Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Your Name Engraved Herein" is a sentimental ballad song [8] with lyrics and music by Xu Yuanting (許媛婷), Jiawang (佳旺) and Chen Wenhua (陳文華).The Malaysian songwriter, Jiawang, said that he was initially invited by the record company, so he asked Chen Wenhua to join him in writing the song, and then left it to Xu Yuanting to write the lyrics. [9]
"Shum" (Ukrainian: Шум, transl. "Noise") is a song by Ukrainian electro-folk band Go_A. It represented Ukraine in the Eurovision Song Contest 2021 in Rotterdam. [3] [4] It is the second song sung entirely in Ukrainian to represent the country at Eurovision (the first being "Solovey" also by Go_A in 2020), but the first to compete in Eurovision due to the cancellation of the 2020 contest.
Also favored by the Russian Orthodox Church, the music went without lyrics for several years. In 1999, Viktor Radugin won a contest to provide suitable words for it with his poem "Glory to Russia!" (Russian: Славься, Россия!, romanized: Slávsya, Rossíya!). However, no lyrics and none of the entries were ever adopted.
The lyrics were interpreted as either anti-Japanese, treasonous, or pornographic. After 1949 the song was banned by the People's Republic of China because it was seen as bourgeois and decadent. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The writer Liu was criticized and suffered during the Anti-Rightist Movement in 1957 and during the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s.
The song was released on December 17, 2023, [3] its music video was released on the same day. The remake version of "Dream" reinterpreted with bright, medium-tempo , rhythmic band arrangements, aims to accentuate the beauty of the original song's lyrics and melodies with Taeyeon's clear and powerful vocals. [ 5 ]
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
In order to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the Soviet victory in the Second World War, the Soviet government announced a competition for the best song about the war. . In March 1975, poet Vladimir Kharitonov, who had taken part in the war, [1] approached his traditional co-author, the young composer David Tukhmanov with a proposal to write a new song for the occasi
The "Song of the Soviet Army", [a] also known as the "Song of the Russian Army" [b] or by the refrain's opening line "Invincible and Legendary", [c] is a Soviet patriotic song written during the end of World War II.