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Pages in category "Soviet songs" The following 47 pages are in this category, out of 47 total. ... My Country, My Native Country; N. Na Zare; Night (David Tukhmanov song)
Pages in category "Soviet patriotic songs" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
It is based on "Slobodarka", a 1908 song written by Josip Smodlaka. [36] The Red Army is Strongest: Samuel Pokrass and Pavel Gorinshtejn: 1920 Soviet Union: The Partisan's Song: Yuri Cherniavsky and Peter Parfenov: 1915-1922 Soviet Union: A popular Red Army song from the Russian Civil War and World War I. [37] Tachanka (song) Mikhail Ruderman ...
They were best known for the 1986 songs "American-Soviets I" and "American-Soviets II", released by Clockwork Germany. This six-minute song themed on the Cold War became a hit on the US Billboard charts, the German Top 75 and other European charts. Their follow-up singles ("Made in Russia" and "Orient Express") hit the number one and number two ...
Soviet music educators (131 P) Soviet musicians (7 C, 60 P) Soviet musicologists (34 P) A. Alexandrov Ensemble (10 P) C. Classical music in the Soviet Union (3 C, 1 P) F.
The song is the third one heard at the beginning of Cast Away, an American movie starring Tom Hanks, right after Elvis Presley's "Heartbreak Hotel" and "All Shook Up". The song is used throughout the movie " REDS " (1981), the epic historical drama about American journalist John Reed who chronicled the October Revolution in Russia in 1917.
Smuglyanka was used in the 1973 Soviet film Only "Old Men" Are Going to Battle (В бой идут одни "старики"), the most popular Soviet film about the Great Patriotic War according to Afisha Daily. [3] In the film, a young fighter pilot introduces the song to his squadron and so gets nicknamed "the dark girl".
The song was sung by female students from a Soviet industrial school in Moscow, bidding farewell to soldiers going to the battle front against Nazi Germany. Its first official performance was by Valentina Batishcheva in the Column Hall of Moscow 's House of the Unions , at the State Jazz Orchestra concert in the autumn of 1938. [ 3 ]