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The zongora is an instrument typical of Maramureș, a region of Romania. [1] [2] It is similar to a guitar, but has fewer strings. [3] In the past it had two strings, but nowadays it has four or even five. [4] When played, the instrument is usually held vertically.
The Romanian Top 100 was also featured in Billboard 's Music & Media magazine until 2003, [6] [7] and was—apart from a weekly Kiss FM podcast in the 2010s—announced on its own website. [3] [8] As of 2024, the Romanian Top 100 lacks usable archives, especially for the late 1990s and 2000s.
In Romania, the syntagm muzică populară (English: popular/folk music) is used to denote a musical genre based on folklore, but distinct from it. The distinction is both in form and essence and it arises mainly from the commercial aspect of the popular music. [1] In English the term is ambiguous since it could also refer to Romanian pop music.
They transposed this experience into music and seven days later they shared their local inspired music with the North-Romanian people in a concert held at the Merry Cemetery in Săpânța. [9] Later on, they brought the project to Bucharest, performing the Maramures experience in Radio Hall [10] gaining popularity in the Romanian cultural scene ...
The term could be translated literally as "Romanian Easy Music" and, in the most common sense, this music is synonym with "Muzică de stradă" (from French "estrade", which means "podium"), defining a branch of Pop music developed in Romania after World War II, which appears generally in the form of easy danceable songs, made on arrangements ...
Located during the Second World War, the dialogue is in French, Romanian and German. 2006: 12:08 East of Bucharest: Corneliu Porumboiu: Comedy: About the actuality of the Romanian Revolution. Love Sick: Tudor Giurgiu: Drama: Lesbian teenage drama. The Paper Will Be Blue: Radu Muntean: Drama: The first night of the revolution. The Way I Spent ...
Map of Romania with Maramureș region highlighted Northern Maramureș as part of the Zakarpattia Oblast of Ukraine. Maramureș (Romanian: Maramureș pronounced [maraˈmureʃ] ⓘ; Ukrainian: Мармарощина, romanized: Marmaroshchyna; Hungarian: Máramaros [ˈmaːrɒmɒroʃ]) is a geographical, historical and cultural region in northern Romania and western Ukraine.
Nevertheless, the similarities between the Romanian doina and various musical forms from the Middle East have been subsequently documented by both non-Romanian [3] and Romanian [4] [5] scholars. Until the first half of the 20th century, both lăutari [ 5 ] and klezmer musicians [ 6 ] were recorded using a taksim as an introduction to a tune.