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"Allah Peliharakan Sultan" (Jawi: الله ڤليهاراكن سلطان ; "God Bless the Sultan") is the national anthem of Brunei Darussalam.
In 1930, Syed Hamzah ibni al-Marhum Syed Safi Jamalullail, the fifth Raja of Perlis, and at the time serving as Vice President of the Perlis State Council, composed the tune to Amin, Amin, ya Rabiljalil. Jamalullail then asked R. G. Iles, the State Engineer, to transcribe and harmonise it, since he was not proficient at reading or writing music ...
Al-Atlal (Arabic: الأطلال, "The Ruins") is a poem written by the Egyptian poet Ibrahim Nagi, which later became a famous song sung by Egyptian singer Umm Kulthum in 1966. [1] The songs text was adapted by Umm Kulthum and its melody composed by the Egyptian composer Riad Al Sunbati [ 2 ] two years after her first song composed by Mohamed ...
AFC Asian Cup songs and anthems are songs and tunes adopted officially to be used as warm-ups to the event, to accompany the championships during the event and as a souvenir reminder of the events as well as for advertising campaigns leading for the Asian Cup, giving the singers exceptional universal world coverage and notoriety.
Thank You Allah is the debut studio album by Muslim Swedish singer Maher Zain.The album was released on November 1, 2009, by Awakening Records, with 13 songs and two bonus tracks.
Du'a al-Faraj (Arabic: دُعَاء ٱلْفَرَج) is a dua which is attributed to Imam Mahdi. It begins with the phrase of "ʾIlāhī ʿaẓuma l-balāʾ", meaning "O God, the calamity has become immense".
"When We Die As Martyrs" is a song produced by a Jordanian children's music troupe Toyor Al-Janah (Birds of Heaven) and performed as a music video on a Bahraini television channel of the same name. Sung by young Arab children and led by Dima Bashar and her older brother Mohammed Bashar, in 2010 the song became a hit on YouTube as well as Arabic
Jādaka al-Ghaithu"(Arabic: جَادَكَ الغَيْثُ "Good Rain Would Befit You") is an Andalusi Arabic muwashshah by Ibn al-Khatib. [ 1 ] It was written as a madīh ( مديح " panegyric ") of Sultan Muhammad V of Granada . [ 2 ]