Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
YouTube is an American video-sharing website headquartered in San Bruno, California. "Lm3allem" by Moroccan singer Saad Lamjarred is the most-viewed Arabic music video with 1 billion views in May 2023. [1] [2] "Ya Lili" by Tunisian singer Balti with Hammouda is the second video to garner over 700 million views.
Stevens re-recorded the song for his 1969 album Gitarzan and again for the song's music video in 1995. A cover version of Stevens' song was released in July 1962 by Jimmy Savile, [8] [9] backed by the English pop group The Tremeloes, featuring Brian Poole. Kinky Friedman recorded the song for his 1977 album Lasso from El Paso.
Al Watan Al Akbar - Pan-Arabic Patriotic Anthem Al-Watan Al-Akbar ( Arabic : الوطن الأكبر , translated The Greatest Homeland ) is a pan-Arab musical created in Egypt . The song was composed by the Egyptian Mohammed Abdel Wahab in 1960, and arranged by Egyptian composer Ali Ismael , with lyrics by poet Ahmad Shafik Kamal .
Since the song's release, "Killing an Arab" has been controversial and viewed as promoting violence against Arabs. [8] A 1978 NME article described the song's title as "at first glance irresponsibly racist," with Robert Smith responding, "It’s not really racist, if you know what the song is about. It’s not a call to kill Arabs."
Nour El Ain (Egyptian Arabic: نور العين, IPA: [nuːɾ elˈʕeːn]; English: "Light of The Eye") is Egyptian singer Amr Diab's most successful album. It was released in January 1996 and became a tremendous success not only in the Middle East but worldwide. [1]
This is a list of Arabic pop-music musicians. Not all are Arabs , but all perform at least in part in the Arabic language . This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness.
Arabic pop music or Arab pop music is a subgenre of pop music and Arabic music. Arabic pop is mainly produced and originated in Cairo , Egypt ; with Beirut , Lebanon , as a secondary center. It is an outgrowth of the Arabic film industry (mainly Egyptian movies), also predominantly located in Cairo.
Often described as an "operetta" in the Arab world, the song includes performances by 22 Arab artists. [1] [2] The song, first aired in 1998, reached wider popularity in 2000 with the start of the Second Intifada, when satellite channels throughout the Arab world broadcast the operetta's music video as a form of solidarity with Palestinians. [1 ...