country

China

From Cantopop ballads to Beijing yaogun and the Rap of China generation

6
genres
27+
artists
60y
of history

Top 10 Hitlist

The defining tracks from this region

1 / 5
1
#1 on the Hitlist

Made In China

Higher Brothers
2017chinese hip hop

Chengdu rap quartet of MaSiWei, DZ, Psy.P, and Melo, signed to the Beijing label 88rising and built for an export market they reached almost immediately. Their 2017 collab with Famous Dex, Made In China, was the first Chinese rap track to draw mainstream Western media attention, and the album Black Cab followed the same year. The group went on indefinite hiatus around 2020 as the members pursued solo careers but they remain the reference point for a generation of mainland rappers.

Chinese popular music tells two intertwined stories. Hong Kong built Cantopop into the dominant Chinese-language entertainment industry of the 1970s through 1990s, with the Heavenly Kings and Queens setting the global template for Asian pop stardom. On the mainland, Cui Jian plugged in an electric guitar in 1986 and gave a post-Cultural Revolution generation its own voice, while the 2000s Beijing indie scene, the new folk movement of the 2010s, and the post-2017 hip-hop boom built layer on layer of underground culture. Mandopop on the mainland has produced its own divas alongside, from Na Ying to G.E.M., and the result is a catalogue that runs from karaoke staples to censored cult records.

CantopopChinese rockBeijing indieChinese folkMandopopChinese hip-hop

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between Cantopop and Mandopop?+

Cantopop is Cantonese-language popular music, centred on the Hong Kong industry that flowered from the 1970s onward and produced stars like Sam Hui, Leslie Cheung, Anita Mui, and Eason Chan. Mandopop is Mandarin-language popular music, with roots in 1930s Shanghai shidaiqu and a modern industry that draws on both mainland China and Hong Kong. Many singers, including Faye Wong and Jacky Cheung, record in both languages.

Who started Chinese rock music?+

Cui Jian is universally credited as the father of Chinese rock. A classically trained trumpeter at Beijing Symphony, he performed 一無所有 (Nothing to My Name) at a 1986 televised concert and turned overnight into the voice of a generation. The Mandarin term for the genre, yaogun, became shorthand for a 1980s and 1990s underground that included Tang Dynasty, Black Panther, Dou Wei, and He Yong.

What happened to Hong Kong's Heavenly Kings and Queens?+

The four Heavenly Kings of Cantopop in the 1990s were Jacky Cheung, Aaron Kwok, Leon Lai, and Andy Lau, while the Heavenly Queens included Anita Mui and Sammi Cheng. Leslie Cheung, the era's other defining star, died in 2003. Jacky Cheung continues to tour as one of Asia's biggest box-office draws, while the rest moved between music, film, and television careers. Their songbook remains the foundation of Cantopop karaoke nights.

How did the show Rap of China change Chinese hip-hop?+

The 2017 iQiyi competition show Rap of China made Chinese hip-hop a mainstream phenomenon almost overnight. GAI and PG One co-won the first season; the Chengdu crew Higher Brothers used the moment to sign with the Beijing label 88rising and break out internationally. The Chinese government's 2018 ban on hip-hop and tattoos on television briefly chilled the scene, but rappers like GAI pivoted to historical and patriotic themes and the genre remained one of the country's most-streamed.

Last reviewed: 2026-05

Is Taiwanese music included on this page?+

No. Taiwan has its own distinct Mandarin-language industry, including artists like Jay Chou, Jolin Tsai, Teresa Teng, Mayday, and A-Mei, and is covered on its own page. This page focuses on mainland China and Hong Kong, including Cantopop, mainland Mandopop, yaogun, Beijing indie, the new folk movement, and post-2017 Chinese hip-hop.

Last reviewed: 2026-05

Sources & References

  1. 1
    Red Rock: The Long, Strange March of Chinese Rock & RollJonathan Campbell, 2011Book
  2. 2
    Like a Knife: Ideology and Genre in Contemporary Chinese Popular MusicAndrew F. Jones, 1992Book
  3. 3
    How Cantopop captured a generation and shaped a cityBBC Culture, 2021
  4. 4
    Cui Jian, the father of Chinese rock, is still going strongThe Guardian, 2022
  5. 5
    How The Rap of China launched a new generation of Chinese hip-hop starsSouth China Morning Post, 2019
  6. 6
    Music of ChinaWikipedia, 2026

Further Reading

About This Article

This page is based on documented music history, artist biographies, chart data, award records, and cross-referenced sources from music journalism and academic research.

Curated by the timeline.music editorial team.