
"Shlyakh dodomu" ( Ukrainian: «Шлях додо́му», English: "The way home") was released as the second single on. On 26 March 2015, "Ochyma" was released as the lead single from her third studio album. The EP was released on 1 October 2014, through Enjoy Records. On 25 September 2014, she released "Zaplutalas" ( Ukrainian: «Заплу́талась», English: "Confused") as the lead single from her debut EP Thank You.

She released All or Nothing on 19 March 2013, through Moon Records Ukraine. She released "Hurt" as the second single, and "Kaktus" ( Ukrainian: «Ка́ктус», English: "Cactus") was released on 6 March 2013, as the third and final single from the album. On 8 November 2012, she released "Ya Lyublyu Tebya" ( Russian: «Я Люблю́ Тебя́», English: "I Love You") as the lead single from her second studio album All or Nothing. On 12 April 2011, she released her debut studio album For Every Heart through Moon Records Ukraine. However, she later decided to withdraw from the competition.

The song was a crowd favorite and Jamala herself managed to land a spot in the finals of the competition. Early in 2011, she participated on the national selection show in an attempt to represent Ukraine at the Eurovision Song Contest with the song "Smile". On 23 November 2010, she released "Smile" as the third single from the album. She released "It's Me, Jamala" as the second single on 18 October 2010. On 14 February 2010, she released her first single "You Are Made of Love" from her debut studio album For Every Heart. Jamala signing an autograph for a fan on the red carpet of the third annual festival of the Odesa Film Festival on 13 July 2012. She entered the Simferopol Music College and later graduated from Tchaikovsky National Music Academy of Ukraine as an opera singer, but preferred a career in pop music.
Wale the album about nothing full album free download professional#
She made her first professional recording at the age of nine, singing 12 folk and children's Crimean Tatar songs. Jamala has been fond of music since her early childhood. During this period, Soviet authorities did not allow ethnic Crimean Tatars, like her father, to purchase property in Crimea.

Her parents divorced for about four years so that her mother could purchase a house in Crimea for the family under her maiden name. They were well-to-do peasants until her great-grandfather's land was confiscated and he was exiled to Osh where he changed his Armenian name to make it sound more Russian. Her maternal ancestors are Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh. Her Crimean Tatar ancestors were forcibly resettled from Crimea to the central Asian republic under Joseph Stalin during World War II, although her own relatives fought on the Soviet side. Susana Dzhamaladinova was born in Osh, Kirghiz SSR, to a Muslim Crimean Tatar father and an Armenian mother.
