Mayday (Taiwanese band)
Mayday | |
|---|---|
| Background information | |
| Origin | Taipei, Taiwan |
| Genres | |
| Years active | 1997–present |
| Labels | |
| Members | |
Mayday (Chinese: 五月天; pinyin: Wǔ Yuè Tiān; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Gō͘-goe̍h-thiⁿ; lit. 'Day in May') is a Taiwanese rock band which debuted in 1997 and consists of five members. They released their first album in 1999.
Formerly called So Band, they came to be known as Mayday in 1997, with the name originating from Masa's online nickname "Mayday".[2] Dubbed as “the Beatles of the Chinese-speaking world”, Mayday has won many awards in their career, including the Golden Melody Award for Best Band, an award given by the Taiwanese Ministry of Culture, in 2001, 2004, 2009 and 2012.[3][4] Their Life Tour is one of the most-attended concert tours with 4.15 million attendees.[5]
Career
[edit]1995–1997: So Band and Formation of Mayday
[edit]In 1995 Chen Hsing-hung (Ashin), guitarist Wen Shang-yi (Monster) and drummer Chien You-ta (錢佑達) formed a band as students at the Affiliated Senior High School of National Taiwan Normal University (師大附中). They recruited schoolmates Tsai Sheng-yen (Masa) and Shih Chin-hang (Stone), who were also members of the school's guitar club. After graduation, the members went to different universities but continued to perform in pubs and eateries. They were also actively involved in promoting the growing rock music trend in Taiwan.[6] In 1997, the band registered to perform at the Formoz Festival using the name "Mayday", which was Masa's online user name.[2]
1997–1999: Mayday’s First Album
[edit]Shortly after participating in the Formoz Festival (野臺開唱) on 29 March 1997, the band began to actively send demo tapes to various record companies in the hope of sealing a record deal. Their demo impressed Rock Records executive Jonathan Lee (李宗盛)[7] who described them as "the ones who would usher in the sound of the future".[7]
As a result, they signed their first record deal with Rock Records in 1998. In the same year, they also took part in the release of the Taiwan Independent Compilation Album (ㄞ國歌曲) by indie music label TCM (角頭音樂) which included their first studio recording Motor Rock (軋車).[citation needed] In June 1998, they also released Embrace (擁抱) compilation album for which they took on most of the songwriting, production and recording duties.[8]
However, their original drummer left, as did their next two drummers Chen Yung-chang (陳泳錩[9]) and former drummer of LTK Commune Robert (任柏璋).[10] In 1999, Ming (冠佑), then known as a drummer for the jazz-fusion band Why Not, agreed to join Mayday, thus forming the current line-up. They went on to release their first full-length studio album titled Mayday's First Album (第一張創作專輯) under Rock Records on 7 July 1999. Their debut received critical acclaim, and they gained a following in Taiwan. The album went on to sell more than 300,000 copies.[7] Not long after, on 28 August 1999, Mayday held their first large-scale concert 168th Concert at the Taipei Municipal Stadium.[11]
1999–2001: Viva Love and People Life, Ocean Wild
[edit]The band's second album Viva Love (愛情萬歲) was released on 7 July 2000. Sales of Viva Love exceeded their previous album, selling more than 350,000 copies.[12] Additionally, Viva Love won them the "Best Band" award at the 12th Golden Melody Awards (十二屆金曲獎最佳樂團獎).[13] This made them the first winner of the “Best Band” award which was only introduced that year. Between 12 and 26 August 2000, Mayday held three concerts of their Stand Out tour in Taipei City, Changhua County and Kaohsiung City in Taiwan.
