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Hanan Bulu Bulu (Arabic: حنان بلوبلو, born as Hanan Abdallah Abdelkarim, 4 May 1966, Omdurman, Sudan), is a modern Sudanese singer-songwriter and recording artist. In her music, she combines both songs by older Sudanese musicians as well as her own compositions.
Al Balabil (Arabic: البلابل, transl. The Nightingales) were a popular Sudanese vocal group of three sisters, mainly active from 1971 until 1988. Their popular songs and appearance as modern female performers on stage, as well as on Sudanese radio and television, earned them fame all over East Africa and beyond, and they were sometimes referred to as the "Sudanese Supremes". [1]
She was best known for her love songs (referred to as tom-tom songs, and generally written by male poets), [5] but some of her music was political in nature, and she was known as an advocate of women's rights, workers' rights, anti-colonialism, and Sudanese independence. Aisha lived in Omdurman until her death in 1974, but was also a frequent ...
Sudanese women are also known both at home and in the wider region for their role as singers and musicians playing the dalooka drum in aghani al-banat (transl.: Girls' songs) [19] as well as for their spiritual musical performances called zār, believed to be able to exorcise evil spirits from possessed individuals.
Ramey Dawoud (born 1991), Sudanese-American singer; Aisha al-Falatiya (1905-1974) Gawaher (born 1969) Omer Ihsas (born 1958) Emmanuel Jal (born 1980), also connected to South Sudan and Kenya; Abdel Karim Karouma (1905-1947) Abdel Aziz El Mubarak (1951-2020) Khojali Osman (died 1994) Rasha (born 1971) Ayman al-Rubo (date of birth unknown) Abdel ...
Music portal This category is for articles about women singers from the African country of Sudan . Classification : People : By occupation : Singers / Women by occupation : Women singers : By nationality : Sudanese
Before the abolishment of Public Order Law, the authorities had imposed many restrictions for women's appearance in public. [7] During the Sudanese revolution of 2018/19, she published a song called Birth, which according to the selection of Sudanese songs The Sounds of Sudan, expresses the "sentiments of Sudan’s December Revolution". [8]
The song "Vivian", [30] which expresses the condition of a girl from southern Sudan residing in the capital of the north, Khartoum. This song gave a great social and political dimension because it gave women in southern Sudan a place within the passion of Sudanese lyric poetry. [31]