Maloum
Studio album by
ReleasedFebruary 11, 1999
Recorded1998
GenreArabic Pop
LabelRelax-In International
Nawal Al Zoghbi chronology
Mandam Aleik
(1998)
Maloum
(1999)
El Layali
(2000)
Singles from Maloum
  1. "Ghayarli Hayati"
    Released: February 3, 1999
  2. "Maloum"
    Released: June 6, 1999
  3. "Dal'ouna"
    Released: September 9, 1999
  4. "Tia"
    Released: January 8, 2000

Maloum (Arabic: مالوم) is the sixth Arabic language album by Nawal Al Zoghbi, released in 1999 produced by Relax-In international. It was released 1 year after the previous album Mandam Aleik.[1] The biggest hit of this album remains "Dal'ouna" which was one of the best songs of the year 1999. Nawal sang this song on various TV shows including "Ya Leil Ya Ein", "A tribute to Lebanese President", "LBCI Anniversary Show" and "New Year's Eve Special" on MTV.

Track listing

# Title Composer Arranger Lyricist
1 Dal'ouna September 9, 1999 Marwan Khoury Roger Khoury
2 Maloum June 6, 1999 George Mardirosian Roger Khoury
3 Enshallah June 1, 1999 Tareq Aref Salah El Sharnoubi
4 Tia January 8, 2000 Marwan Khoury Boudy Naom
5 Ghayarli hayati February 3, 1999 Tony Abi Karam Jean Marie Ryashi
6 Thanbi ya nas November 9, 1999 George Mardirosian Roger Khoury
7 Kalam El Lail October 11, 1999 Ahmad Darweesh Sameer Sfair

Music videos

  • Ghayarli hayati
  • Maloum (I don't blame you)

This shows Nawal running everywhere including Paris and a stranded island from her lover who was stalking her. Video on YouTube

  • Dal'ouna

Nawal is surrounded by dancers with the Greek them, the video was filmed in Prague.

  • Tia

Tia, Nawal's daughter is in the video and it shows a lot of Nawal's touchable moments with her one and only daughter.

Versions

  • Three years after the release of this album, the bosnian singer Selma Bajrami made a bosnian version of Maloum entitled "Žena sirena" (Mermaid woman), that was released as part of the tracklist of her 2002 album, entitled Žena sa Balkana.[2]

References

  1. "Malom (Nawal Album 1999)". Archived from the original on 2016-10-12. Retrieved 2013-01-15.
  2. Zena Sirena, archived from the original on 2021-12-15, retrieved 2020-02-02
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