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KaZantip, also known simply as "Z", was an electronic dance music festival that took place every year from 1992 to 2013 on the Crimean Peninsula; from 2002 to 2013, it was held in the village of Popivka, near Yevpatoria
The Leningrad Rock Club, founded in 1981 and supported by the CPSU, Komsomol, and the city and federal governments, was probably the biggest venue, [67] featuring "classic Russian rock" by Aquarium, [68] Kino, [69] Zoopark, Piknik, [70] Alisa, [71] DDT, Televizor, N.E.P., etc. [72] It also included the nascent Russian art-rock movement ...
TaMtAm (also written as Tamtam, tam-tam, or Тамтам) was an independent rock club in Saint Petersburg, founded Vsevolod Gakkel, the former cellist of Aquarium and operating from 1991 to 1996. TaMtAm was the first Western-style rock club in Saint Petersburg.
The Leningrad Rock Club (Russian: Ленинградский рок-клуб) was a historic music venue of the 1980s in Leningrad, situated on Rubinstein Street in the city centre. Opened in 1981 and overseen by Komsomol and KGB , it became the first legal rock music venue in Leningrad.
[citation needed] His first appearance as a DJ was in the club Tresor in March 1991. [15] After several more dates, he was given the chance to perform at Andre'Hoche's Dubmission parties in the Turbine club [clarification needed], together with the young resident DJ Kid Paul. [16] [17] With Cosmic Baby, he collaborated as The Visions of Shiva. [18]
mirage-vocal.ru, mirage.su Musical artist Mirage ( Мираж , Mirazh) is a soviet Russian pop group founded in Moscow in 1986 by Russian composer-keyboardist Andrey Litjagin.
Comedy Club [1] is a Russian stand-up comedy TV show broadcast by the Russian TNT channel since January, 2001. Long-time residents of the club are Garik Martirosyan, Timur Batrutdinov, Garik Kharlamov, Pavel Volya, Alexandr Revva, Marina Kravets and others. The show host is Garik Martirosyan. Comedy Club headquarters is located in Moscow.
Sovyetskaya Muzyka was established in February 1933 by the Union of Soviet Composers and the State Committee on the Arts.In the first year, the journal was a bimonthly publication 200 pages in length, but after that until World War II the journal was published once a month and was on average 110 pages long.