Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Странные игры - Метаморфозы



http://www.mediafire.com/download.php?ddjmneduzmi

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Sergey Kuryokhin & Keshavan Maslak - Friends Afar

Experimental pianist Sergei Kuryokhin was one of the leading lights of the Russian avant-garde until his death in 1996. Moving in between several experimental rock groups and more classically influenced material, Kuryokhin was a controversial figure in his time, once appearing on Russian television to prove that Lenin was not a human being, but rather a mushroom. His later switch to the ultra right-wing National Bolshevik Party caused a riff among the avant-garde Russian community who could not figure out if he was genuine or simply pulling off a satirical prank.



http://www.mediafire.com/?sharekey=62c08cc6f5c66b0bab1eab3e9fa335ca0df4dae054378fc9

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Хаммерман Знищує Вiруси - Страшний Суд i мягка пiся

pop - punk - electronic

Ukrainian avant-garde for masses.




http://www.mediafire.com/?sharekey=62c08cc6f5c66b0bab1eab3e9fa335ca0628ca107544e507

Pyotr Mamonov (Russian: Петр Николаевич Мамонов) (born April 14, 1951) is a former Russian rock musician and songwriter, former frontman of the Moscow band Zvuki Mu.Mamonov was one of the few rock musicians from former USSR who managed to achieve recognition abroad, through his collaboration with Brian Eno in the late 1980s. Around the same period he started acting in film, and over the next decade wrote, produced and acted in several one-man theatrical performances establishing himself as a cult figure in Russia.Mamonov's best-known film appearance was in the leading role in Pavel Lungin's 1988 Taxi Blues[1]. His works for theatre include Is There Life on Mars?, an absurdist take on Anton Chekhov's A Marriage Proposal, and Chocolate Pushkin, which makes a comical reference to (but doesn't cite) the Russian national poet Alexander Pushkin Piotr explains the name for the album as his own comparison to a popular DJ who calls himself "Black Elvis" and also describes the genre on this record as "lit-hop" (literature hip-hop).In the 1990s, Mamonov converted to Orthodox Christianity, left the capital, and settled in a village. He returned to play the lead role in Pavel Lungin's religious film "The Island" (Russian "Остров"), which closed the 2006 Venice Film
Festival. His acting in the film was praised by Alexis II, Patriarch of Moscow.



http://rapidshare.com/files/204364012/__1055___1077___1090___1088____1052___1072___1084___1086___1085___1086___1074____1080____1047___1074.html