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Anjeza Shahini is an Albanian singer, born on the 4 May 1987, who in 2004 represented Albania in its first appearance in the Eurovision Song Contest, with the song The Image Of You, original title Imazhi YtThe image of you
Eurovision 2004 The then 17-year old schoolgirl was plucked from obscurity in 2003 when she competed at the three-day "RTSH" song festival (Festivali i Këngës) at the Tirana Palace of Congress in December. Along with 29 other singers, she vied to win the public vote to represent the Balkan state for the first time at the Eurovision Song Contest in Istanbul in 2004, singing the song "Imazhi Yt" (TheImage of you)a synthesised pop tune. After two preliminary rounds, the singers faced a final vote by jury and Albanian television viewers' televote. The interval act at these national finals was actually the previous winner Sertab Erener.
At the end of the final on 20th December, hosts Adi Krasta and Ledina Çelo presented Anjeza with her special ticket for 12th May: a place in the Eurovision semi-final in Istanbul. The victory was well received by the Albanian public.
The song, originally four and a half minutes in length, was translated into English and re-named "The Image of You", and Anjeza Shahini was also forced to sing the song at one-and-a-half times it's original tempo to bring the song in at the time of three minutes, as stipulated by the EBU, controllers of the Eurovision. A verse was also cut from the Albanian version to bring it in at three minutes.
Anjeza sang in the semi-final first, using singers which had lost out at the original selection procedure for backup, and finished fourth out of twenty-two (a top ten finished would secure a place in the final). She was, therefore, qualified, and she sang live on the Final night in May, alongside twenty-four other countries. The performance was very well received by the Turkish audience.
Anjeza Shahini finished a respectable seventh on the night, with an excellent total of 106 points, behind Ukraine, Sweden, Greece, Turkey, Cyprus, and newcomer Serbia and Montenegro, and just before Eurovision veterans like Germany, United Kingdom and Ireland.
"The Image of You" has since been adopted into Eurovision camp culture. On one Internet voting site after the contest, the song was voted second-best, with Sakis Rouvas' Greek offering at Number One. Surprisingly, Ruslana, the actual winner, only just broke the Top Ten.
In 2005 she signed a contract with an artists management based in Vienna for an international career and announced her intention to participate at the "National Song Festival" (Festivali i Këngës), the Albanian selction process for the Eurovision Song Contest 2006.
With the song "Pse Ndal" Shahini made it through the two semi-finals to the last twenty at the National Final and was one of the favorites to win. The final show evening aired on the 18th December 2005, where the winner was announced as the song "Fire and Cold", by Luiz Ejlli. This result provocated something of a big outcry in Albania, as well-known domestic Albanian singers, like Anjeza, failed to win, and even prompted accusations of jury bias.
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Leonora Jakupi (born 3 March 1978 in Skenderaj, Kosovo) is an ethnic Albanian singer.
She is one of the most popular commercial singers among ethnic Albanians in Kosovo, Albania, Macedonia and Montenegro. Today Leonora lives in Kosovo's capital Prishtina. She lost her father during the Kosovo war (1998-1999). Her repertoire includes a wide variety of material including commercial pop and patriotic songs. She is not married.
Her most popular song, without any doubt, is “Can innocence be killed?”(A vritet pafajsia?) published in 1998 while Leonora was a refugee in Albania. She dedicated the song to her father killed by Serbs during the so-called Kosovo war and other Albanians with same desitiny.
ALBUMS
“Leonora Jakupi” (1997) “Sahara and Roe deer” (double) (Sahara dhe Kaprolle) (2001) “Everything different” (Krejt ndryshe) (2003) “Leonora” (Leonora) (2005)
LEONORA JAKUPI HITS
"Sahara" (Sahara) "A vritet pafajsia?" (Can innocence be killed) "Ti nuk egziston" (You do not exist) "Ende të dua" (Still love you) "As mos provo" (Do not even try)
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Pirro Çako is an Albanian artist born in Tirana to Gaqo and Luiza Çako, tenor and soprano respectively. He is known as a composer and singer.
He graduated from Academy of Arts at Tirana and later went to Ecole Normale de Musique de Paris to get his degree for film music composing.
His duet with Rovena Dilo Për një çast më ndali zemra is one of his great performances, for what he is popular among the Albanian World. In the meantime, E duam lumturinë, a song written by Çako, won the Albanian Song Contest 1988 and has now transformed into an anthem of the children [1].
