Sisters (A-Mei album) explained

Sisters
Type:Studio album
Artist:A-Mei
Cover:Sistersalternate.jpg
Released:December 13, 1996
Recorded:1996
Studio:
  • Mega Force Studio
  • Platinum Studio (Taipei)
  • Forward Studio
  • 大聲錄音室
  • Studio C. (Singapore)
Length:47:39
Label:Forward Music
Next Title:Bad Boy
Next Year:1997

Sisters is the debut studio album by Taiwanese singer A-Mei. It was released on December 13, 1996, by Forward Music.[1] The album was primarily handled by Taiwanese producer Chang Yu-sheng, with the assistance of Yu Guangyan, Ma Yu-fen, Baby Chung, David Wu, and Chen Fu-ming. Musically, it experiments with genres such as pop, soul music, R&B, adult contemporary and easy listening to exhibit A-Mei's vocal talent and versatility. On June 23, 2017, 21 years after its initial release date, a vinyl reissue of Sisters was released by Forward Music.[2]

Prior to the album's release date, the higher-ups at Forward Music were concerned that A-Mei's aboriginal heritage would negatively impact the performance of the album, due to widespread discrimination against indigenous people in Taiwan at the time.[3] Nevertheless, Sisters was a massive commercial success in Taiwan upon release. The record topped the Taiwan IFPI chart for a total of nine consecutive weeks and sold a total of 1.21 million copies in Taiwan[4] and 4 million in Asia.[5]

To promote Sisters, A-Mei and Forward Music released five singles; "You Don't Want Anything," "I'm a Dreamer on Air," "Cut Love," "Release" and the title track, all resulting in commercial success. The album's success paved the way for future popular Taiwanese aboriginal artists such as A-Lin and Jia Jia. Sisters currently ranks as the fourth highest selling album of all time in Taiwan.[6]

Background and development

In 1992, A-Mei headed on a bus to Taipei and participated in the televised "Five Lights Singing Contest" on TTV Main Channel after encouragement from her father.[7] She made it all the way through to the finals but lost in the final round.[8] She was disappointed and considered giving up music until her father encouraged her to attended the singing contest again in 1993, which she later won in 1994.[9] Her father died before getting to see her win, which affected A-Mei and inspired her to take a break from music afterwards. After her father's death, A-Mei struggled to recall her passion for music until 1995 when she started singing in local pubs with a rock band called "Relax" which was formed by her musician cousin.[8] One of her pub performances impressed Taiwanese music producer Chang Yu-sheng and Chang Hsiao-yen, then-head of Taiwanese record label Forward Music.

In March 1996, she signed a recording deal with Forward Music. After she signed to the label, she collaborated on the song "The One Who Loved Me Most, Hurt Me The Most (最愛的人傷我最深)" with Chang. It appeared on his mini-album, Red Passion, which was released on July 12, 1996.[10] In November 1996, A-Mei was invited to sing "I'm a Dreamer on Air," the theme song for Taiwan's UFO Radio station, which further increased her popularity.[11] [12]

Writing and recording

Sisters was primarily handled by Taiwanese producer Chang Yu-sheng—who served as A-Mei's primary vocal tutor, producer and supervisor until his death—with the assistance of Yu Guangyan, Ma Yu-fen, Baby Chung, David Wu, and Chen Fu-ming.[13] The album's music incorporates a range of contemporary genres with a mix of slow ballads and up-tempo tracks, having been influenced by various genres and styles such as adult contemporary, funk, jazz and R&B. There are 10 full-length recorded songs on the album in total, all of which feature vocals from both A-Mei and various backing singers.[13]

The lead single "You Don't Want Anything" was originally sung by Michelle Pan in February 1995 under the name "Who Makes Who Down (誰辜負誰)." Formerly planned to be on Pan's album "It's Time to Wake Up (該醒了)," it was delayed due to the acquisition of UFO Records by Warner Music. The composer Guo Tzu authorized the lyricist Wu Yukang to re-write the lyrics for A-Mei to sing for her version of the song.[14] The songs "Sisters" and "Seafoam Blue Tears" were written and composed solely by Chang Yu-sheng.[13] In the song "Sisters" he added in traditional Puyuma musical elements and invited A-Mei's mother, sisters and other relatives to sing along with her in the upbeat chorus. Lyrically, the song reflects on the deep love between sisters and family. In 2016, to commemorate the 20th anniversary of her debut, A-Mei sang a re-arranged version of the album's title track.[15] The guitar-driven pop ballad "Release" was composed by Jonathan Koh and written by Daryl Yao;[13] lyrically it talks about finding a new direction and moving forward after a difficult romantic breakup. "Impulse" is an R&B influenced track that was written by Yu Guangyan & Yu Meiming,[13] with music composed by Baby Chung.[13]

