
Marwan Moussa Is Not Holding Back: 'The Man Who Lost His Heart' Will Shatter You
After kicking things off with 'BOSAKBER' music video, Marwan Moussa is pulling back the curtain even further. With three new tracks — 'Fahman Donia' , 'El 3nwan' , and 'Fawateer El 3etab' — he's offering a raw, emotional preview of 'الرجل الذي فقد قلبه' album, set to drop on May 5.
What These Early Tracks Tell Us
These three tracks show us Moussa's mind at war with itself: against the world, his memories, and even his own thoughts. The lyrics are full of personal questions, moments of doubt, and raw honesty. Moussa pulls us in with every detail, making his internal chaos something we can all feel.
Tracks Highlights
'Fahman Donia'
From the line — 'وأنا فهمان دنيا، إزاي أتخض؟' — Moussa puts you in his head, where thoughts race and nothing feels certain. The song is fast, almost dizzying, capturing the feeling of being overwhelmed. Lines like 'هل فعلًا دي قافلتي؟ أنا شكلي محتاج Therapy' show someone who's not hiding his confusion. He's openly lost, and he's saying it out loud.
The nod to Fairuz in 'صباح ومسا، تركت الحب وأخَدت الآذى' hits hard. It's as if he's taking classic Arab sadness and making it his own — more personal, more modern.
'Fawateer El 3etab' The most emotionally devastating of the three. Written after the death of his mother, this track feels like real-time grief. 'العمر مسروق والبَدَن مسموم، العقل متكتّف والقلب مسجون' hits like a punch to the gut.
The final 30 seconds — just music — feel like a moment of silence for everything left unsaid. The violin doesn't just accompany the pain — it becomes it.
One fan captured it perfectly: 'This track doesn't have a music video because everyone has their own. ' And it's true — Moussa gives you the space to project your own heartbreak onto his.
'El 3nwan'
If 'Fawateer El 3etab' is about facing pain, 'El 3nwan' is about escaping it. The track feels like floating outside your own body, watching your thoughts without being part of them. The music is light but still full of layers, wrapping around you. Moussa's voice is quiet, like he's speaking to himself but letting you overhear. There's no big moment; it's more like getting lost in the feeling. Even after the song ends, it lingers in your mind.
If 'الرجل الذي فقد قلبه' starts like this, we're in for something deeply personal and emotional. Marwan Moussa isn't just making music — he's laying bare his thoughts, even the ones most artists would keep hidden. If these three tracks are any indication, the full album won't just be something we hear — it'll be something we feel.

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