Tul8te

Tul8te
Born
Egypt
Genres
Occupations
  • Singer
  • rapper
  • songwriter
  • record producer
InstrumentVocals

Tul8te (Arabic: تووليت‎; stylized as TUL8TE), is an Egyptian singer, rapper, songwriter and record producer. He has released three studio albums, one live album and one EP.

Career

Tul8te rose to fame with "Layalina," from his debut studio album, Tesh Shabab (2024), which earned him his first top five spot on the Egyptian charts of the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry.[2][3]

His studio second album, entitled Cocktail Ghena'y,[2] was released the following July. It placed five tracks in the national top ten and two in the Middle Eastern top ten simultaneously.[3] Additionally, "Mateegy A3ady Aleiky" dethroned his own "Habeeby Leh", marking his second number one in his home country.[3] "Habeeby Leh", however, returned to the top spot for five consecutive weeks.[4] Tul8te earned six nominations at Billboard's Arabic Music Gala, where at the ceremony, he took home his first award.[5][6] He was then busy with a world tour, which concluded in April 2025.[7]

Discography

Studio albums

  • 2024 – Tesh Shabab
  • 2024 – Cocktail Ghena'y
  • 2025 – Narein

Live albums

  • 2024 – Cocktail Ghena'y: Live Session

Extended plays

  • 2023 – Maghool

Singles

  • 2022 – Model El Sana
  • 2022 – 3enaya Betelma3
  • 2022 – Mohy El Din Mosadak
  • 2022 – Doctor Nafsany
  • 2025 – Qesm El Shakawy
  • 2025 – El Hob Gany[8]

References

  1. ^ Danny Hajjar (8 October 2024). "Get To Know TUL8TE, The Rising Arab Pop Star Bringing Egyptian Culture To The World". Grammy Awards. Retrieved 1 May 2025.
  2. ^ a b Federico Romagnoli (27 January 2025). "Tul8te - Cocktail Ghena'y (Album + Live Session)". Ondarock. Retrieved 1 May 2025.
  3. ^ a b c "This Week's Official MENA Chart Top 20". The Official MENA Chart. Retrieved 1 May 2025. Selezionare "2024" e "W32" come periodo di riferimento, e successivamente il mercato di interesse.
  4. ^ "This Week's Official MENA Chart Top 20". The Official MENA Chart. Retrieved 1 May 2025. Selezionare "2024" e "W38" come periodo di riferimento, e successivamente "Egypt".
  5. ^ Hala Mustafa (3 December 2024). "Finalists Revealed for the First Ever Billboard Arabia Music Awards". Billboard. Retrieved 1 May 2025.
  6. ^ Maha ElNabawi (13 December 2024). "The Inaugural Billboard Arabia Music Awards: The 2024 Winners and Highlights". Billboard. Retrieved 1 May 2025.
  7. ^ Sara Ibrahim (19 March 2025). "TUL8TE Asks You to See the Sound, Not the Person". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 1 May 2025.
  8. ^ Al Saadi, Leen. "The 15 Best Arabic Songs of 2025". Vogue Arabia. Retrieved 23 March 2026.