"Cut Love" was written by producer Michael Tu for his wife Huang Qishan. However, after the two divorced, Tu gave the song to A-Mei to sing,[16] and the lyrics of "Cut Love" were filled in by Eric Lin.[17] The snazzy soul influenced song "Betrayal" was written by KiKi Hu and composed by David Wu.[13] "Love Until You Can't Receive" was composed by Jonathan Koh and written by Wang Zhongyan.[13] Musically, it is a Latin soul-influenced power ballad that describes the feeling of emotional scars in a relationship which also features drums, guitars, and digital synthesizers. The synthesizer-heavy ballad "Seriously" is composed by Chen Chih-yuan and written by Zhang Fanglu.[13] "I'm a Dreamer on Air" was also composed by Chen Chih-yuan with lyrics handled by Andy Yang[13] and musically is a mellow easy listening ballad.

Commercial performance and legacy

Commercially, Sisters experienced major success in the Sinophone world. The album sold 300,000 copies within a week of its release, and sales in Taiwan exceeded one million by 1997.[18] According to various published sources and journalists, the album sold 1.21 million units in Taiwan alone[19] and 4 million throughout Asia.[20] It topped Taiwan's IFPI chart for a record breaking nine weeks.[21] [22] Sisters is ranked the fourth highest-selling album of all time in Taiwan behind two album entries by Jacky Cheung and A-Mei's album Bad Boy.[23] [24] The success of Sisters also awarded A-Mei with numerous accolades and recognition. The lead single "You Don't Want Anything" won the "Silver Award for Most Popular Mandarin Song" at the 1997 Jade Solid Gold Best Ten Music Awards Presentation.[25] The album also won a Gold Record at the 1997 Hong Kong Golden Disc Awards Ceremony, won one of the top ten excellent albums and top ten singles of 1997 by the Chinese Musicians Exchange Association, and eventually was placed at No. 10 in the selection of the "200 Best Taiwanese Popular Music Albums."[26]

Despite there still being widespread discrimination for Taiwanese aborigines at the time of its release,[3] Sisters defied expectations and A-Mei became the very first A-lister to repeatedly flaunt her aboriginal identity to the mainstream media.[27] [28] The commercial performance of Sisters surprised Forward Music, since they had low expectations for it, and even forgot to sign her up for the 8th Golden Melody Awards.[29] As a result of the album's success in the 1990s, A-Mei was noted by journalists and commentators as a trendsetter in the Greater China region, where her influence was dubbed as "sister power."[30] Consequently, some journalists described her meteoric rise to the top to the experiences of Madonna.[31] This comparison inspired Western media to dub A-Mei with honorific titles such as the "Queen of Mandopop" or "Taiwan's Madonna."[32]

Before the release of Sisters, there were many singers with Taiwanese aboriginal ancestry in Taiwan's entertainment industry, such as Yulunana Tanivu, Shen Wen-cheng, Sammi Kao, Wan Sha Lang, Qian Bai Hui, and Gao Jin Sumei. Despite this, A-Mei was the first popular singer in Taiwan to continually emphasize being aboriginal to the media. Many later generations of Aboriginal singers, such as A-Lin, Jia Jia, Francesca Kao, Landy Wen, and Samingad cited A-Mei as the godmother of Aboriginal pop music. Many Aboriginal singers began to attract attention because of the appearance of A-Mei.[33]

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (1996)Peak
position
Hong Kong Albums (IFPI)10
Taiwanese Albums (IFPI Taiwan)[34] 1

