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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.
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
"Only if I could just fall for you") in Japanese, from the song's opening lyrics. [6] By July 2020, it was the most used song on TikTok in Indonesia, Singapore, the Philippines, and Myanmar. [6] The popularity of "Summertime" in on TikTok led to the song gaining more traction in Japan. [6]
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
The song is a copy thachin of "Dust in the Wind" by the American band Kansas. [7] The song's title is variably translated as "We Won't Be Satisfied Until the End of the World," [8] "The World Will Not End," [1] "The World Is Unforgiving," [9] and "Until the End of the World". [7] Naing Myanmar wrote the song when he was 30 years old.
May Sweet (Burmese: မေဆွိ; pronounced [mè sʰwḭ]; born Swe Aye Myint (ဆွေအေးမြင့် [sʰwè ʔé mjɪ̰ɰ̃]) on 13 February 1962) is a Burmese singer and actress, and considered one of the most commercially successful female singers in the history of Burmese pop music.
Myo Kyawt Myaing was born on 29 April 1971 in Yangon to May May Tin, a teacher, and Kyawt Myaing, a pilot with the Union of Burma Airways. [5] The youngest of four siblings, he has two elder sisters and an elder brother. [6]
May Kha Lar (Burmese: မေခလာ, pronounced [mèkʰəlà]; also spelled Maykhalar) is a Burmese singer who was one of the most popular Burmese pop vocalists in the 1980s. Her stage name is derived from Manimekhala, a Buddhist goddess. She is known for her Burmese language covers of Western pop songs as well as original Burmese songs.