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May Thet Htar Swe (Burmese: မေသက်ထားဆွေ; born 10 January 2003 [1]) is a traditional Burmese classical, country, and dhamma singer. [2] She began her career as a child, and is known both for her mastery of songs from the Burmese classical tradition and her musical versatility, which spans several genres.
"May" is the twenty-eighth single by B'z, released on May 24, 2000. This song is one of B'z many number-one singles in Oricon chart, although sales were not as high as their previous single. Track listing
Lyrics: YMB Saya Tin and Thakins [a] (1930) U Sein Mya Maung (1947) Music: YMB Saya Tin, 1930: Published: 1930 (as Dobama Song) 1947 (as National Anthem) Adopted: 27 June 1936 (by the second conference of Dobama Asiayon) 1 August 1943 (by the State of Burma) 22 September 1947 (by the Constituent Assembly of the Union of Burma) Audio sample
"Mayya" is a popular Hindi song from the 2007 Hindi film, Guru. It was composed by A. R. Rahman, performed by Maryem Toller, Chinmayi Sripada, Keerthi Sagathia and written by Gulzar. Apart from the film's soundtrack, it also appeared in the compilation album, A. R. Rahman – A World of Music released in 2009.
This is a list of the most-watched Indian music videos on YouTube. Phonics Song with Two Words from children's channel ChuChu TV is the most viewed video in India and is the 7th most viewed YouTube video in the world. "Why This Kolaveri Di" become the first Indian music video to cross 100 million views. [1] [2] "Swag Se Swagat" became the first ...
The name was May Sweet, the result of Burmese wordplay (called Zagalein) of the name Mi Swe (IPA: [mḭ sʰwè]) to May Sweet ([mè sʰwḭ]). [1] Zagalein is similar to vesre in Argentine Spanish , or verlan in French, reversing the sounds of a word or words to produce a slang or colloquial name.)
May La Than Zin (Burmese: မေလသံစဉ်; MLCTS: me la san. cany, also known as May Melody; born 23 May 2003) is a Burmese singer best known for her acoustic cover songs. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Early life
Copy thachin, or simply "copy music" is a genre of music in Myanmar that originates from the early 1980s. It merges the melody and instrumentals of international songs with Burmese vocals. Proponents of copy thachin argue that the style is separate from cover songs due to it having unique vocal arrangements and lyrics.