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A traditional folk song in the Arab world with the same melody is known as "Ya Banat Iskandaria" (Arabic: "يا بنات اسكندريّة") meaning "Oh Girls of Alexandria". [15] The song was later recorded by Lebanese Mohammed El-Bakkar around 1957 in his album named " Port Said ".
YouTube is an American video-sharing website headquartered in San Bruno, California. "Lm3allem" by Moroccan singer Saad Lamjarred is the most-viewed Arabic music video with 1 billion views in May 2023. [1] [2] "Ya Lili" by Tunisian singer Balti with Hammouda is the second video to garner over 700 million views.
"Mawṭinī" (/ ˈ m ɔː t ɪ n iː / MAW-tin-ee; Arabic: موطني, lit. 'My Homeland') is an Arabic national poem by the Palestinian poet Ibrahim Tuqan, composed by the Lebanese musician Mohammed Flayfel in 1934, and is a popular patriotic song among the Arab people, and the official national anthem of the Republic of Iraq.
The song was released on 31 October 2023 to raise awareness of the suffering of the Palestinian population amid the Israel–Hamas war. [2] All of the revenue generated by the song was donated to the Palestine Children's Relief Fund .
Lamma Bada Yatathanna (Arabic: لما بدا يتثنى) is an Arabic muwashshah of the Nahawand maqam. [1] [2] The poem is considered one of the most famous Arabic pieces of its era, [3] yet, it's origin comes from Al-Andalus, being this a Muwashshah or Andalusian Moaxaja.
Typical themes for a muwashshah include love, panegyric, and wine. Some muwashshah poems are devoted to a single theme while others combine multiple themes. One common thematic structure is love, followed by panegyric, and then love. [4]: 169 The kharja also plays a role in elaborating the poem’s theme. At the end of a love poem, the kharja ...
"Ya Tabtab Wa Dallaa" (Translation: Pat And Pamper) also shortened as "Atabtab" was released in the form of a music video single in February 2006.The video was directed by Nadine Labaki and features Ajram in a clown's outfit and makeup in a nomadic circus bus in a small Egyptian town.
Khaliji music first started as a bedouin tradition with poetry sung by a tribe's shāʿir ("poet"), usually accompanied by a rebab, the lyrics dealt with tales of honor, love, camel riders, and glory warriors. Khaliji music has roots going back more than 1,000 years, to the Islamic period, under the Umayyads and Abbasids in Baghdad, Iraq. [1]