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"Yah" (stylized as "YAH.") is a song by American rapper Kendrick Lamar, from his fourth studio album DAMN, released on April 14, 2017. The third track on the album (twelfth on the Collector's Edition of Damn), [2] the song was written by Lamar, Mark Spears, a.k.a. Sounwave, DJ Dahi, and Anthony Tiffith, and produced by, Sounwave, DJ Dahi, and Tiffith, with additional production by Bēkon.
"Yah Yah Yah / Yume no Bannin" (YAH YAH YAH/夢の番人) is a single by Japanese popular music duo Chage and Aska. It was released on March 3, 1993. [ 1 ] It was number-one on the Oricon Weekly Singles Chart . [ 2 ]
Yah may refer to: Jah, shortened form of Yahweh, the Hebrew name for God; Iah, ancient Egyptian male lunar deity; YAH, The IATA code for La Grande-4 Airport in northern Quebec, Canada; Yazgulyam language, by ISO 639 code "Yah" (song), by Kendrick Lamar from his album Damn
"Guillotine (It Goes Yah)" is a song by American experimental hip-hop group Death Grips, released as the lead single from their debut mixtape, Exmilitary. It was released on August 3, 2011. It was released on August 3, 2011.
Frey said the Cunninghams then toured America singing the song with the text "Kum Ba Yah". [1] The story of an African origin for the phrase circulated in several versions, spread also by the revival group the Folksmiths, whose liner notes for the song stated that "Kum Ba Yah" was brought to America from Angola. [1] As Winick points out, however:
The song was written by Beyoncé, The-Dream, Jay-Z, Arlo Parks, Cadenza, Harry Edwards, and Klara Mkhatshwa Munk-Hansen, and produced by Beyoncé, The-Dream, Harry Edwards and Cadenza. The track interpolates Nancy Sinatra 's " These Boots Are Made for Walkin' " (1966) written by Lee Hazlewood and The Beach Boys ' " Good Vibrations " (1966 ...
Jah or Yah (Hebrew: יָהּ , Yāh) is a short form of the tetragrammaton יהוה (YHWH), the personal name of God: Yahweh, which the ancient Israelites used. The conventional Christian English pronunciation of Jah is / ˈ dʒ ɑː / , even though the letter J here transliterates the palatal approximant (Hebrew י Yodh ).
Written by Jeff Lynne in 1971, it was one of two songs featured on the B-side of the UK hit "California Man" credited to The Move (the other was Roy Wood's "Ella James"). In the United States the B-side proved more popular than the A and so the song became the group's only US hit, albeit a minor one (reaching number 93 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart). [3]