Wowkie Zhang
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Wowkie Zhang | |||||||||||
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Background information | |||||||||||
Birth name | Zhang Wei | ||||||||||
Also known as | Wowkie Da, Da Zhang Wei | ||||||||||
Born | Beijing, China | 31 August 1983||||||||||
Genres | |||||||||||
Occupations |
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Instrument(s) | Vocals, guitar, | ||||||||||
Years active | 1998–present | ||||||||||
Member of | The Flowers | ||||||||||
Chinese name | |||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 張偉 | ||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 张伟 | ||||||||||
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Zhang Wei (Chinese: 张伟; born 31 August 1983), known professionally as Wowkie Zhang or Wowkie Da (simplified Chinese: 大张伟; traditional Chinese: 大張偉; pinyin: Dà Zhāng Wěi; lit. 'the Big Zhang Wei'), is a Chinese singer, songwriter, and musician. He is best known as the lead singer, guitarist, and primary songwriter of the rock band The Flowers.
He is most famous for his song, "Sunshine, Rainbow, White Pony." He is also known for briefly coaching the Flash Wolves in 2016.
Early life and career
[edit]1983–1998
[edit]Zhang was born on 31 August 1983, in Beijing, China. He completed his elementary school education in the Chongwen District in Beijing before joining the Children's Cultural Palace to practice singing. At the age of 10, he won first place in the Chongwen District singing competition, as well as the Beijing Middle School and Elementary School Students Sing Competition.[1][better source needed]
In the fourth grade, Zhang, along with other singers in the Children's Cultural Palace, attended the Children's Choir competition in Russia and came in second place.[citation needed] During the fifth grade, Zhang became a member of the China Central Television (CCTV) Yinhe Teenage Art Troupe after passing its audition. The Yinhe Teenage Art Troupe has produced many superstars in the contemporary Chinese pop music world, including Faye Wong, Cai Guoqing, Wang Xuechun and Liu Chunyan.[1][better source needed]
1998–2009
[edit]In February 1998, Zhang and his friends performed in a pub and met artist agent Hong Feng,[citation needed] forming The Flowers together in June 1998. As Zhang Wei was a common name in the Chinese language,[citation needed] he became known by his stage name, Da Zhang Wei.[citation needed]
In January 1999, The Flowers signed with a small Beijing-based Chinese independent label, New Bees Music, and released their first album, On the Other Side of Happiness.[2] The album turned out to be a success with many hit songs like "Stillness," "Disillusion," and "School's Out."[citation needed]
In December 2001, they released their second album, Strawberry Statement ("草莓声明").[3]
In 2002, they won the Media Award for the 2nd Chinese Pop Music Festival.[citation needed][ambiguous]
In 2004, they won the Most Popular Band in the 4th Global Mandarin Pop Chart and the Chinese Music Pioneer Chart. The same year, the band signed a contract with EMI. In June, they released a single CD, You Are My Romeo ("我是你的罗密欧").[4]
From 2004 to 2005, the band experimented with various musical styles including hip hop and techno. In 2005, the band released "Xi Shua Shua"(嘻唰唰),[5][better source needed][non-primary source needed][6] propelling Zhang to household-name status. Xi Shua Shua remains popular overseas, in countries such as Malaysia, as well as in China, especially for parties, square dancing (广场舞) and karaoke.[7][better source needed][non-primary source needed]
Xi Shua Shua was included on the band's fourth studio album, Hua Ji Wang Chao, or Blooming Dynasty, released in July 2005. The album won numerous awards in China and sold some 200,000 copies in the forty days after its release.[citation needed]
The Flowers have been referred to as China's "first famous adolescent band."[8] The band disbanded in 2009, and Zhang embarked on his solo career afterwards. Since 2009, he has released five albums and over thirteen singles, achieving record sales of over five million copies.[citation needed]
