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Boris Grebenshchikov

 
Artist: Boris Grebenshikov
Boris Grebenshikov

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  • Born: 1953, Russia
  • Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Guitar
  • Representative Albums: "Russian Songwriter", "Sinii Albom", "50 BG

Biography

Boris Grebenshikov (also known as B.G.) is famously quoted as saying that, in the over 30-year history of his group, Aquarium, if someone was interested in playing with him, then the resulting band would be Aquarium. It follows that Aquarium have had the most fluid and diverse of lineups starting in 1972, playing all kinds of music under all kinds of circumstances. As a result, the history of Grebenshikov and Aquarium reads like a history of Russian rock & roll, of which the bandleader is the most widely acknowledged forefather.

Together with childhood friend Anatolii Gunitskii, Grebenshikov formed the group in Leningrad, U.S.S.R. (now St. Petersburg, Russia) in 1972 before any kind of thaw had occurred in Soviet politics. The two musicians were lost at sea with no land in sight, so to speak, as far as getting any getting approval from the Soviet administration, who saw rock music as directly contradicting the system. Aquarium's pioneer members included Grebenshikov on vocals and guitar; Gunitskii on drums; Andrei Romanov on guitar, keyboards, violin, and flute; and Michail Fainstein-Vasiliev on bass, keyboards, and percussion. The group's first recording was a crude 1973 cassette tape called Iskushenies Svyatovo Aquariuma (The Temptation of Saint Aquarium). Another album, Prichti Grafa Diffuzora (The Parables of Count Diffuzora), was recorded in the spring of 1974, shortly after which Gunitskii left the group to pursue an acting career.

The next couple of years were characterized by gigs around town in surreptitious acoustic gatherings at friends' apartments (known as kvartirniks) or walking the streets with their instruments, a uniquely mobile collective. By 1976 they were playing concerts regularly, and even traveling to some festivals to play acoustic music, which was tolerated. They made two recordings: 1976's S Toy Storony Zerkalnogo Stekla (From the Other Side of the Looking Glass) and 1978's Vse Bratya -- Sestry (All Brothers Are Sisters). A 1979 meeting with producer Andrei Tropillo proved to be of great consequence toAquarium. Recording albums was also a process complicated by opposition from the state, causing recordings of rock music to be highly coveted and copied dozens of times. Tropillo's studio was one of the few places where rock musicians could record albums, and in 1981 Aquarium left basement recording behind forever with Sinii Albom (The Blue Album), which was recorded at Tropillo's studio. It was not only Aquarium's first studio record, but the first studio rock album in the history of the Soviet Union. It was followed by Treugolnik (Triangle), which, because its text verged on the absurd, Grebenshikov hoped would become the new Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. Not long after, the first rock club was opened in Leningrad, and Aquarium became regular performers there. They also released Akustika (Acoustics), its follow-up record, Elektrichestvo (Electricity), and in 1984, Tabu (Taboo).

In the mid-'80s, the media began to cautiously include coverage of rock performances, including an appearance by Aquarium on the show Musical Ring, shown on national TV. An avalanche of media appearances and live performances followed, launching the group into superstardom. In this period, Aquarium recorded and released a series of albums, including Den Serebra (The Day of Silver), Deti Dekabrya (The Children of December), Desyat Strel (Ten Arrows), and 1987's Ravnodenstvie (Equinox). In 1989, while visiting the U.S., Grebenshikov and members of Eurythmics recorded the album Radio Silence, his first album in English. In 1990, in London, he made his second English-language recording, entitled Radio London. When he returned to Russia he traded the name Aquarium for BG-Band. The new Russian Album was dedicated to the many changes occurring in Russia as a result of Perestroika and Glasnost.

