Popular music genre originating in Hong Kong, and became popular in the late 1970s to early 1980s, sung in Cantonese, the major dialect of Southern China, and spoken widely in Overseas Chinese communities. Before then, popular music in Hong Kong, aside from classical and traditional vernacular ballads, was most often sung in Mandarin, the
lingua franca language of China.
Artists such as Sam
Hui and Roman Tam were among the first singers to popularize songs written and sung in Cantonese around that time. Much Canto-pop songs follow a rhyming format in its lyrics. This popularity, combined with slick marketing of the songs and its artists, lead to the development of a local popular music and entertainment industry that was not only popular in Hong Kong, which spread to other Chinese communities in Southeast Asia and beyond.
Artists in the 1980s that rode and
strengthed the
Canto pop industry included Alan Tam, Kenny Bee, Leslie Chueng, Anita
Mui. The 1990s saw the emergence of artists such as the Four Heavenly Kings -
Jacky Cheung, Andy
Lau, Leon
Lai, and Aaron
Kwok. Today's artists include Sammi
Cheng, Twins, Nicholas
Tse,
Eason Chan.
It's a pretty structured and manufactured industry -- stars get the buildup by their recording companies, they make lots of public apperances, and put on concerts at the Hong Kong
Coliseum, often for days on end. They also frequently are cast in locally made movies to take advantage of their
star power.
Much of the lyrics are often sappy and critically slammed as superficial. Some of them were covered from Japanese songs with local writers putting them to Chinese lyrics. They are, however, fairly easy to sing, and are often a staple of the karaoke lounge.
Many Cantopop stars, to take advantage of the markets in the
PRC and Taiwan, will often record songs in Mandarin, and make appearances there as well, as well as areas such as Singapore, Malaysia and North America.
The Twins is a well-known popular Cantopop
duo.
Cantopop is
sugar for the ears.