My Chinese Heart Desk Dance is introduced as follows:
My Chinese Heart is a song full of patriotic feelings, which expresses the deep attachment and love of overseas travelers to the motherland. The desk dance of this song is a form of dance that uses a table as a prop to express the rhythm and emotion of the song by tapping the table and swinging the arms.
During the performance, students sit in front of their desks, swinging their arms and tapping the desktop in time with the rhythm of the song, and at the same time, they can also express their love for the motherland through the song. This form of dance not only helps students better understand the connotation and emotion of the song, but also exercises their sense of rhythm and body coordination.
In addition, desk dance can also be used as a collective activity, allowing the whole class to participate together, enhancing class cohesion and the spirit of cooperation. During the performance, students can feel the close connection between themselves and their motherland, further enhancing their patriotic feelings.
In short, the desk dance of "My Chinese Heart" is a form of dance full of patriotic feelings and collective spirit, which allows students to better understand the connotation and emotion of the song through simple movements and props, and at the same time, it can also exercise the body and cultivate the spirit of cooperation.
Background of creation
In 1982, Deng Xiaoping and Margaret Thatcher began talks. Against this backdrop, the owner of Zhang Mingmin's record label saw this as a great opportunity and began planning an album for Zhang Mingmin. Deng Bingheng approached Hong Kong lyricist Huang Zhan and asked him to write a Mandarin song. Huang Zhan offered the same price as a Cantonese song, and Teng Bingheng agreed.
When Wong Chim wrote "My Chinese Heart", he wrote the lyrics quickly, because it was all about what he felt in his heart, so he wrote it in a single stroke, and wrote it without much modification, and then composed the music by Wong Fook Ling, and then sung by Cheung Ming Man after the work was finished.