Date of Birth
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20-July-1954
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Place of Birth
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Taipei
(Taiwan, Taiwan, Taiwan Province, People's Republic of China)
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Nationality
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Taiwan
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Also know as
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ù¤j¦ö, Law Dai Yau, Lo Ta Yu, Lotayu, Luo Da You, 罗大佑, 羅大佑, Lo Tayu, Tayu Lo, Luó Dà yòu, Luo Dayou, Law Tai-yau, Lo4 Daai6-jau6, Tai-Yau Law, Tai-yo Law, Lo Ta-yu
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Profession
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Singer, Songwriter, Film Score Composer, Singer-songwriter
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Lo Ta-yu, also known as Luo Dayou and Law Tai-yau, is a Taiwanese singer and songwriter who, during the 1980s, affected Chinese pop and rock music with his melodic lyrics, his love songs, and his witty social and political commentary that he infused in his more political songs, often to the point that some of his songs were suppressed in Taiwan and China during the 1980s. He is recognized as a major cultural icon in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and China.
Stylistically, Lo defies classification, though his contribution to Taiwanese campus folk song genre was most significant. His early music in particular shows strong folk roots, and many of his songs tap into native Taiwanese cultural influences. Some songs are reminiscent of 1950s American diner and soda shop rock, and others exhibit a 1970s lounge lizard growl. What captured the hearts of a generation, however, were his lyrics, touching on issues of life, attitudes, social responsibility, and the political problems of both Chinese Mainland and Taiwan with an underhandedly critical strain of dark humor. The lyrical style is not particularly artsy or complex, but rather conversational; the cleverness comes in the meaning, not how the words are put together.
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