What's the song about the red sunlight flying over the western mountains?

Target Shooting - YAN Weiwen

Lyrics: Niu Baoyuan

Music: Wang Yongquan

When the sun sets on the western mountains, the red sun flies? The soldiers returned to the camp by hitting the target

The red flowers on their chests reflect the colorful sun? The happy songs are flying all over the sky

Mi suo la mi so? La suo mi dao rui

The happy songs are flying all over the sky

The happy songs are flying all over the sky

The happy songs are flying all over the sky. The song flew to Beijing

Chairman Mao was happy to hear it. He praised us for our good singing

He praised us for our excellent marksmanship

He praised us for our excellent marksmanship? Mi suo la mi so

La suo mi dao rui? The sun sets over the western mountains and the red clouds fly

Warriors shoot at targets and return to their camps

Red flowers on their chests reflecting the colorful clouds

Cheerful songs fill the sky. Happy songs fly all over the sky

Mi suo la mi so La suo mi dao rui

Happy songs fly all over the sky

Songs fly all over the sky? The song flew to Beijing

Chairman Mao was happy to hear it. He praised us for our good singing

He praised us for our excellent marksmanship

He praised us for our excellent marksmanship? Mi suo la mi so

La suo mi dao rui? Compliment us on our marksmanship

One, two, three, four

Expanded:

This song was composed by musician Wang Yongquan in 1960 while he was in the army. The circumstances of its birth are interesting. At that time, Wang Yongquan was preparing to compose a song for an all-army cultural performance, and he happened to catch a glimpse of a four-stanza poem by the author of "Niu Baoyuan", and was inspired to adapt the poem and compose the music. It became a popular military song.

At that time, the creator of this song, Wang Yongquan, was a club director in an infantry regiment of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) and was preparing to write a song for the All-Army Literary and Artistic Performance, when he happened to catch a glimpse of a four-sentence poem in a publication a year ago (1959), which reads, "The red sunlight is flying in the western mountains at sunset, and the warriors return to their camps after hitting the targets. The red flowers on their chests reflect the colorful haze, and their crisp songs fill the sky."

At that time, this inconspicuous poem was discovered by Wang Yongquan, who felt that although the poem was commonplace, its content still matched his own creative thinking. As the performance was imminent, time was short, there was no time for a new work, so he studied the poem and modified it to be contrary to the "common sense" of the place. The first time I saw this, I was able to see it in the background, and I was able to see it in the background, and I was able to see it in the background.