Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Ivanovs vs. The Ivanovs (Russian: Ивановы-Ивановы, romanized: Ivanovy-Ivanovy) is a Russian TV series produced since 2017. Made by "Yellow, Black and White" (episodes 1 to 40) and "Pick Up Film" film companies. The series has very high television ratings [1] and has won award "TEFI".
Ivanovs continued to add movements to his Vocalises until 1982, the year before his death. [2] Taken as a whole, their tendency towards slower tempi, modality, minor keys, and timbral richness establish the kinship between the various Vocalises. [1] The earlier ones revolve around themes of natural beauty, while the later focus on abstract ideas.
Jānis Ivanovs [a] (9 October 1906 [O.S. September 26] – 27 March 1983) was a Latvian composer whose later career took place in the Soviet Union. [1] In 1931, he graduated from the Latvian State Conservatory in Riga. [2] In 1944, he joined the conservatory's faculty, becoming a full professor in 1955. [3]
The Ivanovs, produced for STS television network, and directed by Anton Fedotov, Andrei Elinson, Sergey Znamenskiy, Fyodor Stukov, and Alyona Korchagina. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Kowalscy kontra Kowalscy was written and directed by Okil Khamidov , and produced by Khamidov, Krzysztof Hansz, and Tamara Aagten-Margol.
Ivanovs is the Latvianized form of the surname Ivanov. The feminine form, Ivanova , is the same in Latvian and Russian. The surname may refer to the following notable people:
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Redirect page
Ivan Ivanov was born on 7 April 2000 in Gorna Oryahovitsa, a small town in northeastern Bulgaria. Ivanov first became interested in music when he was 7 years old, but started to sing at the age of 8. His very first single "Kurazh" (Courage) was released in June 2009, in which he rose to fame.
Ivanovism (Russian: Ивановство, Ивановизм) is a Rodnover (Slavic Neopagan) new religious movement and healing system in Eastern Europe based on the teachings of the Russian mystic Porfiry Korneyevich Ivanov (1898–1983), [1] who elaborated his doctrines by drawing upon Russian folklore. [2]