In 2001, Mayday first dabbled in film music by composing and recording the theme song and score of Migratory Bird (候鳥) which starred Rene Liu and Huang Pin Yuan. Two months later, Mayday released their third album People Life Ocean Wild (人生海海), sales of which hit more than 350,000 copies after just a month.[14] From 18 August to 1 September 2001, Mayday held their first ticketed tour Where are you going (你要去哪裡) in Taipei City, Kaohsiung City and Changhua County in Taiwan, as well as in Singapore. It was considered a "farewell tour" due to the members' upcoming enlistments. Monster, Ashin and Masa reported to basic military training in November.[15] Stone was granted an exemption due to a congenital heart condition while Ming had completed his military service after graduating from high school.[16]
2003–2013: Return to the music scene and further albums
[edit]During their hiatus, Mayday released the autobiographical documentary titled The Wings of Dream (搖滾本事) as well as an accompanying movie soundtrack.[17] On 16 August 2003, Mayday held their Castle in the Sky concert at the Taipei Municipal Stadium, attracting over 40,000 fans. This officially marked their return to the music scene. On 11 November 2003, the band released their fourth studio album Time Machine (時光機)[18]
In 2004, Mayday produced their third movie soundtrack, this time for the movie Love of May (五月之戀). Stone also acted in the movie. On 5 November 2004, Mayday released their fifth studio album God’s Children are all Dancing (神的孩子都在跳舞), and were nominated for Best Band at the 16th Golden Melody Awards in 2005. The band embarked on their first-ever world tour Final Home from 25 December 2004 to 1 May 2005, holding a total of 14 concerts in Taiwan, USA, China, Singapore, Malaysia, Japan and Hong Kong.
In 2006, Mayday left Rock Records to set up their own record label, B’in Music (相信音樂).[19] On 29 December 2006, they released their sixth studio album Born to Love (為愛而生), and held 12 concerts in the first quarter of 2007. They kicked off their world tour Jump! The World (離開地球表面) in Hong Kong, holding 23 concerts in the span of two years.
On 23 October 2008, Mayday released their seventh studio album, Poetry of the Day After (後青春期的詩).[20] On 19 March 2009, Mayday announced their DNA World Tour, holding a total of 44 concerts in 2 years. The Kaohsiung concert stop was held on 5 December 2009 at the National Stadium (Kaohsiung) with 55,555 attendees, breaking the record for the concert with most attendees in Taiwan previously held by Michael Jackson.[21]
From 20–23 May 2011, Mayday held four concerts of their Just Rock It!!! World Tour. On 16 September, Mayday released their 3D film, 3DNA. The film, costing NTD220 million to produce, was the first ever concert film to be produced in 3D in the Mandarin-speaking music industry and the first by a Taiwanese artist.[22] Ticket sales totalled close to NT200 million.
On 16 December 2011, Mayday released their 8th studio album, Second Round (第二人生). The album was highly anticipated, with preorders totaling 129,958 in one week.[23] As the five members of the band had different views of Doomsday, two versions of the album were released, with different covers and song sequence. In 2012 the album was certified 10 Platinum by the Recording Industry Foundation in Taiwan (RIT) for sales of 128,754 units and NT$56,158,622, which is, as of 2021[update], the last certification awarded by RIT.[24] Mayday embarked on their Nowhere World Tour (諾亞方舟) on 23 December 2011, playing 7 consecutive concerts in the Taipei Arena. They played a total of 82 concerts as part of their NOW-HERE world tour, including two consecutive concerts in the Beijing Bird’s Nest (北京鳥巢) in 2012 which attracted 200,000 fans. On 3 March 2012, they held their Just Love It! I won’t let you be alone charity concert to raise funds for the underprivileged.

Mayday earned another award for Best Music Video at the 24th Golden Melody Awards for the song Cheers (乾杯) in their 8th album Second Round (第二人生). In July 2013, they held 6 charity concerts, donating a total of NT27 million to charity. As part of their NOW-HERE world tour, they performed at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena on 2 February and held 8 consecutive concerts at the Hong Kong Coliseum in May. On 17 August 2013, Mayday returned to the Beijing Bird’s Nest. Mayday also entered the Japanese music industry, as they then joined record label Amuse. On 13 November, Mayday officially released their first Japanese compilation. The band also held 2 concerts in Osaka and Tokyo at the start of 2014.
On 18 September 2013, the band released their second 3D concert film, Mayday Nowhere (5月天諾亞方舟). It was also the world’s first 4DX concert film.[citation needed] On 30 December, the band released their 3rd compilation, The Best of 1999–2013.