Pirro published his first album Herët a vonë (Soon or Late) in June 2004. It contains 15 songs, solos and duos with Rovena Dilo, Mariza Ikonomi, Redon Makashi as well as Pirro's wife Inva Mula, a well-known soprano. Albanian and foreigners who rushed to purchase a copy have found the album attractive.
The recent work has been published on the second album Mos më krahaso (Don't Compare Me) is a set of 12 songs, including the joyful Letër Dashurie.
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Adelina Ismajli, born in Prishtina, Kosovo on 14 December 1979, is one the most popular female Albanian pop artists throughout Albania, Kosovo, Macedonia and Montenegro.
Ismajli is best known for her controversial and political songs and lyrics, including “Uragan Çohen Krenarët,” “Në Kosovë Luhet Kumorë,” and “Skenderbe.” She is also highly recognized as a sex symbol for her outrageous sexually explicit videos and performances on Albanian local television.
Ismajli’s records, including four chart-topping albums (100% Zeshkane, S'jam Sex Bombë, Prej Fillimit, and Mbretëreshë E Robëreshë), have become instant successes and best sellers in Albania, Kosovo, Malesi, and the United States.
Ismajli also has a younger sister, Zanfina Ismajli, who is also a singer.
Video News
Video is the technology of capturing, recording, processing, transmitting, and reconstructing moving pictures, typically using celluloid film, electronic signals, or digital media, primarily for viewing on television or computer monitors.
Video Game
A video game is a computer game where a video display such as a monitor or television is the primary feedback device. The term "computer game" also includes games which display only text (and which can therefore theoretically be played on a teletypewriter) or which use other methods, such as sound or vibration, as their primary feedback device, but there are very few new games in these categories. There always must also be some sort of input device, usually in the form of button/joystick combinations (on arcade games), a keyboard & mouse/trackball combination (computer games), or a controller (console games), or a combination of any of the above. Also, more esoteric devices have been used for input (see also Game controller). Usually there are rules and goals, but in more open-ended games the player may be free to do whatever they like within the confines of the virtual universe.
NOTESBlues - The Blues is a vocal and instrumental music form which emerged in the African-American community of
the United States. Blues evolved from West African spirituals, work songs, field hollers, shouts and chants and has
its earliest stylistic roots in West Africa. This musical form has been a major influence on later American and Western
popular music, finding expression in ragtime, jazz, big bands, rhythm and blues, rock and roll and country music, as well
as conventional pop songs and even modern classical music. Due to its powerful influence that spawned other major musical
genres originating from America, blues can be regarded as the root of pop as well as American music. Hip Hop/Rap - Hip hop music (also referred to as rap or rap music) is a style of popular music. It is made up of two
main components: rapping (MCing) and DJing (audio mixing and scratching). Along with breakdancing and graffiti (tagging)
these are the four elements of hip hop, a cultural movement that was initiated by inner-city youth (mostly minorities such
as African Americans and Latinos) in New York City in the early 1970s. Typically, hip hop music consists of one or more rappers
who tell semi-autobiographic tales, often relating to a fictionalized counterpart, in an intensely rhythmic lyrical form making
abundant use of techniques like assonance, alliteration, and rhyme. The rapper is accompanied by an instrumental track, usually
referred to as a "beat", performed by a DJ, created by a producer, or one or more instrumentalists. This beat is often created
using a sample of the percussion break of another song, usually a funk, rock, or soul recording. In addition to the beat other
sounds are often sampled, synthesized, or performed. Sometimes a track can be instrumental, as a showcase of the skills of the
DJ or producer. Rhythm and Blues - Rhythm and blues is a name for black popular music tradition. When speaking strictly of "rhythm 'n' blues",
the term may refer to black pop-music from 1940s to 1960s that was not jazz nor blues but something more lightweight. The term "R&B"
often refers to any contemporary black pop music. Early-1950s R&B music became popular with both black and white audiences, and
popular records were often covered by white artists, leading to the development of rock and roll.A notable subgenre of
rhythm 'n' blues was doo-wop, which put emphasis on polyphonic singing. In the early 1960s rhythm 'n' blues took influences from
gospel and rock and roll and thus soul music was born. In the late 1960s, funk music started to evolve out of soul; by the 1970s
funk had become its own subgenre that stressed complex, "funky" rhythm patterns and monotonistic compositions based on a riff or two.
In the early to mid 1970s, hip hop music (also known as "rap") grew out of funk and reggae. Funk and soul music evolved into
contemporary R&B (no longer an acronym) in the 1980s, which cross-pollinated with hip-hop for the rest of the 20th century and
into the 21st century.