In the early to mid-'90s, Grebenshikov and company released a number of albums, once again as Aquarium. These all departed from rock in favor of a unique take on rural folk melodies. Hyperborea and Lilit (Lilith), which included performances by members of the Band, were released in 1997. The Tibetan-influenced album Refuge was recorded jointly with Gabrielle Roth & the Mirrors, as was 2002's Bardo. Another 2002 album, Sister Chaos, marked the 30th anniversary of Aquarium and a divergence in style, which focused on the group's rhythm section. In 2003 Aquarium recorded the jazz-influenced album Pesni Ribaka (Fisherman's Songs) in Russia and in India. An album influenced by African rhythms, Zoom Zoom Zoom, was released in 2005. ~ Sabrina Jaszi, All Music Guide
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Discography: Boris Grebenshikov
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Selected Songs of 1980-1987

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Pesni Ribaka (Fisherman's Songs)

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Terrarium

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Russian Songwriter

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Careless Russian Rover

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Careless Russian Rover

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Careless Russian Rover [CD/DVD]

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Horse White

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50 BG

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Sister Chaos

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Black Box

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PSI

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Territory

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Prayer and the Fasting

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Songs of Bulat Okudzhava

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Scorbets

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BG & Deadushki

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Cabinet of Curiosities

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Legends of Russian Rock

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Black Moon [Lilith]

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Black Moon [Lilith]

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Twenty Years Later

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Hyperborea

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Lilit [Lilith]

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25

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Collection 1980-1987

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Some Are Married (And Some Are Out of It)

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Radio Silence [Triary]

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Radio London

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Snow Lion

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Little Forelock

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Ancient Russian Despair

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Navigator

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Eye of the Cyclone

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Songs of Alexander Vertinsky

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Kostroma Mon Amour

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Peski Peterburga (Sands of Petersburg)

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At Taganka

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Letters of Captain Voronin

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Favorite Songs of Ramses IV

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Library of Babylon

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Russian Album [FEELE]

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Archive

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Black Rose

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Radio Silence

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Ravnodenstvie [Equinox]

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Assa

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Desyat Strel [Ten Arrows]

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Desyat Strel [Ten Arrows]

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Deti Dekabrya [The Children of December]

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Mad Nightingales of the Russian Forest [SoLyd]

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Den Serebra [The Day of Silver]

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Den Serebra [The Day of Silver]

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Ichthyology

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Radio Africa

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Tabu [Taboo]

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Tabu [Taboo]

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Electroshock

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Electroshock

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Akustika [Acoustics]

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Aroks & Shter

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Sinii Albom [The Blue Album]

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Sinii Albom [The Blue Album]

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Treugolnik [Triangle]

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Elektrichestvo [Electricity]

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Soon the Century Will End

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Pesni Alexandra Vertinskogo

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Wikipedia: Boris Grebenshchikov
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Boris Grebenshchikov

Boris Grebenshchikov in 2008
Background information
Birth name Boris Borisovich Grebenshchikov
Born November 27, 1953 (1953-11-27) (age 56)
Origin Leningrad, Soviet Union
Genres Rock, Reggae, Folk rock
Occupations Singer-songwriter
Instruments Guitar, Harmonica, Keyboard instrument, Metallophone, Tambura
Years active 1972–present
Associated acts Aquarium
Website www.aquarium.ru

Boris Borisovich Grebenshchikov (Russian: Бори́с Бори́сович Гребенщико́в) also known as Boris Purushottama Grebenshikov, is one of the most prominent members of the generation which is widely considered the "founding fathers" of Russian rock music. Due as much to his personal contribution as to the undisputed and lasting success of his main effort, the band Aquarium (active since 1972 until today), he is a household name in Russia. Grebenshchikov is colloquially known as BG (Russian: БГ) after his initials.

Contents

Early years (1953-1979)

Boris Grebenshchikov was born on November 27, 1953 in Leningrad. He co-founded Aquarium with a childhood friend, Anatoly "George" Gunitsky, in 1972 as a post-modernistic theater-centric effort that involved poetry and music. Gunitsky provided absurdist, highly symbolic lyrics to some of BG's earliest songs.

Despite an eventual graduate degree in Applied Mathematics, Grebenshchikov had always been a voracious consumer of culture, especially music. His school-years enamorment with The Beatles eventually extended to include a deep appreciation of Bob Dylan, which slowly transformed Aquarium into a low-fi electric blues band that moonlighted in acoustic reggae. The first song he managed to play on guitar was The Beatles' Ticket to Ride; his first public performance, in 1973, featured him performing songs by Cat Stevens.