2014–2016: North American Tour, Nippon Budokan
[edit]As part of their NOW-HERE world tour, Mayday performed at the Korea International Exhibition Center in Seoul, South Korea, on 8 February 2014. On 21 February 2014, they held the first concert of their European tour at the Wembley Arena in London, attracting more than 10,000 fans from Taiwan, China, Hong Kong and Europe.[25] They also performed in Paris at the Zénith Paris on 23 February and in the Netherlands at the Amsterdam Heineken Music Hall on 26 February.[26] As part of their NOW-HERE North American Tour, the band held 7 concerts in Canada and the US from 17 to 29 March, in cities such as Vancouver, Toronto, Chicago, Houston, San Jose, and Los Angeles. Notably, the band performed at the Madison Square Garden in New York on 22 March, becoming the first Chinese band to perform at the venue. The final show of the NOW-HERE world tour was held in Los Angeles on 29 March.
On 27 July, Mayday started another series of Just Love It! charity concerts, with the first Just Love It! Embrace charity concert held at the Kaohsiung Arena, followed by 3 August in Beijing, 5 August in Shenzhen, and 8 August in Yilan. All proceeds were donated to charity. On 31 December, Mayday held their Campfire concert at the Kaoshiung National Stadium, counting down to 2015 with their fans. They continued to hold 2 more concerts at the same venue on 2 and 3 January 2015. On 1 January 2015, Mayday, together with artists from their record label B'in Music, held a New Year's concert at the intersection of Kaixuan and Ersheng Road – the site of the tragic 2014 Kaohsiung gas explosions.[citation needed]
On 29 March 2015, the anniversary of the band’s formation, Mayday announced that they would be bringing their Just Rock It!!! World Tour to Nippon Budokan with 2 shows on 28 and 29 August 2015, making their mark as the first Mandarin-speaking band to hold a concert at the venue. On 17 June 2015, Mayday also released their second Japanese single, YOUR LEGEND ~Moyuru Inochi~.[27] On 26 June 2015, Mayday released ''Her Story'', an album which invited 10 female singers and their creative teams to remake Mayday's well-loved hits into their signature styles, with an underlying concept of womanhood. In August 2015, the band announced that they would be stopping all public activities for 6–12 months in preparation for their new album.[citation needed]
From 20 May to 1 June 2016, Mayday held 10 consecutive concerts at the Hong Kong Coliseum as part of their Just Rock It!!! World Tour. On 17 July, Mayday returned to where they first performed after releasing their first album in 1999, Ximending in Taipei City, for a free live concert. On 21 July, Mayday officially released their 9th studio album, History of Tomorrow.[28] The album sold over 200 million copies worldwide.[citation needed] The track, "Here, After Us", is one of the most-viewed Chinese music videos on YouTube.
2017–2018: Life world tour and 20th anniversary
[edit]
At the 28th Golden Melody Awards, Mayday was nominated for 7 awards, including Best Band, Best Composer, and Song of the Year. In the end, the band took away awards for Best Mandarin Album and Best Lyricist (Ashin). Mayday’s Life world tour, the band’s 10th large-scale concert tour, kicked off on 18 March 2017 with 4 consecutive shows at the Kaohsiung National Stadium, drawing a crowd of over 200,000 fans.[29] On 29 March 2017, Mayday celebrated their 20th anniversary with a free outdoor concert in Taipei and a worldwide livestream of the show. Over 35,000 fans were in attendance, while millions more watched a free livestream of the concert.[citation needed] The tour began in Hong Kong and China before continuing to Southeast Asia, North America, and returning to Asia. The 4th leg of the Life tour brought the band to Europe, where they held two shows, before further dates in East Asia.
