Tomorrow (A Better You, Better Me)

"Tomorrow"
Song by The Brothers Johnson
Length 2:58
Label A&M Records
"Tomorrow (A Better You, Better Me)"
Single by Quincy Jones featuring Tevin Campbell
from the album Back on the Block
Released November 10, 1989
Recorded 1989
Genre R&B
Length 4:46
Label Qwest
Writer(s) Siedah Garrett, George Johnson, Louis Johnson
Producer(s) Quincy Jones
Quincy Jones chronology
"The Secret Garden (Sweet Seduction Suite)"
(1990)
"Tomorrow (A Better You, A Better Me)"
(1990)
"I Don't Go for That "
(1990)
Tevin Campbell singles chronology
"Tomorrow (A Better You, A Better Me)"
(1990)
"Round and Round"
(1990)

"Tomorrow (A Better You, a Better Me)" is a song originally recorded by The Brothers Johnson as an instrumental in 1976 on the album Look Out for #1. In 1989, Siedah Garrett wrote lyrics to the song, and it was recorded by Quincy Jones featuring Tevin Campbell on vocals for the album Back on the Block.

The new version of the song spent one week at number one on the US R&B chart and peaked at number seventy-five on the US pop chart in February 1990.[1] It was Campbell's first number-one R&B single and first single to enter the Billboard Hot 100.

In 1990, jazz fusion Nelson Rangell covered the song from his self-titled album.[2]

"Tomorrow-Bokra"
Single by Ahmed Al Jumairi, Ahmed Hussein, Akon, Asma Lmnawar, Cheb Jilani, Diana Karazon, Essa Al Kubaisi, Fahad Al Kubaissi, Fayez Al Saeed, Hani Mitwasi, Hasna Zallagh, Hayat Al Idrissi, Kadim Al Sahir, Latifa, Marwan Khoury, Nassif Zaitoun, Rim Banna, Saber Rebaï, Salah Al Zadjali, Sherine, Soud Massi, Tamer Hosny, Waed.
Released November 2011
Label Global Gumbo Group
Writer(s) Majida El Roumi
Producer(s) Quincy Jones, RedOne

Tomorrow-Bokra

Tomorrow / Bokra (Arabic: بكرا) is the Arab version of the song which is produced by Quincy Jones, RedOne & Badr Jafar.

The lyrics were written by the Lebanese singer Majida El Roumi and music was rearranged by Kadim Al Sahir.

The music video was directed by Malek Akkad son of deceased Arab film director Moustapha Akkad. It features the artists performing their sections of the song in close-ups or collectively and children running and / or playing sports.

The song featured 24 Arab singers representing 16 Arab nations across the Middle East and North Africa plus Akon and Shakira who introduced it.

The singers taking part are: (in alphabetical order of family name)

Country Singer Singer name
in Arabic
 Egypt Sherine Abdel Wahab (aka Sherine) شيرين عبد الوهاب
 Senegal Akon إيكون
 Palestine Rim Banna ريم بنا
 Kuwait Ahmed Hussein أحمد حسين
 Egypt Tamer Hosny تامر حسني
 Morocco Hayat Al Idrissi حياة الإدريسي
 Libya Cheb Jilani شاب جيلاني
 Bahrain Ahmed Al Jumairi أحمد الجميري
 Jordan Diana Karazon ديانا كرزون
 Lebanon Marwan Khoury مروان خوري
 Qatar Essa Al Kubaisi عيسى الكبيسي
 Qatar Fahad Al Kubaissi فهد الكبيسي
 Tunisia Latifa لطيفة
 Morocco Asma Lmnawar أسماء المنور
 Lebanon Mashael مشاعل
 Algeria Souad Massi سعاد ماسي
 Jordan Hani Mitwasi هاني متواسي
 Tunisia Saber Rebaï صابر الرباعي
 UAE Fayez Al Saeed فايز السعيد
 Iraq Kazem Al Saher كاظم الساهر
 Saudi Arabia Waed وعد
 Oman Salah Al Zadjali صلاح الزدجالي
 Morocco Hasna Zallagh حسناء زلاغ
 Syria Nassif Zaitoun ناصيف الزيتون

See also

References

  1. Whitburn, Joel (2004). Top R&B/Hip-Hop Singles: 1942-2004. Record Research. p. 307.
  2. "Nelson Rangell overview". Allmusic.com.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, February 04, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.