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  2. Music of Sudan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Sudan

    In 2018, Sudanese journalist Ola Diab published a list of contemporary music videos by upcoming artists, both from Sudan and the Sudanese diaspora in the US, Europe or the Middle East. [74] One of them is the Sudanese–American rapper Ramey Dawoud and another the Sudanese–Italian singer and songwriter Amira Kheir.

  3. Category:Sudanese musical groups - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Sudanese_musical...

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  4. List of Sudanese singers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Sudanese_singers

    Ramey Dawoud (born 1991), Sudanese-American singer; Aisha al-Falatiya (1905-1974) Gawaher (born 1969) Omer Ihsas (born 1958) Emmanuel Jal (born 1980), also connected to South Sudan and Kenya; Abdel Karim Karouma (1905-1947) Abdel Aziz El Mubarak (1951-2020) Khojali Osman (died 1994) Rasha (born 1971) Ayman al-Rubo (date of birth unknown) Abdel ...

  5. List of Sudanese artists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Sudanese_artists

    Omeima Mudawi-Rowlings (born 1969), Sudanese-born British deaf textile artist; Salah El Mur (born 1966), contemporary painter, graphic designer, author, and filmmaker; Hassan Musa (born 1951), Sudanese-born French contemporary painter

  6. Al Balabil (musical group) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Balabil_(musical_group)

    Al Balabil (Arabic: البلابل, transl. The Nightingales) were a popular Sudanese vocal group of three sisters, mainly active from 1971 until 1988. Their popular songs and appearance as modern female performers on stage, as well as on Sudanese radio and television, earned them fame all over East Africa and beyond, and they were sometimes referred to as the "Sudanese Supremes". [1]

  7. Igd al-Jalad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igd_al-Jalad

    All through the period of political oppression of public musical activities by the military government and the imposition of Sharia laws starting in the 1980s, [7] Igd al-Jalād have been re-inventing their line-up by including younger musicians and composed new songs, making it one of Sudan's most long-standing and popular music bands. [5] [8]

  8. Abdel Karim al Kabli - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdel_Karim_al_Kabli

    Al Kabli was born in the city of Port Sudan in 1932. [2] During childhood, he developed an interest in the Arabic language, especially old Arabic poems, and learned to play music on a penny whistle. At the age of sixteen, he moved to Khartoum to attend the Khartoum Commercial Secondary School, where he studied Sudanese folk music and Arabic poetry.

  9. Mohammed Wardi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohammed_Wardi

    [4] After the military coup in 1989, he left Sudan for exile in Cairo and Los Angeles. [1] In 1990, Wardi played a concert for 250,000 Sudanese refugees at a refugee camp in Itang , Ethiopia. [ 5 ] He returned to Sudan in May 2002, and was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Khartoum in 2005.