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Remembering Sudanese Musical Icon Muhammad Al-Amin: A Tribute to a Legend

Sudanese musician Muhammad Al-Amin, who is considered one of the most prominent singers known to the Sudanese artistic scene during the past six decades, died in Virginia, USA.

Thousands of Sudanese mourned Al-Amin, noting that he was the most present, creative and diverse artist in recent decades, as he contributed to shaping the Sudanese conscience through dozens of immortal songs.

Many tweeters regretted the departure of Muhammad Al-Amin away from the homeland, for which he sang so much.

The first public appearance of Muhammad Al-Amin was at the end of the sixties of the last century through the song “Me and My Love,” which for many years remained at the top of the most favorite songs among Sudanese music lovers.

Many critics considered the song “Zad Al-Shajoun,” written by the late journalist Fadlallah Muhammad, as a milestone in highlighting Muhammad Al-Amin’s abilities in classic, emotional melody.

Some accounts point to the role of this song in completely modernizing Sudanese music, as Muhammad Al-Amin froze the song for four years before it was released by the first batch of graduates of the Institute of Music.

Muhammad Al-Amin also contributed to renewing heritage songs, which gained him great popularity.

What distinguished Muhammad Al-Amin most was his high abilities in composing and composing music, which was reflected in more than 50 artistic works.

Immediately after the news of Muhammad Al-Amin’s death spread on Monday morning, thousands of residents and those displaced from the Khartoum war flocked to his family’s home in one of the old neighborhoods of the city of Madani in central Sudan, which turned into an open funeral.

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