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"Treceți, batalioane române, Carpații" (transl. "Cross, Romanian battalions, the Carpathians") is a Romanian patriotic song.It is thought to have been composed in 1916, shortly before Romania's entry into World War I, although its first historical apparition occurred in February 1919, when members of the Romanian Legion of Transylvanian–Bukovinian Volunteers were recorded singing a ...
Map of the region of Bukovina, divided between Romania and Ukraine "Cântă cucu-n Bucovina" or "Cântă cucu în Bucovina" (transl. 'Sings the Cuckoo in Bukovina') is a Romanian folk song, more precisely a doină, composed in 1904 by Constantin Mandicevschi [de; ru; uk].
Original Sheet music of "Sanie cu zurgălăi" (1937). Note that Stein is credited as "S. Richard". "Sanie cu zurgălăi" (Romanian for "Sleigh with bells") is a Romanian language song composed in 1936 by Jewish-Romanian composer Richard Stein. Romanian language lyrics were written by Liviu Deleanu.
Suntem săraci și plini de-amar, Plânsu' nostru-i în zadar, Doamne, ocrotește-i pe români. Săracă țară bogată, Mult ai trăit supărată, Doamne, ocrotește-i pe români. Ne-o umplut amarul crud, Plânsul nostru-i tot mai surd, Doamne, ocrotește-i pe români. Transilvania mea sfântă, De mult ai fost tu râvnită, Doamne, ocrotește ...
Electrecord, Compania de Sunet, Metropol Music, Eurostar, Roton, Fundația Culturală Phoenix Musical artist Valeriu (Vali) Sterian ( Romanian pronunciation: [vaˈlerju steriˈan] ; 21 September 1952, in Știubei, Buzău County – 16 September 2000, in Bucharest ) was a Romanian folk and rock musician.
[1] [2] Before 1977, the country's national anthem was „E scris pe tricolor Unire”, [3] whose melody is the same as that of the Albanian national anthem. The song "Three Colors" is based on a Romanian patriotic song written and composed by Ciprian Porumbescu .
the immolation for the creation; the erotic myth (the myth illustrates how girls at puberty long for the unknown feeling of love, which comes unexpectedly and makes them feel something very deep and spontaneous)
Ciocârlia (meaning the skylark) is a Romanian tune, allegedly composed by the Romani-Romanian pan flute player Angheluş Dinicu [1] [2] in the virtuosic style of the urban lăutarească music from late 19th century. Angheluş Dinicu first presented the tune in 1889 at the inauguration of the Eiffel Tower.