South China Morning Post

Canto-pop veterans take on young stars in reality show

Legends from yesteryear return to vie for a spot on compilatio­n album released at end of series

- Cyril Ip cyril.ip@scmp.com

Riding on the success of last year’s box-office hit Anita, a biopic of the late Canto-pop diva Anita Mui Yim-fong, television shows such as Call Me By Fire and The Dinnerhost­ing Sisters have been featuring Hong Kong singers and celebritie­s from a bygone era to capture that sense of nostalgia.

The latest, Infinity and Beyond, is no exception. Produced by TVB and the mainland’s Mango TV, the singing contest pits male and female guests from different generation­s against one another, performing classic Canto-pop hits.

So far headliners include veteran singers Sally Yeh, George Lam Chi-cheung and Coco Lee Wen as well as Gen Z idols Gigi Yim Ming-hay and Shan Yichun. Other contestant­s include Li Jian and Bibi Zhou Bichang. The programme scores 7.5 out of 10 on Douban, China’s answer to IMDB.

Artists compete for a spot on a compilatio­n album, to be released on the show’s completion. The live audience’s votes decide each episode’s top performanc­es and winning team.

The resurgence of old Cantopop hits is comparable to a similar trend in Britain and the US, says Professor Anthony Fung Yinghim, who researches popular culture at Chinese University.

“Hong Kong is slightly behind when it comes to this trend of nostalgia,” he says. “In other regions, people have long recognised this [phenomenon], as with the Beatles, Queen and Prince – these icons have been rediscover­ed and celebrated by the youth.”

While showcasing younger talent forms a vital part of Infinity and Beyond, other similar mainland production­s focus primarily on Canto-pop’s golden era, Fung adds.“Canto-pop had its largest influence on the mainland in the 1990s, [so] the audience is more familiar with singers from that era,” he says, adding acceptance of newcomers may vary in different markets, and those demanding new-school Canto-pop singers may be in the minority.

The winner of the first episode, however, was 28-year-old Mike Tsang Pei-tak, a singer who has been on the local music scene for just three years but gave a funky take on the 1984 hit First Love by Samantha Lam Chi-mei.

He became the show’s breakout star alongside 17-year-old Gigi Yim Ming-hay, who got her start in TVB’s own singing contest Stars Academy in 2021.

The emergence of new networks has also allowed a variety of genres to flourish, Fung says. “Different platforms perceive mainstream music differentl­y … TVB’s production­s focus on the significan­ce of ’90s or even ’80s music, whereas ViuTV is the opposite and engages with the diversity in the present state of Canto-pop.”

Mike Tsang had his start in ViuTV’s reality TV music show King Maker.

While the 150-minute-long episodes of Infinity and Beyond

aired on the mainland give artists and industry legends more time to give detailed introducti­ons about the classics, including shout-outs to the producers and songwriter­s, the 90-minute Hong Kong versions skip much of that content.

The programme has been trending on Weibo and receiving largely positive reviews, but some have also criticised the rundown for being unadventur­ous, including popular commentato­r “Er Di” (literally “Ear King”), who boasts more than 14 million followers.

“The music in the first episode was too conservati­ve, with many performanc­es below my expectatio­ns,” he wrote in a post that has now accumulate­d nearly 30,000 likes. “It feels as if it was targeted towards the mainstream audience between the ’60s and ’80s.”

In a review on WeChat, writer Zeng Yuli said that “a limitation brought about by the ‘traditiona­l’ choices of music and singers is that the show’s theme of ‘passing on Canto-pop’s legacy [to the new generation]’ was not vigorously executed.”

On the other hand, fans have focused on the stars’ individual performanc­es. “This is the flavour! A perfect presentati­on,” a user wrote about Hacken Lee’s violinist-accompanie­d cover of Silly Girl by Priscilla Chan Wai-han.

 ?? Photo: Handout ?? A still from the Canto-pop series
Infinity and Beyond.
Photo: Handout A still from the Canto-pop series Infinity and Beyond.

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