Don't Pick the Wildflowers on the Roadside
The song was originally sung by Teresa Teng.
Lyrics: Lin Huangkun?
Songwriter: Junxiong Li
Sending you to the village, I have a word to say
Though it's already a hundred flowers in bloom, don't pick the wildflowers on the side of the road
Remembering my love, remembering my love, remembering I am waiting for you every day
I'm waiting for you to come back, don't forget me
Sending you to the village, I have a word to say
There are many things I want you to do, but I don't want you to forget me
There are many things I want you to do, and I want you to know that I'm not the only one. Expanded Information:
"Don't Pick the Wildflowers on the Roadside" is written by Lin Huangkun and composed by Li Junxiong. Junxiong Li, and sung by Teresa Teng in the album Teenagers Love Girls.
Jean Teng (January 29, 1953 - May 8, 1995), born in Yunlin County, Taiwan Province of China, with an ancestral home in Da Ming County, Hebei Province, was a Taiwanese singer and one of the representative Japanese female singers of the Showa Era in Japan.
Beginning her singing career with the release of her debut solo album in 1967? [
In 1967, she released her first solo album, which began her singing career. 969, she became famous in Taiwan for singing the theme song of the same name for the first Taiwanese drama Jing Jing. 1970s, she opened up the record market in Hong Kong and Southeast Asia with the works of Thousands of Words and Sea Rhythm, etc. She was honored as a "New Artist" in the Japan Record Awards for the Japanese song Empty Harbor in 1974, which laid the foundation of her acting career in Japan. In 1974, she won the "New Artist Award" at the Japan Record Awards for her Japanese song "Empty Harbor". [In 1974, he won the "New Artist Award" at the Japan Record Awards for his Japanese song "Empty Harbor".] She made her solo debut at the Lee Theatre in Hong Kong in 1976.
The singer was elected as the first female singer in Taiwan's Golden Bell Awards in 1980, and was invited to perform at Lincoln Center, the Los Angeles Music Center, and Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas in the early 1980s. 1983 was the first time for a Chinese singer to go on tour, and since then she has ceased to perform commercially.
Teresa Teng (January 29, 1953 - May 8, 1995), born in Yunlin County, Taiwan Province of China, with an ancestral home in Da Ming County, Hebei Province, was a Taiwanese singer and one of the most representative Japanese-language female singers of the Showa Era in Japan.
Beginning her singing career in 1967 with the release of her debut solo album, she became famous in Taiwan in 1969 for singing the theme song of the first Taiwanese drama Jing Jing, and opened up the Hong Kong and Southeast Asian record market in the early 1970s with works such as A Thousand Words and Sea Rhythm.
In 1974, she won the "New Artist Award" at the Japan Record Awards for her Japanese-language song "Empty Harbor," which established her career in Japan. 1976, she held her first solo concert at Hong Kong's Lee Theatre, and was selected as the first Best Female Singer at Taiwan's Golden Bell Awards. 1980, she was invited to perform at the Lincoln Center, Los Angeles' Lincoln Center, and the L.A. International Film Festival in the early 1980s. In the early 1980s, she was invited to perform at Lincoln Center and Los Angeles Music Center.