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Mojo Ruiz de Luzuriaga, known professionally as Mo'Ju [1] and previously as Mojo Juju, is an Australian musician, best known for their 2018 album Native Tongue and the lead single of the same title. The single won the Best Independent Single category in the 2019 AIR Awards .
This is a list of the most-watched Indian music videos on YouTube. Phonics Song with Two Words from children's channel ChuChu TV is the most viewed video in India and is the 7th most viewed YouTube video in the world. "Why This Kolaveri Di" become the first Indian music video to cross 100 million views.
The video for the track premiered on Paste magazine's website the same day. [3] "Voices" was released on November 16, 2018, as the second single and the music video was released on the same day. [5] Switchfoot promoted the album with a North American Native Tongue Tour, with supporting acts Colony House and Tyson Motsenbocker. [1]
The Native Tongues was a collective of late 1980s and early 1990s hip-hop artists known for their positive-minded, good-natured Afrocentric lyrics, and for pioneering the use of eclectic sampling and jazz-influenced beats. Its principal members were the Jungle Brothers, De La Soul, A Tribe Called Quest, Monie Love, and Queen Latifah
Native Tongues, an American hip hop collective; Native Tongue (Poison album), 1993; Native Tongue (Switchfoot album), 2019; Native Tongue, a 2018 album and single of the same name by Australian singer-songwriter Mo'Ju "Native Tongue", a song by Sara Groves from her 2015 album Floodplain
After being inspired by Ashish Chanchlani and Amit Bhadana, Yadav began his YouTube career on 29 April 2016, and as of February 2024, he has a following of 15.5 million subscribers and 1.5 billion views on his primary YouTube channel. [10] [11] [12] He initially named his channel The Social Factory but later rebranded it to Elvish yadav. His ...
Seven Days Live is the fourth video album from the American heavy metal/glam metal Poison, featuring a live concert at the Hammersmith Odeon, in London, England, from the Native Tongue world tour in 1993, in support of the fourth Poison studio album Native Tongue, which was certified Gold by the RIAA on April 21, 1993.
Tyla Laura Seethal [4] was born on 30 January 2002 in Edenvale, Gauteng, [5] [6] to a Coloured family with Indian, [7] [8] Indo-Mauritian, Zulu, and Irish ancestry. [9] [10] [11] She grew up in Johannesburg, Gauteng, [12] and graduated from Edenglen High School in 2019, where she was the Head of Culture.