"Down the River" was tailored by the famous poet Wang Haitao and the all-round musician Wan Jiaming for "Ghost Blowing Lights, Linglong Ancient City". The whole song is cut in with mysterious and strange piano sound, and the low psychedelic female voice is full of temptation, as if exploring in the dark. The chorus part of Wan Jiaming's hoarse rap is intertwined with the ethereal dolphin treble, and the emotional span of the song is more in line with the ups and downs of the plot, which makes many netizens say that "the single cycle can't stop". This introduction challenges the ultra-difficult singing method, and the range span of more than four octaves greatly enriches the audibility of the song.
In the latest exposure of this MV, Hu Bayi, Yang Ping and Wang Pangzi are close to death: avalanches have made people have nowhere to escape; Wan Li's seemingly cloudless desert in Wan Li suddenly changed its face, and the loss and lack of water behind the sandstorm killed people. The fire ladybug and the fierce and weird overlord salamander who died of spontaneous combustion in the tomb made the fate of several male protagonists in the play worrying.
Tonight's premiere drama will reproduce the original chapter of Yerengou in Heifengkou, and the geomantic secret of "People light candles and ghosts blow lights" will also be presented to the audience tonight. Hu Bayi and Wang Pangzi were first attacked by a red scorpion in General Cemetery, Liaojin, and then survived under the jaws of a pig-faced bat. What's more, they stumbled upon the underground fortress of the Kwantung Army, and anecdotes unfolded one by one, and a dangerous and wonderful drama was about to be staged.