The first six years of Aquarium's history lacked cohesion as Grebenshchikov and his various bandmates followed the Soviet equivalent of the hippie lifestyle: playing apartment jams, drinking the low-quality port wine available from the Soviet stores of the time, and intermittently travelling to remote gigs, even hitchhiking on rail freight cars.

Youthful philandering was heavily frowned upon by the Communist Party regime; decent recording facilities were out of reach because experiments in non-standardized self-expression were routinely suppressed as a matter of policy. The several homebrew 2-track recordings hacked out over those years (Temptation of St. Aquarium (Iskushenie Svyatogo Akvariuma), Count Diffusor's Fables (Pritchi grafa Diffuzora), Menuet for a Farmer (Menuet zemledel'tzu), and a motley crew of "singles") were of necessity extremely unprofessional, but already showcased the off-kilter wit, showy erudition, and a pervasive interest in Oriental thought and mysticism that eventually became BG's trademarks.

The year 1976 also saw the recording of BG's first solo album, On the Other Side of the Mirror Glass (S toy storony zerkal'nogo stekla), and a dual album with another prominent nascent Russian rock-n-roller, Mike Naumenko (web site in Russian), All Brothers are Sisters (Vse brat'ya - sestry).

Classical years (1980-1988)

BG's big break (or, in retrospect, his and the band's "watershed" moment), however, came in 1980, when Artem Troitzky (web site in Russian), the first public Russian rock critic and the enabling figure in many a Russian rock musician's carrier, invited Aquarium to perform at the Tbilisi Rock Festival.

The festival was a state-sanctioned attempt to channel the then-burgeoning Russian rock music movement into a controllable ideological vessel. It featured a laundered line-up of government-approved rock bands, but also Kraftwerk, whose performance was accompanied by frisbees being launched into the public. Members of the jury (the occasion was officially an artistic contest) were not amused. A covert KGB-bound report pinned the shennanigans on Aquarium, which caused BG to lose his day job at a backwater design bureau (of a kind that employed the majority of technical specialty graduates in the Soviet Union; Russians called them P.O. Box (Pochtoviy yaschik) because their street addresses were never revealed), and membership in Komsomol, the Young Communist League, which was a career kiss of death for a Soviet citizen in 1980.

The band's underground profile, however, had continued to rise sharply over the next 7 years, post-Brezhnev KGB-fueled reactionism and Gorbachev's perestroika notwithstanding. This was both due to talent, and the scarcity of supply - Western rock music was still officially banned at the time. Over the first five albums, the band attracted guitarist Alexander Lyapin, considered to be among the best rock guitar players of Russian origin, the pianist Sergey Kuryokhin, renowned for the impressive speed and virtuosity of his playing and boundless avant-garde experimentation, and Igor Butman, a world-class jazz saxophone player and one of the reigning kings of Soviet jazz.

The first Aquarium music available in the "west" was in 1986 when a double album entitled "RED WAVE, 4 UNDERGROUND BANDS FROM THE USSR" appeared in record stores in the U.S. Besides Aquarium, three other bands, Kino, Strange Games and Alisa were recorded on a four track machine, smuggled out of the country and released by a small record label from Hollywood, California. During this time, bands in the USSR were either officially sanctioned or were not allowed to play in public or record in professional recording studios. In 1986, when the record was released in America, Aquarium was immensely popular throughout the Soviet Union, but were forced to play at underground clubs and private gatherings.

By the time Aquarium disbanded amid internal squabble in 1987, they had 11 "official" records under their belt and were considered a living legend of Russian rock. BG himself was likened to Bob Dylan, not least because of his borrowing amply from Dylan stylistically in his earlier years. Railway water (Zheleznodorozhnaya voda) off the 1981 Blue album (Siniy albom), for example, is a spitting image of Dylan's It takes a lot to laugh off the 1961 Highway 61 revisited.

