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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Format  



1.1  Coaches' timeline  





1.2  Coaches  







2 Coaches' advisors  





3 Series overview  





4 Season synopses  



4.1  Season 1  





4.2  Season 2  





4.3  Season 3  





4.4  Season 4  







5 References  





6 External links  














The Voice of China






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


The Voice of China
GenreReality competition
Created byJohn de Mol
Directed byJin Lei
Presented byHu Qiaohua
Judges
  • Na Ying
  • Yang Kun
  • Harlem Yu
  • A-mei
  • Wang Feng
  • Chyi Chin
  • Jay Chou
  • Country of originChina
    Original languageMandarin
    No. of seasons4
    Production
    Production locationsEast China Normal University Gymnasium
    Shanghai Stadium
    Baoshan Stadium
    Jiaxing University
    Camera setupMulti-camera
    Running time44–104 minutes
    Production companyCanxing Productions
    Talpa Productions (licensor)
    Original release
    NetworkZhejiang Television
    Release13 July 2012 (2012-07-13) –
    7 October 2015 (2015-10-07)
    Related

    The Voice of China (Chinese: 中国好声音; pinyin: Zhōngguó Hǎo Shēngyīn) is a Chinese reality television singing competition broadcast on Zhejiang Television. Based on the original The Voice of Holland, the concept of the series is to find new singing talent (solo or duets) contested by aspiring singers drawn from public auditions. The winner is determined by votes cast by a media judging panel and live audience. They receive a record deal with various labels for winning the competition. The winners of the four seasons have been: Bruce Liang, Li Qi, Diamond Zhang, and Zhang Lei.

    The series employs a panel of four coaches who critique the artists' performances and guide their teams of selected artists through the remainder of the season. They also compete to ensure that their act wins the competition, thus making them the winning coach. Members of the coaching panel include Na Ying (season 1–4), Harlem Yu (season 1–2, 4), Yang Kun (season 1, 3), Liu Huan (season 1), A-mei (season 2), Wang Feng (season 2–4), Chyi Chin (season 3), and Jay Chou (season 4).

    The show began airing under the name of The Voice of China on 13 July 2012. In 2016, contractual disputes arose between Talpa Holding, the owner of the show's format and franchise, and Canxing Production, the show's producing company. It was revealed the former has inked a joint venture with another producing company, Talent International, to produce the upcoming seasons of the show. In a response to the dispute and prevent copyright breaches, Canxing Productions launched Sing! China, a rebranded version of the show which the producers claimed to come with an original format, though it still shares several similarities with The Voice of China.[1]

    Format

    [edit]

    The series consists of three main phases: a blind audition, a battle phase, and live performance shows. The four judges / coaches choose teams of contestants through a blind audition process. Each judge has the length of the auditioner's performance to decide if he or she wants that singer on his or her team. If two or more judges want the same singer (as happens frequently), the singer has the final choice of coach.

    Each team of singers is mentored and developed by its respective coach. In the second stage, called the battle phase, coaches have two of their team members battle against each other directly by singing the same song together, with the coach choosing which team member to advance from each of individual "battles" into the first live round. Within that first live round, the surviving four acts from each team again compete head-to-head, with public votes determining the best of four acts from each team that will advance to the final eight, while the coach chooses which of the remaining three acts comprises the other performer remaining on the team.

    In the final phase, the remaining contestants compete against each other in live broadcasts. The audience and the coaches have equal say in deciding who moves on to the final 4 phase. With one contestant remaining for each coach, the four contestants will compete against each other in the final round with the outcome decided solely by public vote. However, in Season 4, there may be multiple contestants for a coach to enter the Grand Final, or may be no contestants for the respective coaches.

    The Voice of China (season 1–4) was sponsored by JDB Group and Pechoin.[2][3][4][5]

    Coaches' timeline

    [edit]

    Hu Qiaohua has hosted all four seasons.

    Coaches

    [edit]
    Seasons
    Coach 1 2 3 4
    Harlem Yu
    Na Ying
    Yang Kun
    Liu Huan
    A-mei
    Wang Feng
    Chyi Chin
    Jay Chou

    Coaches' advisors

    [edit]

    Series overview

    [edit]
    •   Team Harlem Yu
  •   Team A-mei
  •   Team Liu Huan
  •   Team Wang Feng
  •   Team Na Ying
  •   Team Chyi Chin
  •   Team Yang Kun
  •   Team Jay Chou
  • Season Aired Winner Runner-up Third place Fourth place Fifth place Winning coach Host Coaches (seat order)
    1 2 3 4
    1 2012 Bruce Liang Momo Wu Jike Junyi Kim Ji-mun No fifth finalist Na Ying Hu Qiaohua Yang Kun Na Ying Liu Huan Harlem Yu
    2 2013 Li Qi Zhang Hengyuan Xuan Xuan Jin Runji A-mei Wang Feng A-mei Na Ying
    3 2014 Zhang Bichen Perhat Khaliq Ryan Yu UZ Qin Na Ying Chyi Chin Wang Feng Yang Kun
    4 2015 Zhang Lei Tifa Chen Tan Xuanyuan Beibei Leon Lee Harlem Yu Jay Chou

    Season synopses

    [edit]

    Names in bold type indicate the winner of the season.

