujia people; String-to-string;
String together the joys and sorrows of Tujia nationality; Yes;
No such line exists; Can't be simple;
There is no such string to string; No lingering love;
Row by row; String-to-string;
Row by row; String-to-string;
Rows of strings; String arrangement;
It is closely related to the dreams and hopes of Tujia people;
Extended data:
In Eighteen Bends of Mountain Road, Li Qiong conquered the audience's ears through sonorous, bright and fresh timbre and singing style. Although the melody of the song is catchy, the interpretation of Li Qiong's version basically depends on singing skills, so it is difficult to feel her vocal skills and singing skills. As a high-pitched song, it has also become a reserved track for some singers to fully show their voice conditions and range;
The original name of this song was "Son of the Sun", and later Yan Su changed its name to "Eighteen Bends in Mountain Road". The lyrics of this song are based on the poem "Songs and Roads of Tujia Nationality" written by the poet Tong Wenxi in his hometown Changyang.
/kloc-in the summer of 0/990, Tong Wenxi went to western Hubei to collect folk songs, where he enjoyed Tujia folk performances such as swing dance, Bashan dance and crying wedding song. At that time, when the car was crawling on the mountain road, it was attracted by the scenery of Qingjiang River and misty distant mountains, so it wrote the poem "Songs and Roads of Tujia People". The lyrics of this song are based on this poem and have been polished for three years.