On 5 May 2018, they released a single named "I Will Carry You", a theme song for Android game, Honor of Kings. Leg 6 of the tour brought Mayday to Oceania, where they performed three shows in Melbourne, Sydney and Auckland in September 2018. On 6 October 2018, the band performed in Bangkok, Thailand for the first time. The final leg of the tour brought them back to Taiwan, as they held 10 consecutive shows at the Taichung Intercontinental Baseball Stadium in Taichung, Taiwan to round up the tour. The Life world tour visited 55 cities and comprised a total of 122 shows. It is the largest scaled tour the band has held to date, attracting more than 4.15 million attendees. The tour grossed around USD$333.33 million.[citation needed] The 3D concert film Mayday LiFE was released on 24 May 2019. It comprised scenes from the 122 concerts of the Life world tour, and was the third 3D concert film by the band thus far.[citation needed]
2020–2023: Pandemic era
[edit]On 6 January 2020, Mayday announced that they would be bringing their Just Rock It!!! Blue tour to Singapore on 30 August 2020. However, in light of the COVID-19 pandemic, the concert was rescheduled twice, first to 27 February 2021 and then to 4 September 2021. It was then announced the show would be replaced with the latest tour Mayday Fly to 2022 Live in Singapore, to be held on 3 December 2022.
On 7 November 2020, Mayday announced their Fly to 2021 concert tour, with 5 concerts at Taoyuan International Baseball Stadium from 26 December 2020 to 2 January 2021, which was postponed to 31 December 2020 to 10 January 2021 due to the pandemic; 5 concerts at Taichung Intercontinental Baseball Stadium from 17 to 22 February 2021, which was postponed to 4 to 12 December 2021 due to the pandemic; and 5 concerts at Tainan Municipal Stadium from 20 to 29 March 2021.[30] One additional show was later added to the Taoyuan list, held on 8 January 2021. This tour was exceptionally meaningful as the band had not held a Taiwan tour since 2004. As a gesture of gratitude to COVID-19 frontline workers, the band’s company B’in Music gave out 6000 free tickets to medical staff in Taoyuan, Taichung and Tainan. On 24 December 2020, Mayday released their first single in 971 days, "Because of You", composed and written by Ashin.[31] The band subsequently began touring again in East Asia, North America, and Europe.

2023–present: #5525 Back To That Day 25th Anniversary World Tour
[edit]The final shows of the MAYDAY NOWHERE Re: Live Tour were held at Singapore’s National Stadium on 13 and 14 January 2024.[32] To celebrate Mayday’s 25th debut anniversary, the band announced their brand new #5525 Back To That Day world tour.[33] During their March 2025 dates in Kaohsiung, they set a new attendance record for the National Stadium, playing in their 29th concert at the venue to a combined 1.45 million people over seven different tours.[34] In December 2024, they released the single "Willful" (任性) as the theme song for the drama series The First Frost. The band also announced that they would be bringing their 25th anniversary tour to Sydney's Accor Stadium and Las Vegas' Allegiant Stadium on 22 February 2025 and 29 March 2025 respectively.[35] Between 27 June to 12 July 2025, the band made their debut Taipei Dome appearance with its #5525 Back To That Day world tour.[36]
In 2026, Mayday was scheduled to perform five shows at Kai Tak Sports Park on March 24, 25, 27, and 28. On March 9, the organizer announced the cancellation of the March 24 show and the addition of a March 29 show. This last-minute change outraged attendees, with more than 100 complaints about the cancelled show involving a total of HK$296,194 (US$37,860). As compensation, Mayday invited the fans to attend a free rehearsal.[37]
Members
[edit]| Stage name | Birth name | Instrument | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| English | Chinese | Romanized | Chinese | |
| Monster | 怪獸 | Wen Shang-yi | 溫尚翊 | Guitar |
| Ashin | 阿信 | Chen Hsin-hung | 陳信宏 | Vocals |
| Stone | 石頭 | Shih Chin-hang | 石錦航 | Guitar |
| Masa | 瑪莎 | Tsai Sheng-yen | 蔡昇晏 | Bass guitar |
| Ming | 冠佑 | Liu Kuan-yu[a] | 劉冠佑 | Drums |
Discography
[edit]- Mayday's First Album (1999)
- Viva Love (2000)
- People Life, Ocean Wild (2001)
- Time Machine (2003)
- God's Children Are All Dancing (2004)
- Born to Love (2006)
- Poetry of the Day After (2008)
- Second Round (2011)
- History of Tomorrow (2016)
Concerts
[edit]World tours
[edit]- Final Home World Tour (2004–2006)
- Jump! The World Tour (2007–2008)
- D.N.A World Tour (2009–2010)
- Just Rock It! World Tour (2011–2020)
- Nowhere World Tour (2011–2014)
- Life Tour (2017–2019)
- Really Want To See You Tour (2020–2023)
- 5525 Back to That Day Tour (2023–2026)
Awards and nominations
[edit]Artistry
[edit]Musical style and themes
[edit]The emotional relationship between the musicians and their audience is a focal point of many of Mayday’s songs and music videos, with the band infusing their career into the lives of their listeners and vice versa, both lyrically and visually. The connection is based on shared realities, with the music reflecting the lives of both the creators and the crowd; as they age, as the world changes around them, Mayday’s members infuse their brand of rock with what they see and experience.
