Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The album includes a number of songs celebrating Yusuf's Islamic faith. [4] The international release went platinum in South-East Asia and was on best-selling lists in the Middle East and North Africa. [5] The album was released in a special edition for Turkey, including five songs re-recorded by Yusuf in Turkish. [6]
Sami Yusuf was born on 21 July 1980 in Tehran to Azerbaijani parents. [15] [16] His grandparents are from Baku, Azerbaijan, from which they left for Iran when it was captured by the Bolsheviks following World War I. Yusuf and his parents later arrived in Ealing, West London, in the early 1980s, after the Islamic Revolution in Iran. [17]
It should only contain pages that are Sami Yusuf albums or lists of Sami Yusuf albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Sami Yusuf albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
In 2016, British-Azeri singer Sami Yusuf performed a rendition of Khan's song in his album Barakah. The Bollywood music director Viju Shah used Khan's version to produce the hit song "Tu Cheez Badi Hai Mast Mast" sung by Kavita Krishnamurthy and Udit Narayan for the Bollywood film Mohra (1994), [ 9 ] the soundtrack album of which sold more than ...
Barakah is a 2016 studio album by British singer-songwriter Sami Yusuf. It was released on 1 February 2016 on Andante Records. It was released on 1 February 2016 on Andante Records. It is also marketed as the first of a series of recordings as Spiritique Collection (Vol. 1) .
My Ummah is the second studio album by British singer Sami Yusuf.It was released in two versions, a "music version" and a "percussion version". It is claimed to have sold between five [1] and eight [2] million copies worldwide.
[1] Yusuf subsequently stated on his website that the album was released without his knowledge or consent, and is a compilation of demos and sketches with a quality inferior to his standards. He has called for fans to boycott it.
Alhamdulillah (Arabic: ٱلْحَمْدُ لِلَّٰهِ, al-Ḥamdu lillāh) is an Arabic phrase meaning "praise be to God", [1] sometimes translated as "thank God" or "thanks be to the Lord". [2]