heng Wenjin and Fang You after learning that the two women who were his favorites were rejected by American record companies one after another:

heng Wenjin and Fang You after learning that the two women who were his favorites were rejected by American record companies one after another:
/“Today they are ignoring you, tomorrow I will Make it impossible for them to reach high!”
In the United States in 2003, when there was no mobile Internet and the network was not very developed, there were two possible ways to get a new song by an unknown singer to come out:
/However, although this method is fast, It’s the fastest and easiest to do, but it’s very difficult to get ahead. Without him, the Internet is too vast and too big. There are so many people who want to eat music. Every day, there are countless cats and dogs uploading their own new works that are tone-deaf. But the ones that can be on the home page and on the list are basically the hot songs and popular songs of famous and authorized singers. The unknown newcomers want to be discovered, pay attention to, and then click like crazy in the sea of ??songs that are like needles in the haystack, and then be on the list. , Well, it’s not that there is no chance at all, but the chance is about the same as winning the lottery.
Besides, if a person really has a good voice and a really strong creative ability, why would he still be surfing the Internet? Go directly to the record company to cooperate, package it, and make him famous.
In early November 2003, an “author” named “Angel” uploaded a song called “Rolling/In/the” on major music broadcast websites in English-speaking countries such as the United Kingdom, the United States, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand. /Deep” English song. The lyrics, lyrics, and arrangement of this English song were all co-written by “Angel” himself and a guy named “Victor”.
Immediately afterwards, major music stations and music television stations in the United Kingdom, the United States, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand received a letter couriered by Fedex (U.S. Federal Express). The content of the letter was a CD and A brief explanatory text attached to the back of this CD explains the title of the song on the CD, the accompanying lyrics, and the author of the song’s lyrics, music, and arrangement.
Mainstream music radio and TV stations in Europe and the United States receive a large number of emails from all over the country almost every day. Most of them are letters from listeners saying that a certain listener listened to a certain song played by the radio/TV station on a certain day, month, year, and time. The video is deeply touching and reminds him/her of such and such wonderful memories, so he/she comes here to express his/her gratitude, or to request to play it again.
Another part of the emails are self-recommendation letters from new music talents who want to make a name for themselves but can’t find a way out. They offer their own recorded works and ask radio/TV stations to play them and support them.
Of course, most of these requests have been ignored by radio/TV stations. Doesn’t the resources of radio/TV stations cost money? Help you? Do you really t