Barbra Streisand celebrates Paul McCartney's birthday with sweet message
The Beatles icon turned 83 on Wednesday, and in a message shared via Instagram, he thanked fans for helping "celebrate this special day". While in her own birthday tribute, Barbra posted a photo of herself and Paul sitting in a recording studio. "To Paul... Happy Birthday. Hope you're celebrating with a little help from your friends... including me. xo Barbra," she wrote, referring to the 1967 Beatles hit, With a Little Help from My Friends. Barbra, 83, also shared the image via Instagram Stories with the song as the soundtrack.
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Known to fans as Baraka the Kid, he sings in English and Swahili, and his rap music is finding an audience worldwide. "My biggest following is Nigeria, South Africa, and the United States," he said. "Australia sits at number four." Baraka is proud to contribute to the expanding Australian music industry, which grew in revenue by 6 per cent year-on-year in 2024, marking six consecutive annual gains, according to industry body ARIA. Overall, the Australian music industry generates revenues of $8.78 billion according to a recent report released by the federal government body Music Australia. It provides the first comprehensive measure of the economic contribution of Australia's music industry, and includes data from industry, government, and over 1,000 individuals and businesses working across the music industry. It found that streaming dominates the market, accounting for more than 70 per cent of all revenue. 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"In the past, the Australian music industry felt very white, very male-dominated, very rock-oriented. "Because GRID is open-minded, it supports diverse artists and genres. Their music tells stories of people coming from other countries, particularly from war-torn countries and places where life is a struggle," Ma said. For Baraka, who quit a full-time job in construction to chase his music dream, recent success is sweet, but his goal is to touch people through his songs. "Joel Ma told me that being Congolese and speaking Swahili makes my music unique," he said. "So, each song has a story. It is either something that I experienced or that someone close to me has experienced. "I put that into the music and people relate, they say 'oh wait, I've been through that too'. And so they connect. "They also send me messages which might be little in text, but they are big in heart. "And it makes me feel good that so many people are able to open up by hearing my words," he said. 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