    Season 1

    [edit]

    The first season of The Voice of China premiered on 13 July 2012, and concluded on 30 September. The coaching panel consisted of Liu Huan, Na Ying, Yang Kun, and Harlem Yu. Hu Qiaohua as the host.

    Each coach was allowed to advance four top to the live shows:

    Team Yang Kun Team Na Ying Team Liu Huan Team Harlem
    Kim Ji-mun Bruce Liang Jike Junyi Momo Wu
    Guan Zhe Zhang Wei Quan Zhendong Wang Yunyi
    Ping An Duo Liang Yuan Yawei Jin Chi
    Ding Ding Zhang Hexuan Xu Haixing Da Shan

    Four finalists were advanced to the final round. Bruce Liang was announced as the winner of the season, while Momo Wu, Jike Junyi, and Kim Ji-mun placed second, third, and fourth, respectively.

    Season 2

    [edit]

    Season two premiered on 12 July 2013, and concluded on 7 October 2013. The coaching panel was modified, with A-mei and Wang Feng replacing Liu and Yang. This is the only season with two female coaches, which are A-mei and Na Ying. Hu continued appearing as the host of the show.

    Each coach was allowed to advance four top to the live shows:

    Team Wang Feng Team A-mei Team Na Ying Team Harlem
    Zhang Hengyuan Li Qi Xuan Xuan Jin Runji
    Meng Nan Taskyn Bella Yao Su Mengmei
    Bi Xia Liu Yating Zhu Ke The Mushroom Brothers
    Shan Chongfeng Wang Tuo Hou Lei Ge Hongyu

    Four finalists were advanced to the final round. Li Qi was announced as the winner of the season, while Zhang Hengyuan, Xuan Xuan, and Jin Runji placed second, third, and fourth, respectively.

    Season 3

    [edit]

    Season three premiered on 18 July 2014 and concluded on 7 October 2014. Na and Wang return as coaches for their third and second season respectively, along with Yang who returns after a one season break, and Chyi Chin completes the panel as a new coach.

    Each coach was allowed to advance four top to the live shows:

    Team Chyi Chin Team Wang Feng Team Na Ying Team Yang Kun
    Qin Yuzi Perhat Khaliq Diamond Zhang Ryan Yu
    Wei Ran Wang Kaiqi Chen Bing Melody Tan
    Liu Shuangshuang Geng Sihan Rose Liu Li Wenqi
    Zhang Zhuo Hanwei Li Qi Li Jiage Xu Jianqiu

    Four finalists were advanced to the final round. Diamond Zhang was announced as the winner of the season, while Perhat Khaliq, Yu Feng, and Qin Yuzi placed second, third, and fourth, respectively.

    Season 4

    [edit]

    Season four premiered on 17 July 2015 and concluded on 7 October 2015. Na and Wang return as coaches for their fourth and third season respectively, along with Yu who returns after a one season break, and Jay Chou completes the panel as a new coach.

    Each coach was allowed to advance four top to the live shows:

    Team Harlem Team Wang Feng Team Na Ying Team Jay
    Tan Xuanyuan Bei Bei Zhang Lei Tifa Chen
    Ika Zhao Huang Yong Sun Bolun Leon Lee
    Lotus Zhang Zhang Xinxin Shuhei Nagasawa Gin Lee
    Ma Yinyin Huang Xiaoyun Vanatsaya Viseskul Sharon Kwan

    Five finalists were advanced to the final round. Zhang Lei was announced as the winner of the season, while Tifa Chen, Tan Xuanyuan, Bei Bei and Leon Lee placed second, third, fourth and fifth, respectively.

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ ""2016好声音"暂更名"中国新歌声" 浙江卫视发声明".
  • ^ "JDB to sponsor 'The Voice of China' season three". ECNS. Archived from the original on 2020-02-02. Retrieved 2023-01-22.
  • ^ Chen, Haichao (2019). "Pechoin: "New Concept in Old Framework"". China Detergent & Cosmetics (2). Archived from the original on 2023-01-22 – via CNKI.
  • ^ "加多宝2.5亿第三次冠名好声音 百雀羚1.53亿拿下特约". Sina (in Chinese). 2013-11-02. Archived from the original on 2014-09-18.
  • ^ "加多宝不再冠名《中国好声音》 新冠名商是一个什么公司". 界面新闻 (in Chinese). 2016-06-18. Archived from the original on 2016-06-20.
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Voice_of_China&oldid=1209698004"

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