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  • Golden Oldies

    The Moscow Times, Russia
    July 29 2005

    Golden Oldies

    No longer a giant in recorded music, Melodiya is trying to make a
    comeback by unearthing gems in its archive, such as forgotten Soviet
    rock songs from the 1960s.

    By Anna Malpas
    Published: July 29, 2005

    Janos Koos sounds a bit uncertain as he sings the words of Chuck
    Berry: "My baby does the hanky panky, yeah." The Hungarian vocalist
    recorded the song at Melodiya in 1970, a year when the authorities
    were cracking down on music that didn't fit the official format.
    After all, the country was about to celebrate Lenin's 100th birthday.

    Nevertheless, the song, recently re-released by Melodiya, is
    definitive proof that rock 'n' roll existed in the Soviet Union. To
    get this message across, Andrei Troshin, the record label's chief
    editor, has issued a series of compilation discs called "The True
    History of Russian Light Music."

    Packaged in brightly colored sleeves, the albums are aimed at a young
    audience. "We don't want to do retro," Troshin said during a recent
    interview. He defined his ideal listener as someone who wouldn't be
    seen dead buying an album by current Russian pop acts, but who wants
    to discover something to be proud of in the country's musical past.


    "It's light music for intellectually developed people," the editor
    said. "That segment of the market is free at the moment."

    The albums are a chance to branch out for Melodiya, a label that is
    world-famous for its classical output, but which also preserves a
    unique archive of light, or estrada music. After losing almost all of
    its premises and staff after the breakup of the Soviet Union, the
    state-owned enterprise has experienced something of a renaissance
    under new management.

    Troshin gave the interview in the columned hall of Melodiya's
    headquarters on Tverskoi Bulvar, a building whose oldest part dates
    back to before Napoleon's invasion of Russia. The label's most
    valuable possession is housed elsewhere: an archive of around 60,000
    items -- no one knows the exact figure -- including the master tapes
    of popular music that was taken off the airwaves for ideological
    reasons.

    The golden age of Russian rock 'n' roll began in 1957, the editor
    said. That was the year of the Moscow International Festival of Youth
    and Students, when American bands arrived and played real rock 'n'
    roll -- although for decency's sake, it was called jazz. When they
    left, it was usually without their instruments, which were snapped up
    by Russian musicians.

    "The professional level [of Russian bands] went up very rapidly,
    because they had professional equipment for the first time," Troshin
    said. When compiling the latest disc in the Real History series,
    titled "Love by Post," he chose songs from the 1960s that were
    "clearly pro-Western." Along with the Chuck Berry track, there are
    songs in Italian and French, and a Russian translation of The
    Coasters' 1959 hit "Charlie Brown."

    Only one of the songs on the album would be familiar to most Russian
    listeners: "Black Cat" by Tamara Miansarova, a 1964 hit that still
    gets a lot of airplay. In other cases, the artists might be famous,
    but the material is not. On one track, the smooth-voiced crooner
    Muslim Magomayev sings an Italian dance tune with Elektron -- a band
    that played electric instruments, which has been called Russia's
    answer to Britain's Shadows.

    "Magomayev used to do things that had nothing to do with his image,"
    Troshin said. "He once sang [the Animals' 1964 chart-topper] 'House
    of the Rising Sun' with a rock group."

    Many of the tracks date back to the late 1960s. At the time, Melodiya
    was in a rush to release material, as its staff sensed a change in
    the political climate, with clubs being shut down and jazz bands
    being evicted from restaurants. Sure enough, a 1969 resolution by the
    Council of Ministers called for certain estrada groups to be broken
    up and for some of Melodiya's master tapes to be erased.

    One of the victims of the freeze was an album called "From Palanga to
    Gurzuf," which was recently re-released by Melodiya in association
    with the hip record label Lyogkiye. The feel-good, largely
    instrumental numbers include tracks by Elektron and Rokoko, a band
    founded by the composer Anatoly Bykanov, who now teaches at the
    Moscow Conservatory.

    Named after beach resorts in Lithuania and the Crimea, the album was
    recorded in two versions: a lower-quality mono version for Russian
    audiences and a high-quality stereo version for export, meant to be
    released abroad in association with Intourist. But the summery tracks
    were out of step with preparations for the 100th anniversary of
    Lenin's birth in April 1970, and the order went out to destroy the
    master tape.

    The album survived, however, thanks to quick-witted Melodiya staff
    members. It was hidden in a box labeled "A concert by the
    participants of the All-Russian Show of Rural Amateur Talents," where
    it lay undisturbed until last winter, when restorers transferring the
    label's archive onto digital tape listened to the album and realized
    they had found something unique.

    In a bid to increase awareness of the album, Melodiya teamed up with
    Snegiri Muzyka, a small independent record company, to release the
    album on Lyogkiye, a label that specializes in lounge and
    electronica. The reason was simple: Melodiya is seen as "sovok," or
    Soviet in all the worst senses of the word, Troshin admitted.

    The CD markets at a higher price than those in the "Real History"
    series, and it has more sophisticated packaging and liner notes. It
    was presented last month with a party at the Moscow club Keks.

    "Of course we are trying to hook young people and, in a sense, those
    with patriotic views," Troshin said. "Because you can put this on,
    listen to it and realize that there's nothing embarrassing about it.
    You don't have to feel ashamed by these musicians."

    The media reaction to the releases has been largely favorable. "I
    just can't believe that in the mid-1960s people played and recorded
    this kind of music in our country," a critic wrote in Izvestia
    earlier this month, referring to the "Real History" series. A music
    journalist in Vremya Novostei was more circumspect about "From
    Palanga." It made him feel "childlike pleasure" the first time he
    listened to it, but "maybe a single injection of nostalgia is
    enough," he wrote.

    Founded in 1964, Melodiya held a monopoly on recorded music in the
    Soviet Union, employing tens of thousands. It even had a
    representative office in Samoa, Troshin commented, although "that was
    connected with spying." Now the factories and shops are gone, and the
    label only has about 60 employees.

    Yet Melodiya has undergone something of a revival in recent years,
    the chief editor said, describing it as a "former corpse." Still
    owned by the state, the enterprise makes a small "kopek profit," he
    said, and last year it won an award in Belgium for a recording of
    symphonic and vocal music by the 20th-century composer Boris Arapov.

    Its main tasks now are to digitize the archive, which badly needs new
    premises -- it is currently housed in an apartment building -- and to
    find a replacement for the label's recording studio, a church
    building on Voznesensky Pereulok, which has been handed back to the
    Anglican community, although Melodiya still intermittently records
    there.

    Troshin joined Melodiya two years ago. Previously, he edited a
    magazine on Orthodox art and worked in the art business. He joined
    the company along with a new general director, Kirill Bashirov. As a
    non-classical music specialist, he is in charge of the estrada
    releases, and it's a job that fits his own tastes.

    Among his personal favorites are the Armenian singer Lola Khomyants
    and the Georgian Gyuli Chokheli. "I like women with low, sultry
    voices," he said. Khomyants died last December, just a week before
    the first "Real History" album came out with one of her songs as the
    first track.

    "It was very sad and frustrating," he recalled.
    From: Baghdasarian
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