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What do these songs mean?

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Romanian song
Come with me in Bangladesh
‘Cause with me you need no cash
Everybody brings somebody
Until now we dance, we dance

Come with me in Bangladesh
‘Cause with me you need no cash
Everybody brings somebody
Until now we dance, we dance

Come with me in Bangladesh
‘Cause with me you need no cash
Everybody brings somebody
Until now we dance, we dance

Come with me in Bangladesh
‘Cause with me you need no cash
Everybody brings somebody
Until now we dance, we dance

Come with me in Bangladesh
Come with me in Bangladesh

Come with me in Bangladesh
‘Cause with me you need no cash
Everybody brings somebody
Until now we dance, we dance

Come with me in Bangladesh
Come with me in Bangladesh

Come with me in Bangladesh
‘Cause with me you need no cash
Everybody brings somebody
Until now we dance, we dance
 
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Whoa.. .WTF :eek::-)

I have noticed that there is this Romanian trend of cheap beat-dependent (kind of Trashy) music complete with half dressed women...no offense.

What happens when you have talent in short supply, and musical equivalent of junk food...

I am not familiar with the back story....
 
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By the way, these songs have nothing to do with the People`s Republic of Bangladesh.
'Bangladesh is the name given to an area of Malatia-Sebastia district (population 141,900) in the Armenian capital of Yerevan.'
Why Malatia-Sebastia district was named as Bangladesh? Given that Armenia's total population is about 3 million, a district of more than 141k people is a big in that country. I am aware about naming some places of a country to the other country's famous place or individual. For example, there are multiple Paris in the United States. But they are rather small towns.
 
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By the way, these songs have nothing to do with the People`s Republic of Bangladesh.
'Bangladesh is the name given to an area of Malatia-Sebastia district (population 141,900) in the Armenian capital of Yerevan.'
What does Bangladesh mean in Armenian? 🤔
Whoa.. .WTF :eek::-)

I have noticed that there is this Romanian trend of cheap beat-dependent (kind of Trashy) music complete with half dressed women...no offense.

What happens when you have talent in short supply, and musical equivalent of junk food...

I am not familiar with the back story....
Enjoy the show brother, when you can’t beat em, join em or be left behind... world has changed a lot, this is normal now
 
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Come with me in Bangladesh
‘Cause with me you need no cash
Everybody brings somebody
Until now we dance, we dance

Come with me in Bangladesh
‘Cause with me you need no cash
Everybody brings somebody
Until now we dance, we dance

Come with me in Bangladesh
‘Cause with me you need no cash
Everybody brings somebody
Until now we dance, we dance

Come with me in Bangladesh
‘Cause with me you need no cash
Everybody brings somebody
Until now we dance, we dance

Come with me in Bangladesh
Come with me in Bangladesh

Come with me in Bangladesh
‘Cause with me you need no cash
Everybody brings somebody
Until now we dance, we dance

Come with me in Bangladesh
Come with me in Bangladesh

Come with me in Bangladesh
‘Cause with me you need no cash
Everybody brings somebody
Until now we dance, we dance
Has no meaning whatsoever 🤔
A local or a Bangladeshi student studying there could shed light on this aspect.
I reckon it has something to do with Armenian living in Bengal for hundreds of years
 
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Romanian trend of cheap beat-dependent (kind of Trashy) music
But no one can beat the beat of Taheri Hujur's Dj song. :D It is a big trend now in Bangladesh. Can be heard almost in every party or festival now a days.
 
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Best
Why Malatia-Sebastia district was named as Bangladesh? Given that Armenia's total population is about 3 million, a district of more than 141k people is a big in that country. I am aware about naming some places of a country to the other country's famous place or individual. For example, there are multiple Paris in the United States. But they are rather small towns.

"Never having visited the Republic of Bangladesh, my reflections are probably missing a certain something. Nevertheless I began to ask about the suburb’s unofficial name. “Why is it called Bangladesh?” mimicked a colleague, incredulous. “Because it’s hot, poor, far away, and nobody knows much about it.” Sadly, it seemed that the nickname was pejorative, although anthropologist Lilit Mirzoyan, in a small article on Yerevan’s unofficial toponyms, had another explanation. The name arose around the time when Bangladesh gained its independence from Pakistan in 1971 after a vicious military campaign against Bengali nationalists. Mirzoyan also noted that there was a district known as Hindkastan (India), so called because the Hayreniq cinema often showed Indian films in the 1970s, those exiting the local metro station sometimes being greeted by music from the subcontinent. There was however no Pakistan amongst Yerevan’s suburbs; understandable given that Pakistan is one of a handful of countries which does not recognise Armenia as an independent state."
 
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. . .
Come with me in Bangladesh
‘Cause with me you need no cash
Everybody brings somebody
Until now we dance, we dance

Come with me in Bangladesh
‘Cause with me you need no cash
Everybody brings somebody
Until now we dance, we dance

Come with me in Bangladesh
‘Cause with me you need no cash
Everybody brings somebody
Until now we dance, we dance

Come with me in Bangladesh
‘Cause with me you need no cash
Everybody brings somebody
Until now we dance, we dance

Come with me in Bangladesh
Come with me in Bangladesh

Come with me in Bangladesh
‘Cause with me you need no cash
Everybody brings somebody
Until now we dance, we dance

Come with me in Bangladesh
Come with me in Bangladesh

Come with me in Bangladesh
‘Cause with me you need no cash
Everybody brings somebody
Until now we dance, we dance

She probably loves shopping for new clothing.
Hands up who clicked on the second song and ignored the first one altogether...
:astagh:
 
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