The original singer of "Dust Margin" is Luo Wen.
Luowen, formerly known as Tan Baixian, nicknamed Wuji, was born on February 12, 1945 in Baise, Guangxi. 1967, he started his singing career. His early masterpiece was the Chinese theme song in Bruce Lee's posthumous film "Game of Death", and his claim to fame was the theme song in the 1973 TV series "Under the Lion Rock", which he sang, and since then he has been a mainstay of the Hong Kong music scene.
The lyrics of the song are as follows: The fate of the world is like a dream, a few ups and downs are always uneven, and now it's all smoke and clouds, and the love has become empty, just like waving your hand under the sleeve wind. A wisp of fragrance, floating in the deep old dreams, flowers fall out, a haggard in the wind, turn back when there is no sunshine and no rain. The moonlight small building, lonely no one to tell the feelings of the earth, I have my residual dream has not yet awakened, the long road, ups and downs can not be by me. People wandering in the sea, tasted the thinness of human feelings, enthusiasm and warmth, for cold indifference. Any how much deep love alone to loneliness. The people with the wind over, since the flower blossom and fall.
Rowan's career
Rowan's life as a singer has been marked by many firsts, including the first non-Japanese singer to win the "All-Japan Ballad Contest" organized by Yomiuri TV in 1975.
In 1975, he became the first non-Japanese singer to win this award when he won the championship of the All Japan Song Contest organized by Yomiuri TV.
In 1976, he became the first Hong Kong artist to hold a solo concert when he performed 15 shows at Hong Kong's Lee Theatre, the first Chinese singer to be allowed to perform at London's Alport Hall in 1979, and the first to hold a solo concert at New York City's Madison Square Garden. 1981 saw the release of his album "Flowers," which included 13 songs with flower names. In 1981, he released the album "Flower", which included 13 songs with flower titles, making him the first Hong Kong singer to release a concept album.
In 1986, his album "Under the Lion Rock" included "Laser in the Middle", which became the first Cantonese Rap song, and in 1987, he became the first Chinese singer to perform at Carnegie Hall in New York City, U.S.A. In 1989, he performed at the Hong Kong Cultural Center in the "Just For Your Part" and "Today's Rap" concerts. In 1989, he performed at the Hong Kong Cultural Center in the "Just For Your Part" and "Today's Classics" concerts, performing 44 shows, breaking the record for the number of shows performed by a Hong Kong artist.