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Dear YouTube viewers, Bai Nian (拜年), as sung by Lin Dai and Yan Jun, has always felt less like a song to me and more like a doorway back in time. The moment the familiar melody begins, I am carried to the first day of the lunar new year—zheng yue chu yi, that precious morning when every household awakens to celebration. In my mind, the streets of my hometown glow with hanging lanterns, red and gold swaying gently above narrow lanes. Firecrackers crackle endlessly in the air, their sharp echoes blending with laughter, footsteps, and the excited rhythm of “qi ge long dong qiang dong qiang,” a sound that seems to capture the very heartbeat of the festival. This is a deeply nostalgic song for me, because it mirrors my own ritual year after year: no matter how far I roam, I always return to my hometown for the New Year. I go back to sit at the table with my parents for a grand reunion dinner, surrounded by familiar dishes, familiar voices, and a warmth that only home can give. The song’s cheerful images of dressing in new shoes and new clothes, stepping out joyfully to pay New Year visits, echo the simple happiness I felt as a child—and still feel, in quieter ways, as an adult. Listening to Bai Nian, I can almost see my younger self, carefully dressed from head to toe, brimming with excitement at the promise of the year ahead. The song repeats its scenes, just as memories repeat themselves across time, unchanged in spirit even as everything else grows older. In those moments, nostalgia is not sadness but gratitude—a gentle reminder that some joys endure. For me, Bai Nian is the sound of coming home. It is the sound of family, tradition, and the unbroken thread that leads me back, every New Year, to my parents’ table and the comfort of belonging. Enjoy the song. Dr. Seong Chong Toh Jan 9, 2026