Year-end charts

Notes and References

  1. News: 《姊妹》專輯 . April 4, 2024 . zh.
  2. News: 《姊妹》黑膠專輯 . April 4, 2024 . zh.
  3. Hannah . Beech . Both Sides Now. https://web.archive.org/web/20020522133946/http://www.time.com/time/asia/features/heroes/amei.html . dead . May 22, 2002 . . June 21, 2024.
  4. Web site: 張惠妹、張學友兩「張」王牌,稱霸華語歌壇黃金十年少見的百萬銷量紀錄 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210419131806/https://fountmedia.io/article/73737 . October 21, 2023. April 19, 2021 .
  5. Web site: 【明星倒退嚕】阿妹《五燈獎》挫敗再起 2個男人推向天后之路 . September 25, 2023 . tw.appledaily.com . https://web.archive.org/web/20220121113113/https://tw.appledaily.com/entertainment/20200125/NS4KG2XWPQX55TQELZHJKLKXBU/ . January 21, 2022 . zh-TW.
  6. Web site: 台灣史上唱片銷量專輯 張惠妹 張學友統治整個華語市場 . October 23, 2023 . mypaper.pchome.com.tw . zh-TW.
  7. Web site: February 11, 1999 . Father's advice spurs singer . September 6, 2023 . South China Morning Post . en-US.
  8. Xinhua News (originally from Askmen.com). Always A-Mei, xinhuanet.com, December 11, 2003; retrieved July 23, 2007.
  9. News: Han Cheung . The five lights to stardom . October 7, 2018 . Taipei Times . October 7, 2018.
  10. Web site: 张惠妹出道不久即成天后歌星 . October 25, 2023 . yule.sohu.com . zh-CN.
  11. Web site: 2014.04.06紀錄台灣/不怕失敗闖歌壇 阿妹蛻變成天后 . September 25, 2023 . youtube.com . zh-TW.
  12. Web site: 【狂野嗓音】天后張惠妹《就愛電你》1996年飛碟電台台呼 . September 25, 2023 . youtube.com . https://web.archive.org/web/20210222220148/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S3HMNtfaM9U&gl=US&hl=en . February 22, 2021 . zh-TW.
  13. 姊妹. 張惠妹. 1996. CD album; Liner notes. Forward Music. 96-20028.
  14. Web site: 郭子出書爆料阿妹非原唱 〈原來你什麼都不要〉是「她」的歌 . September 25, 2023 . www.ctwant.com . zh-TW.
  15. Web site: 张惠妹重新演绎《姐妹》 巡演上海起跑 . October 25, 2023 . ent.sina.com.cn . zh-CN.
  16. Web site: 一首《剪爱》情感纠葛 牵动黄绮珊张惠妹两位歌后 . October 25, 2023 . www.163.com . zh-CN.
  17. Web site: 旧作《剪爱》等引追捧 林秋离重回公众视线 . October 25, 2023 . www.163.com . zh-CN.
  18. Web site: 姐妹(張惠妹演唱專輯) . September 25, 2023 . newton.com.tw . zh-TW.
  19. Web site: December 13, 2016 . 紀念恩師! 阿妹重新詮釋"姊妹" . September 5, 2023 . news.cts.com.tw . zh-TW.
  20. Web site: June 21, 2016 . BIO人物傳記頻道:張惠妹 (Biography®:A-Mei) . youtube.com . zh-TW.
  21. Web site: January 6, 2021 . IFPI張惠妹首張專輯"姊妹"連9周封后破紀錄 . September 6, 2023 . mypaper.pchome.com . zh-TW.
  22. Web site: November 27, 2019 . 巨星猴年蹦蹦跳-亞洲天后 妹力四射 張惠妹 . youtube.com . zh-TW.
  23. Web site: November 27, 2019 . 巨星猴年蹦蹦跳-亞洲天后 妹力四射 張惠妹 . youtube.com . zh-TW.
  24. Web site: 台灣史上唱片銷量專輯 張惠妹 張學友統治整個華語市場 . October 23, 2023 . mypaper.pchome.com.tw . zh-TW.
  25. Web site: 1997年度十大劲歌金曲颁奖典礼 . September 6, 2023 . jsg.tvb.com . zh-TW.
  26. Web site: January 6, 2021 . 《台灣流行音樂200最佳專輯》評選最佳專輯名單第10名*姐妹 . mypaper.pchome.com.tw . zh-TW.
  27. Web site: June 17, 1999 . 阿妹好嗓依舊在 專輯不夠好 P.132 . September 6, 2023 . businesstoday.com . zh-TW.
  28. Web site: March 12, 2021 . 跨越語言界線!紀曉君《聖民歌─太陽 風 草原的聲音》讓原住民音樂獲得主流肯定 . September 6, 2023 . fountmedia.io . https://web.archive.org/web/20210515200550/https://www.fountmedia.io/article/103269 . May 15, 2021 . zh-IO.
  29. Web site: June 20, 2015 . 10年回顧: 「創作」和「突破」是拿金曲歌后兩大重點,今年會是誰呢? . thenewslens.com . zh-TW.
  30. Web site: December 29, 1999 . 《华声月报》评出1999年"十大华声人物" . September 6, 2023 . ent.sina.com.cn . zh-CN.
  31. Web site: January 11, 2000 . 舒淇张惠妹荣登美国"国际销魂风云人物榜" . September 5, 2023 . ent.sina.com.cn . zh-CN.
  32. News: May 24, 2000 . China bans Taiwan's Madonna . BBC News . May 3, 2007.
  33. Web site: 靈魂的旅程 回家吧!都市不是我的家/我是原住民 驕傲喊出我的名【台灣啟示錄】復刻版 第625集|洪培翔 . YouTube . October 15, 2023.
  34. Web site: IFPI Taiwan Chart – Top 20 Albums . https://web.archive.org/web/19970619003633/http://ifpi.org.tw/chart/1997/local13.htm . 1997-06-19 . IFPI Taiwan . zh.