Related changes

Enter a page name to see changes on pages linked to or from that page. (To see members of a category, enter Category:Name of category). Changes to pages on your Watchlist are shown in bold with a green bullet. See more at Help:Related changes.

Recent changes options Show last 50 | 100 | 250 | 500 changes in last 1 | 3 | 7 | 14 | 30 days
Hide registered users | Hide unregistered users | Hide my edits | Show bots | Hide minor edits | Show page categorization | Show Wikidata | Hide probably good edits
Show new changes starting from 16:25, 31 May 2024
 
Page name:
List of abbreviations (help):
D
Edit made at Wikidata
r
Edit flagged by ORES
N
New page
m
Minor edit
b
Bot edit
(±123)
Page byte size change
Temporarily watched page

31 May 2024

30 May 2024

  • diffhist Copenhagen 23:42 +52601:843:8100:5540:28a0:5e6:e25d:86e5 talkTags: Reverted Mobile edit Mobile app edit Android app edit
  • diffhist Senegal 19:08 +179Nasir Hussain Bhakkri talk contribs(Added a link to Morocco senegal relations wikipedia article.) Tag: Visual edit
  • diffhist Senegal 17:39 02a02:c7c:ca05:7600:802b:b11e:1930:a2cf talk(→‎Culture)
  • diffhist m Mbalax 15:09 −4Arjayay talk contribs(Sp)
  • diffhist Mbalax 04:47 +404AnomieBOT talk contribs(Rescuing orphaned refs ("coonnol" from rev 1226351172; "Sturman" from rev 1226351172))
  • diffhist Mbalax 02:45 −7Yoro Ka talk contribs(→‎References: Erni, Corinne. “Rhythms of Changes: From the Sabar to the Mbalax.” Black Renaissance 2.1 (1998): 35. ProQuest. 9 Dec. 2020 .Mangin, Timothy Roark. “Mbalax: Cosmopolitanism in Senegalese Urban Popular Music.” Dissertation Abstracts International Section A: Humanities and Social Sciences, vol. 74, no. 6–A(E), ProQuest Information & Learning, 2013. EBSCOhost, search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=psyh&AN=2013-99230-412&site=eds) Tag: Visual edit
  • diffhist Mbalax 02:41 −576Yoro Ka talk contribs(refocused the music back on the Wolof. See: {{hlist|sabar|[[jazz]|[[Afro Cuban}} 1 Erni, Corinne. “Rhythms of Changes: From the Sabar to the Mbalax.” Black Renaissance 2.1 (1998): 2 Mangin, Timothy Roark. “Mbalax: Cosmopolitanism in Senegalese Urban Popular Music.” Dissertation Abstracts International Section A: Humanities and Social Sciences, vol. 74, no. 6–A(E), ProQuest Information & Learning, 2013. EBSCOhost, search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=psyh&AN=2013-99230-412&site=eds) Tags: references removed Visual edit
  • diffhist Mbalax 02:27 +658Yoro Ka talk contribs(Mbalax is solidly a music of the Wolof, sung in Wolof, played on Wolof drums and Wolof instruments. Calling it a music of the Serer is incorrect. The previous editor cited a blog post and an author who specializes in Mexican music. the corrections can be verified by Afropop.org, interviews of the top mbalax performers including Youssou N'Dour, Omar Pine, Thione Seck, and Cheikh Lo. Ethnomusicologists: Isabe Leymarie, Timothy Mangin, Patricia Tang,) Tag: Visual edit

29 May 2024

28 May 2024

27 May 2024

26 May 2024

25 May 2024