Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Erediauwa was born on 22 June 1923, son of Oba Akenzua II. Before being crowned he was known as Prince Solomon Aiseokhuoba Igbinoghodua Akenzua. He attended Government College, Ibadan (1939–1945), then Yaba College, before going to King's College, Cambridge to study Law and Administration. He joined the Eastern Nigeria Civil Service in 1957 ...
His chosen title was founded on the name Ere, relating to Oba Eresonye who is traditionally considered to be an incredibly wealthy Oba. [ 1 ] Akenzua's descendants include his daughter Princess Elizabeth Olowu , grandson Oba Ewuare II , great-grandson Crown Prince Ezelekhae Ewuare , granddaughter Peju Layiwola , and grandson Thompson Iyamu ...
On 3 May 2017, the first single of the film "DJ Saranam Bhaje Bhaje" was released through the YouTube channel of Aditya Music, the music label which bought the film's audio rights. [10] The promo of the song " Gudilo Badilo Madilo Vodilo " was unveiled on 15 May, [ 11 ] [ 12 ] and two days later, on 17 May 2017, the full song was released and ...
He began his music career in early 2007 DJing in South Africa alongside local acts like Black Coffee [5] and international visitors like Louie Vega and Rocco. [6] Following his forays in DJing, Culoe De Song began exploring production where he collaborated with Black Coffee on the track "100 Zulu Warriors", who included the tunes tribal aural assault on his second album Have Another One.
Dassanayake worked as a music director and Music Inspector in Anuradhapura, Polonnaruwa, Vavuniya, Trincomalee, Jaffna districts in 1966. [7] They married in December 1970. In 1977, he was appointed as the Deputy Director of Aesthetic Education in the Colombo District, while his wife worked as a music instructor at Lumbini Vidyalaya.
"Ex" was written by Gjata and Bardhi along with DJ Gimi-O and Çelik Lipa, who also produced the song. [4] Musically, "Ex" is an upbeat tempo Balkan and Mediterranean-infused Albanian pop love song. [2] The song's production was noted as "modern" and "pleasant", while incorporating oriental drums and a Middle Eastern-styled beat. [2]
Past and present cast members from "Saturday Night Live" reveal what really goes on behind the scenes.
One of the main innovations of Oba Kò So was that it departed from the traditional Yoruba folk opera and entered into a new postcolonial chapter of Yoruba theater that aimed to reclaim the traditional Yoruba poetry, music, and dance rituals that were denounced by the European colonial powers that promoted the retelling of stories from the ...