The Flowers
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Active until | 2009 |
---|---|
Origin | Beijing |
China | |
Members | Wowkie Zhang |
Wang Wenbo | |
Guo Yang | |
Shi Xingyu | |
Genres | Mandopop |
Pop Punk | |
Record labels | Gold Typhoon |
EMI | |
Albums | Hua Tian Xi Shi |
Hua Ling Sheng Hui | |
Shadow | |
Death By Static | |
Truth | |
Hao Nan Er Zhan Chu Lai | |
Career start | Beijing, China |
Skos genre | Alternative/Indie |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 1983615 |
About The Flowers
The Flowers were a Chinese rock band formed in Beijing in 1998. The line-up originally consisted of Dà Zhāng Wěi, Guō Yáng, and Wáng Wénbó. In 2001, the Flowers brought in Shí Xǐngyŭ. The Flowers recorded and released six studio albums. Following personal struggles with Zhang Wei, Xǐngyŭ left in the summer of 2008.
King's tie resembles Greek flag after Elgin Marbles row
... Although saying nothing in public, The Flowers were seen as an eloquent if unspoken message...
Remembrance Sunday: Aberystwyth veteran pays for memorial lights
... But why do we wear them? Launched by the Royal British Legion in 1921, poppies were chosen as they are The Flowers which grew on the battlefields after World War One ended - as described in the famous poem In Flanders Fields...
Why a 'hologram revolution' could be on the way
... The hologram shows also come with sensory technology, allowing visitors to smell The Flowers and trees...
Taylor Swift's 1989: The stories behind her biggest album
......
Can tech stop India wasting so much of its harvest?
... To meet peak demand The Flowers had to be at the market at 05:00...
5,000 dahlias at Stonehenge in recreation of Victorian shows
... The annual shows of The Flowers in the 1840s attracted crowds of up to 10,000 people, with events including cricket matches and brass band performances...
Farmers turn to tech as bees struggle to pollinate
... The level of vibration is said to have been designed to imitate that of bumble bees - the most effective pollinators of blueberries - which use their wings to agitate The Flowers...
How Sinéad O'Connor recorded Nothing Compares 2 U
......
5,000 dahlias at Stonehenge in recreation of Victorian shows
By Sophie ParkerBBC News
More Than 5,000 dahlias have been put on display at Stonehenge, paying homage to shows nearly 180 years ago.
They feature in a three-day exhibition at The Visitor centre in the style of a traditional flower show.
The arrangements have been made by clubs in Wiltshire, with the blooms grown by local members of The National Dahlia Society.
English Heritage has also re-started a dahlia Competition - a " New Hero of Stonehenge" will be chosen.
The annual shows of The Flowers in the 1840s attracted crowds of up to 10,000 people, with events including cricket matches and brass band performances.
In 1842, the Devizes and Wiltshire Gazette wrote: " Such a scene of gaiety was never before witnessed on Salisbury Plain … Parties of gentlemen and elegantly dressed ladies were scattered about in All Directions . "
Events became so popular that people were told " no vehicles, booths, or standing pitches" should be put within 50 yards of The Stones .
English Heritage 's landscape historian Louise Crawley said Stonehenge was not a Tourist Attraction at that point: " You wouldn't get hordes and hordes of people coming to visit.
" It was one of the main carriage routes and a local landmark but no More Than that. As the dahlia shows turn up, more and more people turn up.
" You could argue that is part of The Beginning of tourism at Stonehenge. "
To recreate the original events, huge floral sculptures have been created by nine local groups, including the Devizes Flower Club, Winterslow Flower Club and Warminster and Wylye Flower Club.
The Salisbury Flower Club made the 8ft (2. 4m) tall trilithon structure.
Gill Pelton, chair of The Club , said it took seven hours to create: " Our piece is a small tribute to our ancestors in recognition of their amazing legacy.
" It is not small but of course it is small when you compare it against The Stones . "
Visitors will be able to judge and choose the new " Hero of Stonehenge" - in the 1840s, This Was a new variety of dahlia.
Ms Crawley said she thinks they will find another good winner.
She Said : " The original shows were an opportunity for people to gather and parade in their finery, and we hope people will do the same this weekend.
" The floral sculptures give us a real flavour of what those original shows may have been like, and the original Hero of Stonehenge may no longer be in cultivation, but with so many wonderful varieties to choose for 'best in show', I know that with visitors' help, we will be able to find a worthy successor. "
Visitors will also be able to pose in front of The Stones with wearable flower headdresses.
Source of news: bbc.com