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The song received particularly heavy radio broadcast in the days following Romanian coup d'état of 23 August 1944, when Romania switched sides, turning against Nazi Germany and joining the Allies in World War II. After the Communist Party abolished the monarchy on 30 December 1947, "Deșteaptă-te române!" and other patriotic songs closely ...
Founded in 1995, the Romanian Top 100 was the national music chart of Romania. It was compiled by broadcast monitoring services Body M Production A-V (1990s and 2000s) and by Media Forest (2010s), and measured the airplay of songs on radio stations throughout the country. [1] [2] [3] In 2005, the number of radio stations involved was 120. [4]
In February 2022, Billboard inaugurated Romania Songs, a streaming and digital download-based chart compiled by MRC Data. The following is a list of all documented number ones on the aforementioned two Romanian record charts.
"Llámame" was written by Alexandru Turcu, Andrei Ursu (Wrs), Cezar Gună and Costel Domințeanu, while the production was solely handled by the latter. [2] It was released for digital download and streaming in various countries on 10 February 2022 by Global Records, having a length of three minutes and four seconds. [3]
Alejandro (song) Alibi (Sevdaliza, Pabllo Vittar and Yseult song) All of Me (John Legend song) Alors on danse; Amazing (Inna song) American Pie (song) L'amour toujours; Another Chance (Roger Sanchez song) Are You with Me; Around the World (La La La La La) As It Was; As Long as You Love Me (Backstreet Boys song) Astronaut in the Ocean
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.
Doamne, ocrotește-i pe români" (transl. "God, protect the Romanians") is a Romanian patriotic song. One of the most famous parts of the song refers to Romania as săracă țară bogată ("you poor, rich country"). [1] Famous singers of the song include Veta Biriș, Nicolae Furdui Iancu and Sava Negrean Brudașcu . [2]
"Dragostea din tei" is the first song in Romanian to have achieved international success. [130] [D] While Libertatea wrote that it had "done more for Romania's image than all politicians put together", [103] Balan stated in an interview that, for him, "the greatest pride is the fact that [he] promoted the Romanian language". [203]