This article sketches the history of Hong Kong Cantopop songs, which directly address topics such as Hong Kong's political future and the ongoing emigration wave.2 The term “Cantorock” was first used by Billboard correspondent Hans Ebert in 1974, who noted the emergence of Hong Kong's own locally produced rock music. The “Cantorock” style was related to American and British rock of that period and characterized by electric guitars and heavy percussion. By 1978, the style of locally produced popular music in Hong Kong had become one similar to British-American soft-rock, as had Japanese pop music earlier, prompting Ebert to revise his description of such music to “Cantopop.” Cantopop subsequently evolved on its own in the 1980s, although it still borrowed musical elements and instrumentation from Western and Japanese popular music. The distinct Japanese influence on Cantopop is exemplified by quasi-pentatonic melodies and almost exclusively amorous lyrics. Some Cantopop songs are pop or rock versions of traditional Chinese folk tunes. Others are borrowed Western pop tunes set to new Cantonese lyrics.3 The market for Cantopop is not limited only to Hong Kong: it extends into Southeast Asian countries and Chinese urban areas in Europe and America (i.e., London, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Toronto, Vancouver, etc.). The business of Cantopop has been lucrative since the late 1970s, when popular culture became subsumed under large-scale commercial enterprises in Hong Kong. During the 1980s, local television stations, film production companies, and the popular music industry flourished as Hong Kong became increasingly prosperous.