—Billboard[1]
During their first three albums, Ashin was entirely responsible for the lyrics and composition while the other members were only responsible for the musical arrangements. The other members began taking part in the composition process since the fourth album, Time Machine.[1] Their discography is almost entirely in Mandarin, with some songs sung entirely or partially in Taiwanese Hokkien.
Mayday's early style of music was marked by a raw style of music production that tended towards Hokkien garage rock tunes. They were also themes of teenage angst and growing up, with several songs and music videos making oblique references to the issues.[39] They gained popularity in their earlier years for capturing the zeitgeist of Taiwanese youth in the mid to late 1990s.[40] Earlier lyrics written by Ashin also included themes related to growing up, such as dealing with parental and societal expectations and transitioning into young adulthood. After their return from their military service hiatus, the subject matter of their songs began leaning towards more mature themes, such as regret over one's life choices and dealing with career disappointments. Their cross-generational appeal has been attributed to the spectrum of relatable themes covered.[41][4][1]
Although often referred to as a rock band in the media, Mayday's discography primarily falls in the category of "pop rock".[19] They have refused to be pigeon-holed in any particular genre, earning them derision from rock purists but garnering them critical acclaim and broad popular appeal for the subject matter covered in their lyrics.[42] Musically, they experimented with a variety of genres outside of the rock genre, ranging from jazz in "Brotherhood" (兄弟) from History of Tomorrow to acoustic guitar-based R&B in "The Apple" (一顆蘋果) from People Life, Ocean Wild to hook-heavy pop in the 2005 single "Love-ing" (戀愛ing).[19] Billboard has described their sound as "inspirational rock music that blurs the lines of alternative and pop."[1]
The lyrics of their songs have referred to various historical figures and cultural icons such as Journey to the West, Noah's ark, Mickey Mouse, Superman, Neil Armstrong, John Lennon, and Che Guevara. Ashin has also cited movies and novels as inspiration for his songs including "Viva Love" (愛情萬歲) which was inspired by avant-garde Taiwanese director Tsai Ming Liang's 1994 movie, Vive L'Amour[43] and the song "Armor" (武裝), which was influenced by the television adaptation of the novel Crystal Boys (孽子) and Haruki Murakami's novel Kafka on the Shore.[44] Other songs were directly inspired by the members' personal experiences; for example, "Time Machine" (时光机) from the eponymous studio album was actually a tribute to Monster's mother after she fell ill, "Sun Wu-Kong" (孫悟空) from their fourth studio album used the storyline and characters from Journey to the West as a satirical representation of the members' close friendship and "T1213121" from Second Round referred to guitar fingering notations and contained tongue-in-cheek references to their experiences as high school students learning to play the guitar.[45][46][47]
Influences
[edit]Mayday has expressed their admiration of the Beatles, whom they cite as influencing their ideals of rock music.[48] The eighth track of their fifth album is called "John Lennon" (約翰藍儂) where the band espouses its dreams to become the "Beatles of the Chinese World" (華人世界的披頭四). Other musical influences cited by the members include the Irish band U2, the British band Oasis, and the Japanese pop music artists Mr. Children.[49]
Collaborations
[edit]Mayday is known for both collaborating with top Mandopop stars in addition to younger up-and-coming artists. Notably, lead singer Ashin and others has written lyrics and composed songs for many singers, including Victor Wong, JJ Lin, Jolin Tsai, Fish Leong, Twins, Nicholas Tse, Jam Hsiao, S.H.E, Alan Tam, Leehom Wang, Rene Liu, Della Ding and many others. In 2019, Ashin was featured on Jay Chou’s single "Won't Cry".[50] Other members of the band have also undertaken album and song production for other artists.
