Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Şən Azərbaycan" (Azerbaijani Cyrillic: "Шән Азәрбајҹан", English: "Merry Azerbaijan") is a Soviet-era patriotic song about Soviet Azerbaijan that still remains popular in modern Azerbaijan. It was written in 1970 and was sung by Polad Bulbuloghlu, Muslim Magomayev, Shovkat Alakbarova, and Idris Mehdiyev , among others.
1899 postcard with the first line in Czech (Hej Slované ještě naše slovanská řeč žije!) and views of several Slav cities "Hey, Slavs" is a patriotic song dedicated to the Slavs and widely considered to be the Pan-Slavic anthem.
The "Jujalarim" (Azerbaijani: Cücələrim, Cyrillic: Ҹүҹәләрим, Russian: Мои цыплята — my little chicks) is an Azerbaijani song composed for children. The first time it was sung by Sughra Baghirzade in May 1959 at the Festival of the Decade of Azerbaijani Art in Moscow . [ 1 ]
"Molitva" (Serbian Cyrillic: Молитва; "Prayer") is a song recorded by Serbian singer Marija Šerifović with music composed by Vladimir Graić and Serbian lyrics by Saša Milošević Mare. It represented Serbia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2007, held in Helsinki, resulting in the country's only
"Ramonda" (Serbian Cyrillic: Рамонда) is a song by Serbian singer-songwriter Teodora Pavlovska, known by her stage name, Teya Dora. The song was released on 22 January 2024 by PGP-RTS and was written by Pavlovska, Luka Jovanović, and Andrijano Kadović.
Music: Davorin Jenko and Josif Runjanin, [c] 1918 [d] Adopted: 1919 () Relinquished: 1941 () Preceded by "Bože pravde" (as Kingdom of Serbia) "Ubavoj nam Crnoj Gori (as Kingdom of Montenegro) "Gott erhalte Franz den Kaiser" (as part of Austria-Hungary) "Shumi Maritsa" and "Anthem of His Majesty the Tsar" (as part of Kingdom of Bulgaria ...
Erlangen Manuscript (Serbian: Ерлангенски рукопис) is a Serbian Cyrillic manuscript dated between 1716 and 1733 that contains one of the earliest written collections (217 songs) of epic poetry written in the Serbian language. [1]
Bilećanka" (Serbian Cyrillic: Билећанка; Slovene: Bilečanka) is a Yugoslav song written in 1940 in a political prison camp in Bileća during the authoritarian regime of Prince Paul. The original Slovene lyrics were written by Milan Apih, a Slovene communist and teacher from Celje, who was imprisoned at the camp. [1]