Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pages in category "Songs in Swahili" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Aie a Mwana;
See You on the Moon!: Songs for Kids of All Ages is a compilation album , released in 2006 on Paper Bag Records . The album features a number of indie rock artists, mostly but not exclusively from Canada , performing songs written in the style of children's songs.
"Jambo Bwana" by Them Mushrooms was a huge commercial success, selling over 200,000 copies between 1982 and 1987 and getting platinum certification in Kenya. As a consequence of this popularity, many other bands covered the songs, in some cases with a similar success; the version by Safari Sound Band, in particular, is one of the most played songs in tourist venues in East Africa. [4]
Other Swahili-language authors from Tanzania include poets Mathias E. Mnyampala (1917–1969) and Euphrase Kezilahabi (1944–2020), novelists Shafi Adam Shafi, [2] Fadhy Mtanga, Hussein Issa Tuwa, Maundu Mwingizi, Changas Mwangalela, Joseph Mbele, as well as playwrights Ebrahim Hussein, [3] Penina Muhando [4] or Amandina Lihamba.
Chorus Jumuiya Yetu sote tuilinde Tuwajibike tuimarike Umoja wetu ni nguzo yetu Idumu Jumuiya yetu Ee Mungu twaomba ulinde Jumuiya Afrika Mashariki
See You Tomorrow was recorded in the Peris' home, namely their basement and dining room. Lead vocalist and composer Karen wrote and sang on ten of the album's eleven songs and played the majority of the instruments, [2] while her husband [3] Don sang lead on the song he composed, "Mary Margaret in Mid-Air".
"Helule Helule" is a Swahili song written by Kenyan musician Daudi Kabaka. It was first released as a single by Kabaka and fellow Kenyan musician George Agade in 1966 through Equator Records . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] However, the song is better known for the version by British group the Tremeloes , who kept the original chorus and added English verses ...
Unlike previous music by Ongala, the album contains songs in both English and Swahili, as opposed to just Swahili. [3] Ongala decided to write and sing some songs in English so that he could reach a wider audience. [1] The album tackles social themes, [9] and features both elegies and sorrowful laments. [8]