List of Kabyle People - Musicians

Musicians

  • Edith Piaf, french singer/actress Kabyle grandmother, French singer
  • Abderrahmane Abdelli, singer
  • Myriam Abel, winner of Nouvelle Star season 3.
  • Kenza Farah, french singer
  • Mohya, Kabyle folk poet, and theatre
  • Lounis Ait Menguellet, singer
  • Idir, singer
  • Lounes Matoub, Berberist and secularist singer assassinated In 1998.
  • Si M'Hand Oum'Hand, Kabyle folk poet
  • Daniel Prévost, actor, Kabyle father
  • Salah Sadaoui, singer
  • Takfarinas, singer
  • Rim'K, rapper
  • Tyssem, singer, one Kabyle parent
  • Malika Domrane, singer
  • Djamel Allam, singer
  • Chennoud, singer
  • Akli Yahyaten, singer
  • Akli D, singer
  • Mohamed el Anka, singer
  • Kamel Messaoudi, singer
  • Marcel Mouloudji, singer, actor, writer, artist
  • Rabah MBS, Rap artist
  • Zahra N'soumer, singer
  • Cherif kheddam, singer
  • Cheikh el Hasnaoui, singer
  • Hamdi Bennani, singer
  • Brahim Izri, singer
  • Tagrawla, kabyle band
  • Taous Amrouche, singer
  • Rouiched, actor
  • Sid Ahmed Agoumi, actor
  • So­ Massi, singer
  • Chrifa, singer
  • Hnifa, singer
  • Boudjemaa Agraw, singer
  • Oulahlou, singer

Read more about this topic:  List Of Kabyle People

Famous quotes containing the word musicians:

    We stand in the tumult of a festival.
    What festival? This loud, disordered mooch?
    These hospitaliers? These brute-like guests?
    These musicians dubbing at a tragedy,
    A-dub, a-dub, which is made up of this:
    That there are no lines to speak? There is no play.
    Wallace Stevens (1879–1955)

    How are we to know that a Dracula is a key-pounding pianist who lifts his hands up to his face, or that a bass fiddle is the doghouse, or that shmaltz musicians are four-button suit guys and long underwear boys?
    In New York City, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)

    Music is of two kinds: one petty, poor, second-rate, never varying, its base the hundred or so phrasings which all musicians understand, a babbling which is more or less pleasant, the life that most composers live.
    Honoré De Balzac (1799–1850)