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"Marryuna" (English: "Let's Dance") [2] is a song by Australian musician Baker Boy featuring Yirrmal, released independently on 6 October 2017. The song ranked at number 17 in Triple J 's Hottest 100 of 2017 .
The video features Baker Boy rapping in his native language of Yolngu Matha as well as English, alongside six barefoot Dancehall Dancers and two members of the Baker Boy family. Baker Boy said: "The video for "Meditjin" was such an exciting process to work through, the concept blew my mind, so I was just so pumped we managed to pull all the ...
"Marryuna" (2017) Music video; on YouTube "Cloud 9" is a song by Indigenous Australian musician Baker Boy featuring Australian musician Kian. [2] It was released in ...
In 2017, Yirrmal featured on Baker Boy's "Marryuna". The song ranked at number 17 in Triple J's Hottest 100 of 2017. [6] At the Music Victoria Awards of 2018 "Marryuna" won Best Song. [7] and at the National Indigenous Music Awards 2018, the video won Film Clip of the Year. [8] In August 2022, Yirrmal released "Promised Land", featuring Dami Im.
Danzal James Baker OAM (born 10 October 1996), known professionally as Baker Boy, is a Yolngu rapper, dancer, artist, and actor. Baker Boy is known for performing original hip-hop songs incorporating both English and Yolŋu Matha and is one of the most prominent Aboriginal Australian rappers.
An assortment of musical instruments in an Istanbul music store. This is a list of musical instruments , including percussion, wind, stringed, and electronic instruments. Percussion instruments (idiophones, membranophones, struck chordophones, blown percussion instruments)
Behati Prinsloo has appeared in various music videos for Maroon 5, alongside the band's frontman and her husband, Adam Levine. Bella Hadid appeared in the 2015 music video for the Weeknd's "In the Night". In 1983, Christie Brinkley featured in the music video for "Uptown Girl", alongside her then-future husband Billy Joel.
The traditional bowed instrument has been preserved into the 21st century in Lithuania as the pusline [5] (and possibly Estonia and Flanders), producing sustained or rhythmic droning notes. [2] The other variation, a percussion instrument, is used in folk music internationally, including Europe, North America and Australia, in which sound may ...