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"Kalinka" (Russian: Калинка) is a Russian folk-style song written in 1860 by the composer and folklorist Ivan Larionov and first performed in Saratov as part of a theatrical entertainment that he had composed. [1]
Kalinka (French: Au nom de ma fille) (2016) – French-German crime drama film based on the true story of the Kalinka Bamberski case which took place in 1982 [95] Kalushi (2016) – South African biographical drama film about Solomon Kalushi Mahlangu, a nineteen-year-old hawker from the streets of Mamelodi, a township outside Pretoria in South ...
I have been told categorically by a prominent member of the Alexandrov Ensemble (the best-known performers of the song) that Kalinka is not a folk song but a composed song in that style. Additionally, Kalinka became known primarily as an operatic song (performed as a musical joke, perhaps, but now has a life of its own) quite early on.
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He is mostly remembered for the famous song "Kalinka", which he wrote in 1860. [1] Larionov was born to a noble family in Perm, and studied music in Moscow. He died in Saratov in 1889, from stomach cancer. [1]
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This music is closely tied in with village life and traditions. It was usually not performed by professional musicians. From the Central Committee's resolution of 1932, [4] which prescribed musical literacy (in parallel to the drive to industrialise the Soviet Union), there has been a marked decline in authentic folk performance practice.