Dao Lang

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Dao Lang (刀郎 pinyin: Dāo Láng, the pseudonym of Luo Lin) is a Han Chinese singer from Sichuan (China). Although rumoured to be from Ürümqi, XinjiangDao Lang moved to Xinjiang only after meeting his second wife. Dao Lang's CD, 2002年的第一場雪 (The First Snows of 2002), 2002 Niande Diyi Chang Xue in pinyin, released in 2003, made him an instant star in China. He sang with Alan Tam on the debut "Can't Say Goodbye" (Cantonese: Seûdbätcöt dëk Gôwbìd, Chinese characters: 說不出的告別). His other albums include 2001's Songs from the Western Region (see the external link below).

Dao Lang claims to have toured the Chinese cities of Chengdu, Chongqing, and Xi'an, as well as the autonomous region of Tibet for more than four years as a young bar-hopping musician (see external link). He has been called the "Wang Luobin of the 21st century" and has performed modern rock adaptations of several of Wang Luobin's Western China-inspired folk songs, such as "Awariguli" (supposedly a Xinjiang Uyghur folk love song), "Flowers and Youth" (pinyin: Hua'er Yu Shaonian, a Hui Muslim song), and "At a Faraway Place" (pinyin: Zai Na Yaoyuan De Difang", a song from western China's Qinghai Province). He has also performed modern adaptations of such renowned old Chinese folk songs as "The Grapes of Turpan are Ripe" (pinyin: Tulufan De Putao Shu Liao) and the famous revolutionary song "Nanniwan".

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