- Source: Di-Dar
- Dar-al Musthafa
- Bursa Efek Dar es Salaam
- Eparki Bahir DarāDessie
- Africa/Dar es Salaam
- Umar bin Hafidz
- Keuskupan Agung Dar-es-Salaam
- Bandar Udara Kabri Dar
- Masjid ad-Dar, Madinah
- Bandar Udara Bahir Dar
- Universitas Dar es Salaam
- Di-Dar
- Faye Wong
- Mike McCartney
- Divisions of the world in Islam
- Fuzao
- Please Myself
- Faye Wong discography
- Dou Wei
- Dar Williams
- Noam Dar
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Di-Dar is the ninth Cantonese studio album by Chinese recording artist Faye Wong, released on 22 December 1995, through Cinepoly. The album marked a shift from Wong's earlier style as she incorporated British psychedelic rock and ragga into her work, showcasing her evolving alternative musical influences. Di-dar featured compositions by Wong with arrangements by her then-husband Dou Wei, production by Zhang Yadong and lyrics by Lin Xi.
The album was both a critical and commercial success, selling 1.5 million copies across Asia; with its title track "Di-dar" and "Ambiguous" (ęę§) becoming well-known songs. Di-dar peaked at number one in Hong Kong according to the IFPI and Billboard magazine.
Critical reception
Di-Dar ranked at number 27 in Ming Pao Weekly's list of "40 Classic Cantopop Albums of the Last 40 Years" published in October 2008. Music journalist Fung Lai-Chee described it as "the best psychedelic and best-selling avant-garde work in Cantonese pop, with songs that are self-centred, ignoring market and others' work. Abstruse, obscure and mysterious."
In a 2023 review of four reissued Wong albums (Please Myself to Fuzao) by Pitchfork, Michael Hong called it Wong's "finest Cantonese album" and "more atmospheric, almost psychedelic" than her previous work.
Track listing
Charts
Sales and certifications
Release history
References
External links
Di-Dar at Discogs