Prague Square is a hit song in Jolin Tsai's 2003 album Look at Me 72 Changes, with lyrics by Fong Wen Shan, music by Jay Chou, and Rap in the song.
The Internet catchphrase "The picture is too beautiful for me to look at" is from this song.
The Internet catchphrase "The picture is too beautiful for me to look at" is from this song.
The Internet catchphrase "The picture is too beautiful for me to look at" is from this song. Background, Lyrics, Influences, Background After a contractual dispute with her former agency, Jolin Tsai regained her freedom in 2003 and released her first Mandarin album "Look at Me 72 Changes" after she joined her new employer, Sony Music. Jolin's first Mandarin album, "Look at Me 72 Changes", was released after she joined her new label, Sony Music. The label invited five of Taiwan's top producers, Huang Yi, Xue Zhongming, Jay Chou, Mustache Lee and Wang Zhiping, to customize the album based on Jolin's voice quality, vocals, positioning, and potential. Song Lyrics The light from the keys of the piano Stained glass windows decorated with gothic churches Whoever plays a piece of wandering melancholy Follow the direction of the piano and see roses clinging to 18th century oil paintings Admire quietly by the side Think of your romance See whether it's the same as it has been for long a a fu shou a a a fu shou yap so so sorry so so so so Moderato yo Andantino Portamento yo Fortissimo yo The thief steals, the monk says no When I wake up from my dream, I have nothing I'm standing in Prague's twilight square, I've cast my hope in the wishing fountain, and the doves are facing the setting sun, and it's too beautiful for me to look at, in Prague's square's deserted corridors, I'm dancing and spinning by myself, and from far away you're singing from afar, and you're not used to me, you can't get used to it, you don't know what you're doing, and you don't know how to do it, but I'm not used to you. The stained-glass windows are decorated with gothic churches, and whoever's playing a piece of wandering melancholy follows the sound of the piano and sees roses clinging to 18th-century oil paintings, quietly admiring them, thinking of your romance, and wondering if it'll be the same for long. Fortissimo yo, the thief who stole, the monk who said no, when I woke up from my dream, I had nothing, I was standing in Prague's twilight square, casting my hopes in the wishing fountain, a flock of doves with their backs to the setting sun, the image was too beautiful to look at, in Prague's square, in a deserted corridor, I was dancing and spinning by myself, and from far away, you sang from afar, and without me, you really wouldn't have practiced, in the twilight square, in Prague, casting your hopes in the wishing fountain, and in the twilight square, in the twilight of Prague. A flock of pigeons with their backs to the setting sun That picture is too beautiful for me to look at A crowded theater in Prague's square A café in a quiet alley I'm checking out and you're making bisque That's the final answer to the story Impact of the Song The lyrics of the song, "That picture is too beautiful for me to look at," have become one of the top ten Internet catchphrases of 2014. This phrase has been extended by netizens to describe strange things.