2010–present
[edit]Zhang became known to younger audiences as a host and TV personality. In 2016, he became a co-host for China's top talk show Day Day Up.[9]
In 2014, Zhang released "Bei-er Shuang", meaning "Super Euphoric." He performed the song at China Central TV's Spring Festival Gala, a show viewed by Chinese audiences at home and abroad. The song became an instant national sensation. Psy used "Bei-er Shuang" when he performed with Chinese girl band SNH48 in China.[10][better source needed][non-primary source needed]
In 2016, Zhang created a theme song for the advertisement of Alipay's new function, combining Beijing Opera with EDM.[citation needed] He also performed in Heroes of Remix as a guest performer, remixing Beijing folk song "Beijing Chick" and 1980's rock song "The Long March" in the song "New Beijing Chick (北京小妞)."[11] In the same show, he also remixed the theme song of 80's cartoon Hulu Brothers (葫芦娃).[12][better source needed][non-primary source needed] In this show he brought forward the concept of CDM—China Dance Music, encouraging musicians to create music using their own ethnic style, rather than forgetting their own cultural identity in following international trends. [citation needed]
In 2018, Zhang appeared as a judge on Rave Now. On the show, he scouted the winning performer, Jiang Liang. He also scouted a team of EDM musicians who mainly performed in underground pubs and bars in China.[citation needed] His 2018 song, Am a Popping Candy, combines EDM with traditional Yunnan ethnic style and Shandong clapper talk, an ancient storytelling music performance.[citation needed]
His 2018 song "Sunshine, Rainbow, White Pony" gained popularity in Western media after becoming an internet meme because of its chorus, containing the phrase "那个 (nèi ge)", which sounds like the racial slur nigga.[13][14]
He and his team create many songs that remix ethnic music with EDM. For example, he created "Nezha," which tells the story of a hero from traditional Chinese myth.[citation needed]
Artistry
[edit]Influences
[edit]Zhang's early influence came from the bands Green Day and Sex Pistols.[11] After he went solo, he turned his interest to EDM. He also tries to incorporate elements of traditional Chinese art forms into his music.[citation needed]
Zhang writes his own songs. As of January 2019, he had written over 190 songs.[11] During his time with The Flowers, he was the principal songwriter of all the songs on the band's albums.[citation needed]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Wowkie Zhang lyrics and profile – MyAsianArtist". myasianartist.com.
- ^ Petra, Niemi (7 March 2008). "The Flowers – From punk pop to hip hop". gbtimes.com. Archived from the original on 8 October 2016. Retrieved 10 June 2020.
- ^ 花兒, 草莓聲明 (in Chinese (China)), retrieved 2 January 2022
- ^ 花儿乐队, 我是你的罗密欧 (in Chinese (China)), retrieved 2 January 2022
- ^ 嘻唰唰 by 花儿乐队, retrieved 31 January 2020
- ^ "花儿"娱乐大众" 新单曲"嘻唰唰"首播_网易娱乐频道". ent.163.com. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Tarian Xi Shua Shua UNIMAS, retrieved 31 January 2020
- ^ "An Adolescent Band – Flowers". China Internet Information Centre. Retrieved 22 August 2021.
- ^ "Da Zhangwei and Wang Yibo both quit?It is revealed that "Everyday Upward" has new people joining, and Yang Di's voice is the highest".
- ^ 鸟叔、SNH48《江南style+倍儿爽》(SNH48第三届年度总决选演唱会), retrieved 31 January 2020
- ^ a b c 贵圈© (12 January 2019). "大张伟:叛逆未遂". www.huxiu.com (in Chinese). Retrieved 31 January 2020.
- ^ wowkie zhang 大张伟-盖世音雄-葫芦娃 -未修音版, retrieved 31 January 2020
- ^ Lo, Adrienne (2021). "Whose hearing matters? Context and regimes of perception in sociolinguistics". International Journal of the Sociology of Language (2021): 153–162. doi:10.1515/ijsl-2020-0103.
- ^ ""Neìgè" in Chinese: The unlikely story of a homophone aggression". 12 January 2021.
External links
[edit]- Wowkie Zhang at IMDb