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On the B-side was just one song from the same album, "Come Together". In other countries, Melodiya recordings imported from the USSR were often sold under the label MK, which stood for Mezhdunarodnaya Kniga ("International Book", Russian: Μеждународная Книга).
Tender Melody is a studio album of Sofia Rotaru, recorded at Melodiya in the USSR. The album was widely acclaimed in the countries of the former USSR and the total sales amounted to more than 2 million copies.
Sofia Rotaru poёt pesni Vladimira Ivasyuka (literally: Sofia Rotaru Performs Songs of Volodymyr Ivasyuk) is a studio album of Sofia Rotaru, recorded at Melodiya in the USSR in 1978. Sofia Rotaru was awarded the grand prix of the Central Committee of Komsomol for this album, which became the reference in Ukrainian pop culture.
Sofia Rotaru (София Ротару), also known as Ballad of Violins (Баллада о скрипках) [1] is the second album by Soviet singer-songwriter Sofia Rotaru, released in 1974 by Melodiya.
List of recording artists performing on or signed to Melodiya at one time or another. This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources .
Arlekino i drugiye (Russian: Арлекино и другие; transl. Harlequin and other songs) is the second studio album by Russian Soviet singer Alla Pugacheva released in 1979 by Melodiya. Background
Sofia Rotaru and Chervona Ruta is a 1981 studio album by Sofia Rotaru, recorded at Melodiya in the USSR. It is packaged together with Where Has Love Gone? , the film soundtrack for Where Has Love Gone? .
In response to the Nazi invasion of the USSR in 1941, Stalin ordered a mass evacuation of people and industry eastward into the country, which eventually involved more than 16 million people. [1] Tashkent was a particularly important destination for the evacuees, who included at one point Anna Akhmatova , Aleksey Tolstoy , and Korney Chukovsky .