Faye Wong’s aura is closely related to her musical talent, aesthetics, and self-awareness. In the 1990s, when Chinese people knew little about Western niche designs, she was already fascinated by those alternative and niche things. It’s not to be unconventional, but because her aesthetic tends to like those unique things.
If you know her, you will find that both the music she leads and the style she leads are very avant-garde and exude a sense of high-end. Needless to say, she has achieved great success in music. She created an era and is the most accomplished and influential female singer in Greater China after Teresa Teng. She once swept the Asian pop music awards ceremony and appeared on the cover of Time Magazine Global Edition in 1996. She was known as a diva. At first glance, she is not a beauty, but the more you look at her, the more elegant she becomes. Coupled with her super aura singing on the stage, people who like her feel that her charm transcends gender, country, and age. There is also her simple and straightforward style of life, which always looks forward and never talks about the rights and wrongs of others. Taken together, she does have an otherworldly charm.
She doesn’t like the entertainment industry, she’s not good at words, and she can’t sell her persona in front of her fans. No matter what kind of persona the record company wants to package for her, it’s all broken by herself. She is who she is. , she hates artificiality. There is too much prejudice, confusion and even hatred towards her from the outside world. The media always likes to exaggerate her spontaneity and uninhibitedness, interpret her emotions in a climax-like manner, and make a big fuss to attract readers. Only those who really understand her can Knowing how good and valuable she is, she still lives too forward.
The media in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan, Singapore, and the United States all speak highly of her. To this day, when Western media report on Faye Wong, they also define her as "the chinese queen of pop" (Chinese pop music). Queen). Perhaps she would be better respected if she lived in the United States.