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Dimash also won episode 2 with his version of Vitas' "Opera 2", [58] and came in third in Episode 3 with his rendition of Queen's "The Show Must Go On". [59] Hunan TV and the Chinese media named him "a bridge for Kazakh-Chinese cultural cooperation". [ 60 ]
Composed by Igor Krutoy, Lyrics by Mikhail Gutseriev: Presented at D-Dynasty Live Concert on 22 March 2019 in Moscow, Russia; Won a Pesnya Goda 2019 Award [10] 2019 War And Peace Chinese: 戰爭與和平: Zhànzhēng yǔ hépíng Composed by Dimash Kudaibergen, Lyrics by Yáo Qiān (Chinese: 姚谦) and Dimash Kudaibergen [11]
Au fond du temple saint" ("At the back of the holy temple") is a duet from Georges Bizet's 1863 opera Les pêcheurs de perles. The libretto was written by Eugène Cormon and Michel Carré . Generally known as " The Pearl Fishers' Duet ", it is one of the most popular numbers in Western opera – it appeared on seven of the Classic 100 ...
Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia. Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality.
Several other versions, or "completions", of the opera have been made. The dances are performed with chorus and last between 11 and 14 minutes. They occur in act 1 or act 2, depending on which version of the opera is being used. Their music is popular and often given in concert as an orchestral showpiece, often with the choral parts omitted.
Dinmukhamed or Dinmukhamet (Kazakh: Дінмұхаммед) is a Kazakh masculine given name, its short version is Dimash. It may refer to It may refer to Dinmukhamed
Vladimir Gilyarovsky wrote the poem "From the Taiga, the Deep Taiga" in 1915 during World War I dedicated to the Siberian Riflemen, with text similar to the well-known version. [3] Gilyarovsky's poem was published that year in several corpuses of Great War's soldiers' songs, [ 4 ] and in the post-Soviet era it became known as the March of the ...
Personent hodie in the 1582 edition of Piae Cantiones, image combined from two pages of the source text. "Personent hodie" is a Christmas carol originally published in the 1582 Finnish song book Piae Cantiones, a volume of 74 Medieval songs with Latin texts collected by Jacobus Finno (Jaakko Suomalainen), a Swedish Lutheran cleric, and published by T.P. Rutha. [1]