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Karaoke Joysound (カラオケJOYSOUND) is a karaoke service and online song library from Japanese karaoke service provider Xing. The Joysound service, which started on various karaoke computers, was adapted into a video game by Hudson Soft for Wii, licensing the Joysound online song library alongside Xing, who also helped co-develop the game with Hudson.
Especially, two songs Hoa Nở Về Đêm (written by Manh Phat) and Chuyến Tàu Hoàng Hôn (written Minh Ky & Hoai Linh) were finally granted legal release after 50 years of ban. [130] The album was released 4 years after the release of Khúc Tình Xưa 2 - Trả Lại Thời Gian (2011). The process of choosing 11 songs for this album was ...
4. “The Boy Is Mine” by Brandy and Monica. Notable lyrics: "When will you get the picture.You're the past, I'm the future. Get away, it's my time to shine. If you didn't know, the boy is mine."
Quang Lê, alongside other singers, Khanh Ly, The Son, Tâm Đoan, Hương Thủy and Thanh Truc was part of a very special performance dedicated to all mothers, called “Lòng Mẹ Việt Nam”. Quang Lê sang the song, promptly titled “Lòng Mẹ Việt Nam” which describes the pain of a mother who must see her sons off to war and ...
China is readying a blacklist for karaoke songs in order to ban tracks featuring “illegal” content, its Ministry of Culture and Tourism said. Such content includes anything that harms national ...
The Xbox version also supported Xbox Live for downloads of more songs. Karaoke Revolution Volume 2 was released in North America on July 13, 2004, on PlayStation 2; Volume 3 came in November 9 for the same platform. Karaoke Revolution Party was released in North America on November 8, 2005, on PlayStation 2, Xbox and GameCube. The Xbox version ...
Thanh Hương originally worked at a karaoke bar where he often went to sing. The purpose of his trip to Vietnam was to officially marry Lê Thanh Hương and bring her to the United States. However, the couple broke up in 2010. [4] Hoài Linh has two biological children, Võ Lê Thành Vinh (born in 1990) and a younger daughter (born in 2012).
The chronicles recorded that a special palace for Cham women was built in 1046, then in 1060 the emperor ordered a translation of Cham songs, and incorporated Cham drum known as trống cơm into the royal band. [8] During the 13th century, a new trend of music came from China: songs set to Chinese tunes with Vietnamese lyrics. [9]