Sinyaya Ptitsa
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Sinyaya Ptitsa | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Origin | Gomel, Belarus; Samara, Russia |
Genres | Pop, rock |
Years active | 1972–1991 |
Sinyaya Ptitsa (Russian: Синяя птица, The Blue Bird) was a Soviet music group, vocal and instrumental ensemble, which existed from 1972 to 1991. Later, several Russian musical groups created by former members of the original band took the name Sinyaya Ptitsa.
History
The band formed in 1972 in the city of Gomel (Belarus) as vocal-instrumental ensemble We, You and Guitar. In 1986 the group took part in the festival Rock for Peace in the Czech town of Sokolovo, and then sent to entertain Soviet troops in Germany.
According to Rossiyskaya Gazeta, Drozdov was one of the recognizable voices in the Soviet Union.[1]
Composition VIA Blue Bird (1972-1991)
- Valentin Barkov (bass guitar, vocals)
- Yuri Bankovsky (violin)
- Boris Belotserkovsky (drums)
- Robert Bolotny (saxophone)
- Mikhail Bolotny (mus. head, keyboards)
- Victor Varvalyuk (drums)
- Yevgeny Voynov (vocals)
- Oleg Gazmanov (sound engineer)
- Dmitry Galitsky (vocals, keyboards)
- Vladimir Gaponov (guitar)
- Eduard Deyneko (trumpet)
- Igor Dotsenko (drums)
- Sergey Drozdov (bass guitar, vocals)
- Yevgeny Zavyalov (vocals)
- Alexander Zverovich (vocals)
- Sergei Kastorsky (keyboards)
- Oleg Kolesnichenko (vocals)
- Alexey Komarov (drums)
- Yakov Kulishevsky (vocals)
- Svetlana Lazareva (vocals)
- Sergei Levkin (guitar, vocals)
- Vitaly Loos (trombone)
- Gennady Matviyenko (guitar)
- Valery Melnikov (trumpet)
- Yuri Metelkin (vocals)
- Alexander Mostovoy (guitar)
- Anatoly Murygin (guitar)
- Lev Panin (violin)
- Nikolai Parfenyuk (vocals)
- Vladimir Preobrazhensky (vocals)
- Valery Pronin (violin)
- Alexander Pruzhinin (keyboards)
- Victor Ryabkov (vocals)
- Anna Salmina (vocals)
- Igor Sarukhanov (guitar, vocals)
- Vladimir Ulyanov (violin)
- Yuri Humaryan (guitar)
- Igor Shablovsky (guitar)
- Vladimir Shurigin (guitar)
- Valery Yushchenko (vocals)
- Jury Janin (guitar)
References
- ^ В Тамбове умер солист Синей птицы Сергей Дроздов — Антон Валагин Archived 12 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine (in Russian)
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sinyaya ptitsa (band).
- Информация о ВИА на сайте «Популярная советская песня» (in Russian)
- Sinyaya Ptitsa Homepage
- ВИА «Синяя птица». Музыка для тех, кто любит… (in Russian)
- Синяя птица. Русский Юрай хип (in Russian)
- История ВИА «Синяя Птица» на сайте группы Комарова (in Russian)
- История группы «Синяя птица» на сайте группы Дроздова (in Russian)
- ВИА "Синяя птица". Музыканты ансамбля (версия от 12 апреля 2005) (in Russian)
- Sinyaya Ptitsa discography at Discogs
Categories:
- Webarchive template wayback links
- Articles with Russian-language sources (ru)
- Articles with short description
- Short description is different from Wikidata
- Use dmy dates from October 2021
- Articles with hCards
- Articles containing Russian-language text
- Commons category link is on Wikidata
- Articles with VIAF identifiers
- Articles with GND identifiers
- Articles with MusicBrainz identifiers
- 1972 establishments in the Soviet Union
- 1991 disestablishments in the Soviet Union
- Soviet musical groups
- Russian musical groups
- Musical groups established in 1972
- Musical groups disestablished in 1991