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The Songs We Sang

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Wikipedia article




'The Songs We Sang' is a 2015 Singaporean documentary directed by Eva Tang. It is about 'xinyao', Singaporean folk music that was popular in the 1980s.

Synopsis



The documentary covered the last years of Nanyang University and how it affected the Chinese educated students who graduated from there. It also documented how the poetry club in Nanyang University, before the closure of the institution, branched out to song writing, influenced by Taiwan 'minyao' (), a Taiwanese folk songs movement in the 1970s and their school campus songs (). The history of was then chronicled from its birth in educational institutes to local success and then to commercial success.

Interviews were conducted on three different groups of people: local 'xinyao' singers such as Eric Moo, Billy Koh, Koh Nam Seng, Liang Wern Fook, Wong Hong Mok; singers inspired by 'xinyao' such as Stefanie Sun and JJ Lin; and local DJs who helped popularised 'xinyao.'

The film ended with clips of footage of the free 'xinyao' concert, with performances by various 'xinyao' singers, held by the producers.

Production



The documentary film was budgeted at $35,000. It was also supported and partly funded with a grant of 30 per cent of the original budget by the National Heritage Board of Singapore.

As part of the documentary, a free concert was staged on 6 July 2014 at Bras Basah Complex. Various 'xinyao' singers such as Eric Moo, Roy Li, Dawn Gan and Pan Ying performed at the concert for two hours. Footage of the concert was shown in the documentary.

Release



'The Songs We Sang' premiered at the Singapore International Film Festival on 29 November 2015. The performance was sold-out. Golden Village released it to five Singaporean theaters on 24 March 2016. It grossed $23,508 on the opening weekend and a total of $84,661.

On 8 August 2020, the film was released via Netflix.

Reception



After its festival premiere, the film received positive reviews. In praising Tang's research, Boon Chan of 'My Paper' rated it 4.5/5 stars and wrote, "'The Songs We Sang' is a labour of love that puts our stories front and centre." Tan Kee Yun of 'The New Paper' rated it 4/5 stars and called it "truly a gem of local cinema", as it avoids the melodrama associated with 'That Girl in Pinafore'.

'Her World' rated it as one of the best Singaporean films of 2015.

References




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