Impact and legacy
[edit]Since their early days, Mayday has been known for their irreverent approach towards certain norms associated with the domestic rock scene and music industry practices. Their original name "So Band" was a pun on the Taiwanese Hokkien term for "toilet" as they "wanted to be as ubiquitous as public toilets" and their first album was simply named "Mayday's First Album".[51][52] During the 23rd Golden Melody Awards they went viral for their acceptance speech after receiving the Best Band Award; the members each ate a banana together as a nod to a scene from their music video for "Fool" (憨人) and a statement of their solidarity.[53][54] They opted for a clean-cut "boys next door" public image and sang about relatable issues of their generation instead of taking an anti-establishment stance like their rock counterparts were then known for.[41]
One of the most popular bands in the Chinese-speaking world, Mayday are regarded as "concert kings" and known for their box office power, especially in Asia and within the Chinese diaspora.[19][41][4] During the 2000s, an era in which Mandopop girl groups and boybands such as S.H.E and F4, were mainly dominating the Mandarin-speaking music scene, Mayday established themselves as a band with comparable popularity. They broke a number of records and reached several milestones within the Taiwanese and Mandarin-speaking music industry: most number of concerts held by a Taiwanese band/group in the Beijing National Stadium, first act from the Mandarin-speaking music industry to play at Madison Square Garden,[55] and the first artist to break Michael Jackson's long-standing solo concert attendance record in Taiwan.[21] Mayday Life 3D, the concert film which covered their Life tour, is the highest-grossing concert film by any artist from the Chinese-speaking music industry. Despite their last studio album being released in 2016, they have continuously remained one of the most streamed Taiwanese artists on Spotify.[56][57][58]
Politics
[edit]Mayday have continuously enjoyed popularity in both Taiwan and mainland China despite its individual members' varied views on sensitive subjects such as Taiwan and Hong Kong. Notably, Masa posted a photo of himself attending a Sunflower Student Movement protest in Taipei while Stone expressed his support for the 2019–20 Hong Kong protests in a Facebook comment.[59][60]
Around end of December 2023, weeks prior to the Taiwan's upcoming January presidential and legislative elections, Taiwan's internal security authorities revealed that the Chinese government tried to pressure Mayday into publicly supporting Chinese unification. This request was reportedly made by China's National Radio and Television Administration, and the band did not comply. Following media coverage of the incident, the Taiwanese government, both the ruling Democratic Progressive Party and the main opposition Kuomintang, condemned the Chinese government's actions. Additionally, Chinese authorities initiated a lip-sync investigation against Mayday after a content creator made the allegations in a video on Bilibili and then reported them to the China Consumers Association. China's Taiwan Affairs Office denied allegations of meddling in local elections and that the lip-sync investigation was politically motivated, calling them "fake news."[61][62][63] In May 2024, the Chinese government announced that Mayday had been cleared and could resume the mainland China leg of their tour.[64][65] The Bilibili content creator who had uploaded the initial video eventually recanted their statements in a follow-up video and deleted the original video following a separate investigation revealing that the sound quality of the videos used as "evidence" was too low to be professionally judged for lip-syncing.[66]
As a band, they have jointly refrained from making direct statements favoring any political faction, despite netizens', political commentators' and domestic politicians' attempts to label them as either pro-China or pro-Taiwan independence.[67] Ashin himself noted that they preferred to be known for their music rather than politics.[4]
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e Herman, Tamar (1 August 2017). "Taiwanese Band Mayday Talks 20-Year Career". Billboard. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
- ^ a b "Hitoradio | 人物 | 歌手資料庫 | 五月天 / Mayday". Hitoradio.com. Archived from the original on 19 May 2008. Retrieved 3 August 2012.
- ^ Jennifer Huang; Maia Huang (5 November 2013). "'Chinese Beatles' want to meet British Beatle at London concert". Central News Agency. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
- ^ a b c d "Mayday: This band can sell out ten shows in one city". CNN. 5 June 2017.
- ^ "五月天唱完122場3904首歌 將以電影延續感動" [Mayday sang 3,904 songs in 122 shows and will continue the touching story with a movie]. Yahoo News Taiwan (in Chinese). 7 January 2019. Retrieved 6 March 2025.
