Sa Dingding

This is a Chinese name; the family name is Sa.
Sa Dingding

An action shot of Sa Dingding playing during a concert.

Sa Dingding in concert
Background information
Chinese name 薩頂頂 (traditional)
Chinese name 萨顶顶 (simplified)
Pinyin Sà Dǐngdǐng (Mandarin)
Birth name Zhou Peng (周鹏)
Born (1983-12-27) 27 December 1983
Inner Mongolia, China[1]
Occupation Singer, composer, songwriter, record producer, choreographer
Genre(s) Electronica, pop, folk
Instrument(s) Guzheng, Morin khuur
Label(s) Wrasse, Universal
Years active 2006–present
Ancestry Han Chinese and Mongol
Website SaDingding.co.UK

Sa Dingding (simplified Chinese: ; traditional Chinese: ; pinyin: Sà Dǐngdǐng, born Zhou Peng (周鹏), 27 December 1983) is a Chinese folk singer and songwriter. She is of mixed Han Chinese and Mongol ancestry, and sings in languages including Mandarin Chinese, Sanskrit, Standard Tibetan, as well an imaginary self-created language to evoke the emotions in her songs.[2] She also plays traditional instruments such as the guzheng and morin khuur.

Biography

Born in Inner Mongolia,[1] Sa is of Han Chinese ancestry from her father's side and Mongolian ancestry from her mother side and she was influenced by Mongol music while living with her grandmother in Inner Mongolia until age six.[1] She also became interested in Buddhism and taught herself Tibetan and Sanskrit. Later, she moved to Beijing to study music at the People's Liberation Army Academy of Art.

At age 18, she released her first album entitled Dong Ba La under her birth name Zhou Peng, gaining her the title of China’s Best Dance Music Singer.

In 2006, "Holy Incense" was used as the theme song for the movie Prince of the Himalayas, directed by Sherwood Hu.

In mid-2007, she released Alive, available physically and as a download in many countries. The Hong Kong release of the album featured a DVD containing music videos, a remix of "Alive", making of footage and a Chinese version of "Mama Tian Na", not featured on the album.

In 2008, she won the BBC Radio 3 Awards for World Music for the Asia-Pacific region, earning herself the chance to perform at the Royal Albert Hall to a Western audience. In the same year, she also released a two track single called "Qin Shang".[3]

Dingding composed a song with Éric Mouquet of Deep Forest called "Won't Be Long" to raise funds for disaster relief after the 2008 Sichuan earthquake. The song was made available on Mouquet's Deep-Projects website. Mouquet and Dingding have collaborated on an album Deep China.

Dingding has appeared at World of Music, Arts and Dance and the Harrogate International Festivals in the UK. On October 6, 2008, her official English website was updated with information about a European tour, going from November 7 to 17, making stops in Germany, London, Paris, Amsterdam, Las Palmas, Australia and New Zealand.[4]

For Chinese composer He Xuntian's 2008 album, Tathāgata, Dingding contributed the vocals for the second track, entitled "Dátǎjiādá" (达塔伽达).

Her January 2010 album was Harmony (天地合), with nine songs in Chinese. The album also contains three remixes of the title track, one by Paul Oakenfold.

Discography

Albums
Singles
Soundtracks

References

External links

Interviews

News articles

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.