Moya Moskva
English: My Moscow | |
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Moya Moskva | |
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anthem of federal city of Moscow | |
Lyrics |
Sergey Agranyan Mark Lisyansky |
Music | Isaak Dunayevsky |
Adopted | 1995 |
"My Moscow" (Russian: Моя Москва, translit. Moja Moskva) is the anthem of the city of Moscow since 1995. The music was composed in 1941 by Isaak Dunayevsky and the lyrics were written by Sergey Agranyan and Mark Lisyansky.
The original performer was Zoya Rozhdestvenskaya.[1] (She was the one who sang on the first recording of the song.)
The original lyrics had four verses, of which the last pertained to Joseph Stalin. They were replaced by the current lyrics which were introduced during the Leonid Brezhnev era.
Lyrics
Current lyrics since 1995
Russian (Cyrillic) | Romanization | English translation |
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Brezhnev-era lyrics
Russian (Cyrillic) | Romanization | English translation |
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Original Stalin-era lyrics
Russian (Cyrillic) | Romanization | English translation |
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Notes
- ↑ German invasion in 1941, the defense of Moscow.
- ↑ 28 soldiers heroically fight to the bitter end the road to Moscow in 1941.
References
- ↑ Yuri Kuvaldin. Собрание сочинений в десяти томах, Том 8.
Наша улица, Выпуски 1-6. Книжный сад. 2005.
- http://www.sovmusic.ru (for the Stalin-era and Brezhnev-era lyrics)
- http://www.personal.psu.edu/npi103/mos1_himn.htm%5Bpermanent+dead+link%5D (for the English translation)
- https://web.archive.org/web/20080604144129/http://www.mos.ru/cgi-bin/pbl_web?vid=1&osn_id=0&subr_unom=1907&datedoc=0 (for the current lyrics)
- Self-made transliterations
External links
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