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Soviet_Union_national_anthem_(instrumental),_1977.oga (Ogg Vorbis sound file, length 3 min 24 s, 337 kbps, file size: 8.18 MB) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
The Soviet National Anthem (1977 version). Music was composed by A. V. Aleksandrov Lyrics were written by Sergey Vladimirovich Mikhalkov Based on the Russian Anthems museum hosted by Vadim Makarov, this recording was by the choir and orchestra of Bolshoi Theatre. The conductor was Yuri Simonov (from CD “National Anthems of the USSR and Union ...
The Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic was the last republic to adopt a state anthem, doing so in 1990. It had had none before this date, and used in its place the Soviet national anthem, which was "The Internationale" from 1917 to 1944 and the "National Anthem of the Soviet Union" from 1944 to 1990.
The change of the Soviet Union's national anthem from "The Internationale" to the "State Anthem of the USSR" was a factor in the production of the 1944 movie Hymn of the Nations, which made use of an orchestration of "The Internationale" that Arturo Toscanini had already done the year before for a 1943 NBC radio broadcast commemorating the ...
The federal legislature established and approved the music of the National Anthem of the Soviet Union, with newly written lyrics, in December 2000. [citation needed] Boris Yeltsin criticized Putin for supporting the semi-reintroduction of the Soviet-era national anthem, although some opinion polls showed that many Russians favored this decision ...
"The Patriotic Song" [a] was the national anthem of Russia from 1991 to 2000. It was previously the regional anthem of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic from 1990 until 1991 (until 1990 it used the State Anthem of the Soviet Union), when it transformed into the Russian Federation after the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
[3] [4] It was adopted as the country's national anthem in 1962, as a homage to the Nepalese sovereign. The song originally had two stanzas, but the Nepalese government dropped the second stanza upon adopting the song as the national anthem. The stanza that was retained honoured the king. [5]
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