Who sang the ending song of South China Sea Hui Gui?

The ending song of TV series Return to South China Sea Market is Song of Eternal Sorrow sung by singer Charlie.

Song of Eternal Sorrow is a song full of ancient rhyme. The lyrics are based on the poem of the same name by Bai Juyi, a poet in Tang Dynasty, and the theme of the song is interpreted with a deep and penetrating voice. When Charlie sang this song, he made full use of his unique voice and singing skills to express the emotion and charm of the song incisively and vividly.

This song has a beautiful melody, excellent arrangement and exquisite music, creating an atmosphere of ancient style and rhyme. Charlie's singing adds a lot of color to this song. His voice is clear, melodious and euphemistic, which perfectly presents the emotion and charm of the song.

As the ending song of Return to South China Sea Market, Song of Eternal Sorrow complements the plot. The emotion expressed in the song echoes the emotion of the protagonist in the plot, bringing an audio-visual feast to the audience. At the same time, this song has become a classic that many people like because of its beautiful melody and affectionate singing.

Lyrics of Song of Eternal Sorrow

The emperor of China, eager to shock the beauty of an empire, searched his throne for many years and never found it. Until a child of the Yang family hardly grew up and grew up in the inner room, no one knew her, but with God-given grace, she was finally elected royal one day. If she just turned her head and smiled, there would be a hundred spells. The makeup of the sixth palace faded, the cold spring Huaqing pool bathed, the hot spring water bathed and coagulated, and the attendants helped the weak. This is the beginning of new grace, the clouds are swaying, the hibiscus tent is warm and the nights in spring are short and the days are high. From then on, the king went neither early nor late, and he tried his best to wait on the banquet without leisure. In spring, he travels from one spring to another.

There are other ladies in his court, with 3,000 rare beauties, but his love for 3,000 is concentrated in one body, the golden house. When the table in the jade tower is cleared, she will wander around and slowly drink wine, sisters and brothers, because she illuminates and glorifies her family so much, and she gives every father and every mother through empire and happiness when a girl is born instead of a boy. Because she was tired, a maid lifted her. When the emperor noticed her for the first time and chose her as his bride, the clouds of her hair, the petals on her cheeks, and the golden ripples on her crown when she moved were covered by warm lotus curtains in the spring night, but the spring night was short and the sun rose too fast. From then on, the emperor gave up his early hearing and wasted all his time on her feast and carnival and his mistress in spring.