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Heaven - Tengger

I listened to this song when I was young, and at that time, my view was that constipation was quite beautiful. It might be a device issue, but thinking about it, it could have been heard in the streets and alleys as well.

Yesterday, I listened to it over and over again, no less than ten times, using the built-in speakers of my AOC monitor. My eyes were moist, and I also watched some videos of foreign music teachers or enthusiasts who shared the same feelings.

I even wanted to imitate that singing style, but as someone with a naturally hoarse voice, I couldn't reach it at all; I could only hum along. I also wanted to see if anyone had covered it, but I found too few. Maybe the keywords were wrong, and I couldn't find any.

Vitas spans a vocal range of five octaves, but it seems not very related to this. There are not many singers in this who exceed two octaves. That's still quite strong. Which singer in "Singer 2024" has the widest vocal range? How many have a three-octave range? - 360 Entertainment, as long as you're happy

Tengger is a powerhouse of vocal control, and there’s also some agility and, most importantly, emotion, which fills the voice with feeling—not just an auditory experience but a spiritual one. Listening to Vitas's dolphin sound and that song from The Fifth Element, I might not have felt much emotion; it felt like a display of some technique, though it might have been there, I just didn't perceive it.

Many people feel sadness in "Paradise," which might be a tragic love story, but more likely, it's that the paradise of the grasslands can never be returned to, or even if it could be returned, it wouldn't feel the same as before. What cannot be returned is the hometown paradise; what cannot be returned is the past.

Moreover, there might not be a way to exceed the speed of light to go back to the past. When you see the spiral motion of the solar system or larger galaxies continuously moving in a certain direction, the position is always changing. To go back to the past, you need to adjust not just the nonexistent time (more like describing the timing of a celestial body's orbital cycle), but you need to adjust the entire trajectory of the galaxy's motion. Of course, this doesn’t deny the existence of a vast and advanced civilization that could adjust the entire galaxy like adjusting the gears of a clock. Then go back to the past. But is that really the past? Is your body and memory also adjusting within that range?

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