Eman Lam

Eman Lam Yee-man (born 25 October 1982) is a Hong Kong singer and songwriter. Lam and Ellen Joyce Loo were part of the vocal duo at17.[1]

Eman Lam
Lam at SINA Music in 2007
Born
林意汶

(1982-10-25) 25 October 1982
OccupationSinger-songwriter
Years active2002–present
Chinese name
Musical career
OriginHong Kong
Genres
InstrumentsVocals, guitar
LabelsSmallmslam Company Limited
Associated actsat17

In contrast with Ellen Joyce Loo (who has been writing songs which incline more toward Cantopop), Lam's songs seem to show an inclination toward more varieties of styles including folk, jazz, and blues.

Early life

Lam is the younger sister of Hong Kong-based singer-songwriter and musician Chet Lam. She began performing music early in life.

Career

She sang in some of the song demos composed by Chet Lam, which gained her initial attention from music production company People Mountain People Sea's director Anthony Wong Yiu Ming.

In 2000, Lam met Ellen Joyce Loo at "Original Music 2000" (原音2000), a singing competition in Hong Kong. Lam had placed second whereas Loo had placed third.[2] After the competition, she started performing with Loo at university campuses and tertiary institutions.

The team again drew attention from Wong, who decided to sign them under his music production company, People Mountain People Sea, in 2002 and later became at17. They held their first large scale concert "Sing Sing Sing 2006" at AsiaWorld–Expo.[2]

She made her solo debut in 2012.[3]

Her second solo album, On the Go, was released in 2014. It is Lam's first project recorded in Mandarin.[3]

Lam voiced Joy in the Cantonese dub of Inside Out (2015).[1]

at17 reunited in 2017 for the "Girls Girls Girls Live in Concert".[2]

Personal life

Lam and her brother Chet established the charitable institution "Lam 12 Charity Fun" in 2012.

Filmography

Reference

  1. Yung, Vanessa (24 December 2015). "Hong Kong musician Eman Lam talks love and why she doesn't celebrate Christmas". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  2. Chow, Vivienne (9 December 2017). "Canto-pop duo at17 on their return to the Hong Kong stage". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  3. Leung, Melanie (2 September 2014). "Eman Lam finally finds her voice with new record". Young Post. South China Morning Post. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.