



Performed by Lola NovakoviÄ in Serbian in 1960.Page's recording and acoustic style generally was heavily influenced by Davy Graham's work. A short version of this was played live by Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page in a BBC session, called 'White Summer/Black Mountainside' (Led Zeppelin Remasters 1). The influential British folk-blues guitarist Davy Graham did his own instrumental jazzy version of the song on his album Folk, Blues and Beyond (1964, bonus track re-issued 2002).Carles Belda performed 'Mustafà català ' in Catalan in Barcelona in 2008.Catalan trumpeter Rudy Ventura covered the song in the early 1960s as 'Mustafà català '.The Lebanese singer Reeda Boutros has also interpreted the song.The American singer and actress Angélica MarÃa made a recording in her album La Magia de Angélica MarÃa.The vocals of Jolly Mukherjee, Mukul Aggarwal and Alka Yagnik were used for the song. The music was adapted by the Indian composers Nadeem-Shravan and appeared in the film Aatish starring Sanjay Dutt, Aditya Pancholi, Raveena Tandon, Karisma Kapoor.In 1975, the Turkish Cypriot actress and singer Nil Burak sang 'Ya Mustafa'.Kyu Sakamoto also sang a version of this song in Japanese.Bruno Gigliotti (also known as Orlando), the brother of the famous singer Dalida and founder of the Orlando record label, also covered the song.In Kosovo, the song was made in Albanian by Muharrem Qena.In Spain, in 1960, the song reached #1 in the charts in two versions sung by Bob Azzam and by José Guardiola.One of the singers to record this song (in 1962) was the JewishâTurkish-French singer DarÃo Moreno.Azzam's version was also a hit on the UK Singles Chart, where it spent 14 weeks and peaked at number 23. In Europe the song became popular with the help of the Egyptian-born Lebanese singer Bob Azzam, who released it in 1960 in France.

The song was very popular in the 1950s and early 1960s, but its popularity is revived with newer versions of the song. The music of the song is influenced by Greek music. There was also a Hindi version used in the soundtrack of a Bollywood film. The song has been performed in many different versions by many different singers worldwide, including Greek ('ÎÎ¿Ï ÏÏαÏά'), Turkish and Serbian ('Mustafa') languages, where they are very popular in the respective countries.
