Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Passenger" is the third full-length album released by the band Nico Touches the Walls in Japan on April 6, 2011, through Ki/oon Records.The album features the hit single "Diver", [1] the eighth opening song to the popular anime Naruto: Shippuden, the single "Sudden Death Game" and the song "Matryoshka" that was used as the opening theme for the anime C.
Also in April, the song "Matryoshka", from the album, was featured as opening theme for the anime C - the Money of Soul and Possibility Control, aired by Fuji TV. [13] To promote the album, a national tour called "Nico Touches the Walls Tour 2011 Passenger: We Are Passionate Messenger" was launched.
Laughing Matryoshka (Japanese: 笑うマトリョーシカ) is a Japanese drama based on the novel written by Kazumasa Hayami, which was published by Bungeishunjū on November 5, 2021, [1] aired on TBS's "Friday Drama" slot starting June 28, 2024.
The song was part of the symphony with chorus (lyrics by Gusev) "A Poem about a Komsomol Soldier" (Поэма о бойце-комсомольце) composed in 1934. The original lyrics are sung from the perspective of a Red Army recruit, who proudly leaves his home to keep watch against his homeland's enemies.
At the same time the album was released, the group started a new tour, also named "Matryoshka". The group visited all the larger cities of Russia and Ukraine and also included other countries such as Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Kazakhstan, Poland, Czech, Germany, and Israel.
On Hachi's Nico Nico account, seven of his songs have been viewed more than 1,000,000 times, [24] including the song "Matryoshka", which had reached 5,000,000 views by 2012. [ 25 ] In April 2010, Yonezu joined the animation collective Minakata Kenkyūjo ( 南方研究所 , "Minakata Laboratory") , a group that he had worked with since his ...
The original matryoshka set by Zvyozdochkin and Malyutin, 1892. The first Russian nested doll set was carved in 1890 at the Children's Education Workshop by Vasily Zvyozdochkin and designed by Sergey Malyutin, who was a folk crafts painter in the Abramtsevo estate of Savva Mamontov, a Russian industrialist and patron of arts.
The song Over and Over by Nana Mouskouri uses this melody. [3] It followed the singer's french version "Roule s'enroule" (lyrics by Michel Jourdan). The song, "Tumbalalaika (The Riddle)" by Natalia Zukerman [4] is a poetic adaptation of this to English, with the chorus remaining in Yiddish.