Going West (1989-1990)

Perestroika has ushered in a new era of opportunity for rock musicians; several of the more prominent ones got breaks in the West. BG's came from Dave Stewart (of Eurythmics fame). Stewart-produced Radio Silence was released in 1989, featuring covers of Alexander Vertinsky's China amid songs by BG, including a song written to Sir Thomas Malory's Death of King Arthur. Annie Lennox, Billy MacKenzie and Chrissie Hynde helped out, as did several of BG's bandmates from Aquarium.

The name of the album proved self-ironic in the extreme as it hasn't made so much as a dent in the charts. Part of the failure can be attributed to the fact that unlike the Anglo-American rock-n-roll culture, the Russian song tradition heavily emphasizes lyrical complexity over hooks or drive, which reinforces the not entirely fair comparisons between BG and Dylan.

BG issued another English-language album, Radio London, in 1990, which consisted of demos, but had some very appealing material to it.

Returning East (1991-1996)

Disillusioned in the possibility of exporting the Russian song-writing tradition to the West, BG returned to Russia and entered a phase of returning to his Russian roots. The year 1991 saw him come out with a Russian album (Russkiy al'bom), backed by an all-new, eponymous BG Band. The album featured a line-up of songs very "Russian" in both lyric and tune, and wasn't initially met with much public appreciation (in retrospect, however, it is considered by most critics one of his best records). BG was defiant, however, and went on record as having flipped a bird off the stage toward someone yelling demands for him to perform songs from the Classical period. His career since has proved time and again that he is not fond of rehashing the past, however glorious.

No matter the defiance, the Aquarium brand was too strong to eschew and even the next two albums, one mostly filler (Favorite songs of Ramses the 4th (Lyubimye pesni Ramzesa IV)) and one all B-sides (Sands of St. Petersburg (Peski Peterburga)), were released under the name Aquarium. By the time of 1994's Kostroma Mon Amour BG's mastery of folk melody and lyric has grown to new heights, and a new band lineup was going full steam.

The band's next three albums (effectively BG's solo albums published under the band's brand) - Navigator, Snow lion (Snezhniy lev), and Hyperborea - also have a stylized Russian feel. Navigator especially is widely recognized as a classic example of Russian songwriting, albeit with notable touches of blues and French chanson. The songs are melancholic bordering on heart-rending; the lyrics are either drenched in Byronic spleen, or full of BG-branded variant of Russian irony steeped in a sense of separation between self and the world.

And back to basics (1997-2008)

As of 1997, however, the Russian nationalism seems to have run its course for BG. His 1997 album Lilith is still mostly Russian in lyrical theme, but is recorded, by way of a chance meeting, with his idol Dylan's former backup band, The Band. In 1998 BG, who was by then settling into a cult classic status in Russia, played a one-man-and-his-guitar show of 1970s and 1980s songs to a small audience of fans in a San Francisco bar, and decided to return to reggae-n-rock-n-roll roots.

1999's Psi features just that, as interpreted through a post-modernistic lens with ample, highly inventive use of keyboard-triggered samplers. 2002's Sister Chaos (Sestra Haos), 2003's Fisherman's songs (Pesni rybaka), and 2005's ZOOM ZOOM ZOOM feature the same, painted by sparse touches of Armenian (Jivan Gasparyan on Northern Wind), Indian (the entire of Fisherman's songs) and African (some of ZOOM ZOOM ZOOM). Despite all of these having been issued under the Aquarium brand, it is recognized that by now Aquarium is "the people who play with Grebenshchikov".

In a very appealing touch of overcompensation, as technology and funds had begun to permit, sometime in the 1990s BG had become incredibly quality-conscious with his records. As the state of sound engineering in Russia left (still does) a lot to be desired, he had begun tracking in London's studios. Navigator, a predominantly acoustic album with a highly refined, "the-band-is-in-the-room" intimate soft of a mix saw BG sell his car and part of his guitar collection to cover tracking costs. The quality of his recent recordings may give the better of Western singer-songwriters a run for their money.

