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"Cântă cucu-n Bucovina" or "Cântă cucu în Bucovina" (transl. 'Sings the Cuckoo in Bukovina') is a Romanian folk song, more precisely a doină, composed in 1904 by Constantin Mandicevschi [de; ru; uk]. The lyrics are original, while the melody is a modified Bukovinian mourning song.
Doamne, nu uita de noi, Suntem săraci, plini de nevoi, Doamne, ocrotește-i pe români. Suntem săraci și plini de-amar, Plânsu' nostru-i în zadar, Doamne, ocrotește-i pe români. Săracă țară bogată, Mult ai trăit supărată, Doamne, ocrotește-i pe români. Ne-o umplut amarul crud, Plânsul nostru-i tot mai surd,
Fie la paradă, fie la război, Toți în rând grămadă, veseli mergem noi! Drum bun, drum bun, toba bate, drum bun, bravi români, ura! Cu sacul legat în spate, cu armele-n mâini, ura! Steagul să lucească, steagul, pentru el trăim, Țara să-nflorească, țara, pentru ea murim, drum bun!
Pasărea Colibri (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈpasəre̯a koliˈbri], "The Hummingbird") is a Romanian folk supergroup.Aside from typical Romanian folk instruments and acoustic/electric guitars, the band also made use of digital and analogue synthesizers, pedal steel guitars, and fretless bass.
"Treceți, batalioane române, Carpații" (transl. "Cross, Romanian battalions, the Carpathians") is a Romanian patriotic song.It is thought to have been composed in 1916, shortly before Romania's entry into World War I, although its first historical apparition occurred in February 1919, when members of the Romanian Legion of Transylvanian–Bukovinian Volunteers were recorded singing a ...
the immolation for the creation; the erotic myth (the myth illustrates how girls at puberty long for the unknown feeling of love, which comes unexpectedly and makes them feel something very deep and spontaneous)
Veta Biriș (born 11 August 1949) is a Romanian folk music singer. She was born in Veseuș, a village in Jidvei commune, Alba County, in a large family of seven siblings.. Biriș moved in 1966 to nearby Căpâlna de Jos and debuted as a singer the following year in a music competition as a representative of the Mureș-Magyar Autonomous
Born in the Bucharest suburb of Cărămidarii de Jos, or Cărămidari, Maria Tănase attended Primary School number 11 from Tăbăcari. Her father, Ion Coanda Tănase, was a master gardener and a florist, also owner of a big nursery on the outskirts of Bucharest, which employed female workers from different various regions of Romania.