Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Topics about Melodiya albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories This category contains studio albums released on the Melodiya label. Please move any non-studio albums to an appropriate subcategory per WikiProject Albums guidelines .
Soviet vinyl single by The Beatles with songs "Octopus's Garden" and "Something" from the album Abbey Road. 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 ...
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
Russkiye pesni (Russian: Русские песни; transl. Russian songs), subtitled Syuita na temy narodnykh pesen (Russian: Сюита на темы народных песен; transl. Folk Songs Suite), is a studio album by Russian singer-songwriter Alexander Gradsky released in 1980 through Melodiya. [1] It was the first full-length rock ...
The discography of the Soviet and Russian singer Alla Pugacheva includes 100 records, compact cassettes, CDs and DVDs, including 17 studio albums, 3 live albums, 33 compilations and 42 singles. In total, she has sold more than 250 million records. [ 1 ]
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. The album includes songs performed in Russian, Ukrainian, Bulgarian and Romanian languages.
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 .
The album was released digitally on 30 August 2024, [5] and on vinyl and CD on 24 September. [2] The Tashkent record factory was run by Melodiya, the state-owned record label of the Soviet Union. [6] By the 1970s it was annually pressing "several million records of Uzbek, Tajik, Kazakh, Kirghiz, Turkmen, Karakalpak and Uighur folk music."