A-Mei

Singer

Birthday August 9, 1972

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Beinan, Taitung, Taiwan

Age 51 years old

Nationality Taiwanese

#45875 Most Popular

1972

Kulilay Amit (, born 9 August 1972), better known by her stage name A-Mei, is a Taiwanese Puyuma singer and record producer.

A-Mei was born on 9 August 1972 in the Tamalakaw tribe (belonging to the Puyuma) in Beinan, Taitung, Taiwan.

Her Puyuma-language name is Kulilay Amit, alternatively transliterated Gulilai Amit.

She was the seventh child in a family of nine children.

During her childhood A-Mei's family was impoverished, making it increasingly difficult to raise so many offspring.

In order to support the family, the father originally wanted to give A-Mei and her younger sister Saya Chang to relatives for adoption.

It was A-Mei's mother who took them to hide deep in the mountains to escape the fate of being adopted.

Despite avoiding the fate of being separated from her family, A-Mei’s upbringing was still quite difficult due to always being short on money.

Although A-Mei couldn't receive formal training in music and stage performances, she showed her love for stage singing performances since she was a child.

Like most Native Taiwanese people, she was exposed to tribal music very early on.

Her mother used to record herself singing, then play it back on tape for her daughters to hear.

A-Mei had always been fascinated by music, saying that she was addicted to the radio and would rush to watch the late night music programs that introduced her to English songs when she was a child.

Oftentimes she summoned the children in the village and persuaded everyone to use flashlights to create "stage lighting effects" for her.

In addition to her talent in music, A-Mei was also very good at sports.

In elementary school, under the careful guidance of coach Shi Shunxiong, she earned a second-degree black belt and once represented her school in a taekwondo competition.

1990

A leading figure of the Mandopop music scene since the mid-1990s, A-Mei is widely known for breaking ground for Taiwanese indigenous peoples and being a voice for LGBT rights and gender equality.

She has been given the moniker Queen of Mandopop and the "Pride of Taiwan".

Thanks to her career longevity, resilience, professionalism, artistry, and versatility, she is considered a pop culture icon in the Sinophone world and is a legend in the industry.

Born and raised in Beinan, Taitung, Taiwan.

1992

A-Mei moved to Taipei at age 20 in 1992.

In 1992 A-Mei left her hometown of Taitung for the first time to work in a restaurant and sell clothes at a roadside stand in Taipei.

She first connected to the entertainment business by joining the televised "Five Lights Singing Contest" on TTV Main Channel in 1992 after encouragement from her father.

She made it all the way through to the finals but lost in the final round.

She was disappointed and was almost ready to give up interest in music competitions.

A-Mei's father then told her, "You definitely can sing, and you perform songs beautifully. Why don't you enter the competition again to show that you have a talent for music?"

1993

So, encouraged by the kind words from her father, she attended the singing contest again in 1993.

Her performances enchanted the judges and she was crowned champion the following year.

Unfortunately her father didn't live to see her victory due to him succumbing to his illness, leaving A-Mei devastated.

1995

After her father's death, A-Mei struggled to recall her passion for music until 1995 when she began to sing in local pubs with a rock band called "Relax" which was formed by her musician cousin.

Her pub performance impressed Taiwanese music producer Chang Yu-sheng and Chang Hsiao-yen, the head of Taiwanese record label Forward Music at the time.

1996

Born as Amit Kulilay in the rugged mountains of eastern Taiwan, she made her debut in the music world in 1996, achieving meteoric commercial success.

In 1996 she released her debut studio album Sisters, which was a massive hit and transformed A-Mei into a superstar seemingly overnight thanks to selling over a million copies.

Her sophomore record Bad Boy found even greater success in Taiwan, eventually becoming the country's best-selling album of all time.

1998

Her follow up releases—Holding Hands (1998), Can I Hug You, Lover? (1999) and Regardless (2000)—received critical and commercial acclaim, with the first two also selling well over a million units.

2001

Her albums Truth (2001), Amit (2009), and Faces of Paranoia (2014) each won her a Golden Melody Award for Best Mandarin Female Singer and made the Taiwanese diva one of the singers who won the category the most times.

Having sold over 50 million records, A-Mei is the best selling female artist in Taiwanese music history.

She is recognized as having the influence and cultural impact in Asia equivalent to artists such as Madonna in Western music and popular culture.

2004

Initially having continued success, a cross-straits controversy caused her to experience a sales decline from 2004 until she experienced a resurgence in 2006 with the album I Want Happiness?.

2009

Years later in 2009 when she released an album for the first time under her real name Amit, she sung the song "Disappear (掉了)" which expresses how dearly she misses him.

2017

In 2017, she was included in the "Charity Heroes List" by the Asian edition of Forbes Magazine, and her influence is even greater than that of many famous Taiwanese political and business figures.