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Vital composer of Sai Htee Saing's songs is Sai Kham Leik. [2] Sai Htee Saing was born in Langkho, Shan State to Nang Ein and U Nanda. He studied at Mandalay University, where he became one of the founding members of The Wild Ones, an ethnic Shan band, in 1973. Sai Htee Saing began his music career in 1969, when he aired a Shan language song on ...
Her follow-up album was with her mother, covering many of her mother's hits from the 1950s. Trained in classical Burmese music, May Sweet with the help of noted musician Maung Kyemon turned to old Burmese songs from the pre-war era (1930s) by the great May Shin, and updated them with modern Western music and arrangements. Her covers proved ...
The Myanmar Music Asiayon (MMA) was established by the SLORC to further censor Burmese-produced music. Popular musicians including Zaw Win Htut and Sai Htee Saing have produced propaganda albums written by military officers such as Mya Than San. [11]
Sai Hsai Mao (Shan: ၸၢႆးသၢႆမၢဝ်း; 1948 – 17 July 2024), also known as Sai Saing Maw (Burmese: စိုင်းဆိုင်မောဝ်), was a distinguished Burmese singer and musician of Shan descent. [1] Born in Muse, Burma, he was the most prominent singer of Shan pop music, known for his prolific cover songs.
Singles Collection Volume 3 is a compilation album by the American garage rock band Thee Oh Sees, released in 2013 on Castle Face Records. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] The album collects various "one-offs, covers, and rarities," released by the band between 2011 and 2013.
Sai Sai Kham Leng was born on 10 April 1979 in Taunggyi, Shan state, Myanmar to Kham Leng and Cho Cho San Tun of an ethnic Shan aristocratic family. His great-grandfather Sao San Tun, Saopha of Mongpawn, was a signatory to the 1947 Panglong Agreement and one of nine senior government officials assassinated on 19 July 1947.
Masako Mori covered the song on her 1972 album Sensei/Dōkyūsei. Yuri Hayama covered the song on her 1972 album Akogare. Hiromi Kurita covered the song on her 1973 album Taiyō to Umi to Orange. Junko Sakurada covered the song on her 1974 album Junko to Hana Monogatari. Jō Toyokawa covered the song on her 1975 album Kegarenakiitazura/Hoshi ...
The album yielded three singles: "Taken for Granted", "Little Man" and "Drink to Get Drunk". Sia was also part of English band Zero 7, and performed vocals on their albums in the early 2000s; she left the group in Late 2006. In 2004, Sia released her third studio album, Colour the Small One.