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Lassana is a given name or surname that is an alternative transliteration of Al-Hassan, and may refer to: Lassana Bathily (born 1990), hero of the Porte de Vincennes hostage crisis Lassana Camará (born 1991), Bissau-Guinean footballer
The song has elevated the South African house genre to some extent, and was released with the idea that music can influence a large demography of people across the African continent. [4] " Khona" won several accolades, including Record of the Year at the 20th South African Music Awards and Song of the Year at the 2014 MTV Africa Music Awards .
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It was popularized under the name "The Military" and "El sacalengua" ("he who sticks out his tongue") by DJs fond of African music based in Barranquilla and Cartagena. [ 7 ] The album Zangalewa was named "record of the year" in Cameroon, and in 1993 the Union of African National Television and Radio Organizations awarded it as the year's best ...
Ndivhudzannyi Ralivhona (born 30 June 1996 [1]), known by her stage name Makhadzi, is a South African singer.Born and raised in Ha-Mashamba, Limpopo, her career began at the age of 12 as dancer prior to pursuing a music career as a singer, while she was attending school she signed a record deal with Rita Dee Entertainment and released Muhwalo Uya Ndemela in 2015.
Tyla Laura Seethal [4] was born on 30 January 2002 in Edenvale, Gauteng, [5] [6] to a mixed 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.
Ndivhuwo Elaine Mukheli (born 2 April 1999), known mononymously as Elaine, is a South African R&B singer and songwriter from Pretoria.While studying law at the University of the Witwatersrand, she self-released her debut EP Elements in September 2019. [1]
The music video was released on September 30, 2012 on YouTube.In its second week on YouTube, the video had already reached 2 million views, and by December 25, 2013, the video had reached 26 million views, the most viewed OPM music video of all time on YouTube until April 2018, when Ex Battalion's "Hayaan Mo Sila" overtook "Gayuma".