Radio "Aerostat"

Since 2005 Grebenshchikov has an own weekly radio program on Russian radio sation "Radio Rossii" titled "Aerostat" (Russian: Аэростат).[1] It is presented as "author's programm of Boris Grebenshchikov" and is created and spoken by himself. His intention is to tell about the alternatives in music, about the music which nobody else plays in today's radio instead of its artistic value and originality. It is mostly independent music which, as Boris says, otherwise would not be played at all. The range of songs in "Aerostat" varies from 1960-es and 1970-es rock (The Beatles, Bob Dylan and many others) over reggae, new wave , alternative rock, electronica, System Of A Down and punk, to world music, jazz, classical and avantgarde.[2] As of December 2008, almost 200 shows were created and broadcasted, each approximately 46 minutes long. The track lists and the scripts of all programs are available at official site of Aquarium & BG.[1]. The theme music is "Prelude" by T. Rex from "A Beard of Stars" album.

Religion and mysticism

BG is also known as a student of religion and mysticism. He translated several Hinduist and Buddhist books for publication in Russian, travelled the Orient widely, and is friends with A-list spiritual celebrities. He is just as familiar with the Russian Orthodox tradition (Aquarium web site has had a call for discovery of Orthodox relics going for years), and used to mix them freely in his lyrics. Russian Nirvana (Russkaya Nirvana) off Kostroma Mon Amour, for example, is a dual-pointed send-up containing a reference to "sitting down in the lotus posture in the middle of Kremlin". His relentless promotion of Tibetan buddhism in the 1990s and his tendency to use buddhist-derived logic with touches of absurdism to avoid answering questions in interviews make him pretty distinct amongst other Russian artists.

BG also translated several Buddhist and Hinduist texts to Russian, including:

  • Chokyi Nyima Rinpoche (son of Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche) Bardo Guidebook - "source material for the Tibetan Book of Living & Dying also known as Tibetan Book of the Dead Bardo Thodol, in 1995;
  • Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche Repeating Words of the Buddha - "the essential points of spiritual practice, inseparable from everyday life.", in 1997;
  • Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche Rainbow Painting - "addressing the topics of practices of accumulating and purifying to facilitate unification of view and conduct", in 1999;
  • Shibendu Lahiri Kriya yoga - "authentic teachings and techniques of Kriya Yoga", in 2003;
  • The Katha Upanishad, Upanishad belonging to the Yajur Veda, in 2005.

Worth noting

BG has virtually always been able to skilfully combine his interests into a cohesive, if highly eclectic, whole. His lyrics can and often do feature Buddhism, Russian Orthodoxy, and alcohol consumption in the same quatrain. The ability has only grown stronger over the years. 1999's Psi switches from detailed references to samurai culture to mentions of a certain carpenter's son to data storage on hard drives, all the while maintaining tight lyrical cohesion.

He has a unique singing voice. A combination of his natural timbre with a specific vibrato with downward expansion of range and unusual resonation acquired through training make his voice immediately recognizable. (Although one can certainly invent comparisons - for instance, he sounds rather like a wonderful, counter-intuitive blend of Jacques Brel and Bob Dylan.)

His output has been rather prolific. Over the 30+ years of his career he wrote 500+ songs, most of which were recorded and/or performed publicly. At this point Aquarium has 21 albums in the official discography, approximately 12 "unofficial ones", and about as many live records. Additionally, BG recorded cover albums on material from the two most prominent Russian-language songwriters (Alexander Vertinsky (1994's Songs of A.Vertinsky (Pesni A.Vertinskogo)) and Bulat Okudzhava (1999's Songs of B.Okudzhava (Pesni B.Okudzhavy))), two albums of mantra music with Gabrielle Roth and the Mirrors, (1998's Refuge and 2002's Bardo), and an album of electronica versions of Aquarium songs from late 1970s – early 1980s with the Russian duo Deadushki. Which left him time to be credited on records by big-in-Russia bands Nautilus Pompilius, Mashina Vremeni and Kino, as well as the UK acts Shakespears Sister and Kate St. John. This list is not exhaustive, either.

Singles

Year Title Chart positions Album
US Hot 100 US Modern Rock US Mainstream Rock UK
1989 "Radio Silence" - 7 - - Radio Silence

References

  1. ^ a b Radio "Aerostat" on official site of Aquarium & BG
  2. ^ [1]

External links


 
 
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Radio Silence
Afrika (Sergei Bugaev)
45 (album)

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