Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"Perjuangan Yang Belum Selesai" - poem songs by Nora "Malaysia Boleh!" "Kami Anak Malaysia" aka "Proud To Be Malaysian" - both Malay and English version "Untukmu Malaysia "For You Malaysia" "Mulanya Di Sini" ("It All Starts Here") - by Freedom "Here in My Home" - by Malaysian Artists for Unity (MAFU), May 2008.
"Allah Lanjutkan Usia Sultan" (pronounced [allah landʒutkan usia sultan]; "God Lengthen the Sultan's Age") is the state anthem of Perak, Malaysia.. The tune was originally that of "La Rosalie", a popular song in the Seychelles during the 19th century, originally written by French composer Pierre-Jean de Béranger.
" Negaraku" (Jawi: نݢاراکو , pronounced; English: "My Country") is the national anthem of Malaysia. It was adopted as the national anthem at the time of the Federation of Malaya's independence from the United Kingdom in 1957. The tune was originally used as the state anthem of Perak, "Allah Lanjutkan Usia Sultan". [1]
"Lagu Bangsa Johor" ("Song of Johor") 1897 Hj. Mohamed Said Hj. Sulaiman Mackertich Galistan Abdullah ... "Duli Yang Maha Mulia" 1967 Unknown Saiful Bahri
The Johor State Anthem (Malay: Lagu Bangsa Johor, pronounced [lagu baŋsa dʒohor]), which was composed by Armenian bandmaster Mackertich Galistan Abdullah, had no official lyrics until 1914 when a staff member of the Hong Kong Bank in Johor Bahru, Hubert Allen Courtney, wrote the first English words and Haji Mohamed Said Hj.
Ibu Pertiwiku (English: My Motherland) is the official state anthem of Sarawak, Malaysia.The song was adopted in 1988, alongside the adoption of the new State Flag as well, in conjunction with the 25th anniversary of Sarawak's Independence within Malaysia.
It was adopted as an official state anthem in 1911 at the behest of Tuanku Muhammad Shah (1865–1933), the seventh Yang di-Pertuan Besar, who ruled Negeri Sembilan from 1888 to 1933. [1] The anthem was subject to the fine-tuning efforts of the second son of the current Yang DiPertuan Besar, Tunku Zain Al-'Abidin ibni Tuanku Muhriz. [2]
The song, a parody of the Malaysian national anthem "Negaraku" (punning on the Hokkien profanity "kuku", meaning penis) sparked controversy over its irreverent lyrics about the country's politics, which some deemed as mocking the government, ethnic Malays and Islam. However, Namewee and others challenged this view, stating that the song was ...