Lyrics of Yu-Ching Fei's Dream Camel Bell

Song title: camel bell

Album: Camel Bell

Release date: 1984-03

Lyrics: Xiao Xuan

Music: Tan Jianchang

Arranged by Chen Zhiyuan

Original song: Yu-Ching Fei

Lyrics:

Climb to the top and see your hometown

Huangshawanlichang

Where did camel bells come from?

Knock on the heart

Looking forward to stepping on the road of missing.

Fly thousands of miles to the mountains.

The geese in the sky are covered with sunset glow.

Where is the township pass?

Wind and sand cannot be printed.

The blood of history

The wind and sand cannot blow away the pallor.

Blood and tears of begonia

Climb to the top and see your hometown

Huangshawanlichang

Where did camel bells come from?

Knock on the heart

Looking forward to stepping on the road of missing.

Fly thousands of miles to the mountains.

The geese in the sky are covered with sunset glow.

Where is the township pass?

The yellow sand has aged.

I will miss you forever.

How many times are there tonight?

Dream back to Qin Guan

Wind and sand cannot be printed.

The blood of history

The wind and sand cannot blow away the pallor.

Blood and tears of begonia

The yellow sand has aged.

I will miss you forever.

How many times are there tonight?

Dream back to Qin Guan

Appreciation of Song Dynasty:

The whole song itself is a classic one. "Qin Guan" can be found in Wang Changling's "Out of the Great Wall": there is a bright moon in Qin, and it is closed in Han. "Pass" is a pass, such as Shanhaiguan. "Qin Guan" is extended to the frontier here, referring to the country. This lyric expresses the yearning for the country and is a lyric with a sense of historical vicissitudes. "The wind and sand can't shake away the blood stains printed in history, and the wind and sand can't fly away the blood and tears of Begonia." The word "begonia" in one sentence comes from the original territory of China, which is shaped like "begonia leaf". The split of Outer Mongolia has turned Camel Bell's melodious hometown into a distant hometown, leaving blood stains in the history of the motherland.