- ^ "精彩乐评 : 弥散:摇滚乐,你在台湾还好吗?" (in Simplified Chinese). Livehouse.cn. Retrieved 3 August 2012.
- ^ a b c "台湾乐队五月天部分资料". Ent.sina.com.cn. Retrieved 3 August 2012.
- ^ "请介绍五月天?_雅虎知识堂". Ks.cn.yahoo.com. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 3 August 2012.
- ^ "音速青春: 大家好,我們是五月天". pulp.bluecircus.net. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
- ^ "「錯過好幾個億」的男人…五月天首任鼓手現職竟是這個!" (in Chinese). SET News. 30 March 2017.
- ^ "第一十六屆金曲獎完整入圍名單 音樂新聞 KingNet 影音台-影音新聞". Movie.kingnet.com.tw. 12 May 2005. Archived from the original on 10 February 2012. Retrieved 3 August 2012.
- ^ "Hitoradio‧Hit FM -華人音樂入口指標". Hitoradio.com. Archived from the original on 28 September 2011. Retrieved 3 August 2012.
- ^ "中華民國行政院新聞局全球資訊網 – 第十二屆金曲獎得獎名單". Archived from the original on 9 February 2012. Retrieved 3 August 2012.
- ^ 五月天看見支票不為動容 Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine(銀河網路電台)2006年12月29日引用
- ^ "五月天入伍當兵歌迷不捨車站送行" (in Chinese). Chinese Television System. 6 November 2001.
- ^ "多名男團成員爆閃兵!五月天、小虎隊被點名對比 「這幾人」合法免役" (in Chinese). SET News. 21 October 2025.
- ^ "銀河互動網路". .iwant-song.com. Archived from the original on 7 May 2008. Retrieved 3 August 2012.
- ^ "銀河互動網路". .iwant-song.com. Archived from the original on 7 May 2008. Retrieved 3 August 2012.
- ^ a b c d "五月天,从音乐工艺品到流量商品". The Paper (in Chinese). 3 October 2019.
- ^ 第20屆金曲獎得獎消息 2009年6月27日引用 [dead link]
- ^ a b "五月天"创造55555人"演唱会DNA无限放大版再度《创造》票房奇迹 – 中娱网". news.yule.com.cn. 24 October 2009. Retrieved 15 August 2021.
- ^ Taipei Filmmakers 2007∼ (PDF), Taipei Film Commission, 1 November 2014
- ^ "相信音樂官方網站". Archived from the original on 18 June 2012. Retrieved 30 June 2012.
- ^ "認證紀錄". Retrieved 8 March 2021.
- ^ "Mayday begins European tour with concert in London". Taiwan News. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
- ^ "Mayday prepares to rock fans on first European tour". Taiwan News. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
- ^ JpopAsia. "Mayday Announces New Japanese Single & Special Two-Day Live at Nippon Budokan". JpopAsia. Retrieved 3 September 2023.
- ^ "五月天的《自传》藏了多少歌迷才懂的故事?--文化--人民网".
- ^ "Mayday, Asia's Top Rock Band, Announce Their North American Tour". Live Nation Entertainment. 31 May 2017. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
- ^ Music, Bin. "相隔16年五月天台南開唱 瑪莎「鮭魚返鄉」當嘉賓 力邀周華健〈刀劍如夢〉合體助陣 – 相信音樂 B'in Music". www.bin-music.com.tw. Retrieved 13 August 2022.
- ^ Music, Bin. "五月天「好好好想見到你」跨年夜桃園開唱 現場、線上同步陪伴全球歌迷一起倒數! – 相信音樂 B'in Music". www.bin-music.com.tw. Retrieved 13 August 2022.
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External links
[edit]- Mayday's official facebook
- Mayday's official website
- TaipeiMetal "News about Taiwan's Growing Metal Scene"
- GigGuide Taiwan: A Directory of Live Shows and reviews of metal music in Taiwan Archived 2 February 2023 at the Wayback Machine
- Encyclopaedia Metallum- The Metal Archives' directory of metal bands in Taiwan