The song became heavily associated with
Teresa Teng through her version. It was released on December 21, 1978, as part of her Mandarin studio album
A Love Letter.
Background Teng's rendition of "When Will You Return" achieved large amounts of popularity and nearly supplanted Zhou Xuan as "the primary singer identified with this song". In
Mainland China too, Teng became prominent via the song.
Geremie R. Barmé, author of
In the Red: On Contemporary Chinese Culture, described the song as a "nostalgic ode". Barmé said that some individuals on the Mainland condemned the song, describing it as "traitorous" and "obscene". Memorials for Teng have included performances of "When Will You Return?"
Release Teng originally re-wrote the lyrics of the original song by Zhou Xuan in 1967. In 1978, Teng chose to re-release "When Will You Return" following the end of the censorship imposed by the Taiwanese government at the time. She discarded the second and third paragraphs of the original four-part lyrics, retaining only the beginning, ending and the spoken portions. "When Will You Return" soon saw high amounts of popularity again upon the release of Teng's cover, after the original version was banned for 30 years due to its controversial lyrics. She additionally recorded an Indonesian version of the song titled "Cinta Suci" during the same year. A Japanese rendition of the song was released as a
3-inch CD single and
cassette though Taurus Records on April 28, 1993, in support of her compilation album
Best Songs - Single Collection in Japan.
Track listing ;1993 Japanese CD single ==Other versions==