I love the background of Tiananmen Square in Beijing

This song was published in "Songs of the Red Soldiers" published in Shanghai in September 1970. It was broadcast by the Central People's Broadcasting Station in 1971 and filmed by the Central News Film Studio in Beijing's "May Day" in 1972. "I Love Beijing Tiananmen" was put on the screen in a garden party special cultural program, and then recorded on a record. In 1972, it was included in the first volume of "New Songs from the Battlefield" edited by the State Council's Literary and Art Group. The songs became more and more popular and were adapted into various versions of children's dances. Later, it was adapted into various styles and genres of music (such as accordion, xylophone solos, etc.). In 1981, it was compiled into the "Lyric Song Collection" of Guangdong Huacheng Publishing House.

This children's song has been repeatedly used and processed to become an iconic work in singing lyric songs, and has entered the ranks of classic works that represent the spirit of that era. Before U.S. President Ronald Reagan visited China, the first chorus program performed by an American art troupe in Beijing was "I Love Beijing Tiananmen".

After the Cultural Revolution (1977), Jin Yueling studied at the Central Conservatory of Music and was classmates with Tan Dun, Chen Zuohuang and other students who would become famous composers and conductors in the future. After graduation, he served as the music editor of the Shanghai Company of China Record Company. According to reports in 1999, Jin Yueling has composed two to three hundred lyric songs of various types, some of which have won various awards in national music competitions.