Anthem of the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic
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English: 'State Anthem of the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic' | |
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Имнул де Стат ал РСС Молдовенешть | |
Former regional anthem of Moldavian SSR | |
Lyrics | Emilian Bukov and Bogdan Istru (Ivan Bodarev) |
Music | Ștefan Neaga (1945) Eduard Lazarev (musical renovation in 1980) |
Adopted | 1945 (original version) 1980 (renewed version) |
Relinquished | 1980 (original version) 1991 (renewed version) |
Preceded by | Deșteaptă-te, române! |
Succeeded by | Deșteaptă-te, române! (until 1994) Limba Noastra |
Audio sample | |
"Imnul de Stat al RSS Moldovenești" (post-1980 version) |
National anthems of Moldova | ||||||||||
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The State Anthem of the Moldavian SSR[a] was the regional anthem of the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic, a constituent republic of the Soviet Union.[1]
Originally, the anthem began with the words, "Moldova cu doine străbune pe plaiuri"[2] and was composed by Ștefan Neaga, with lyrics by the poets Emilian Bukov and Bogdan Istru (Ivan Bodarev) in 1945.
Ivan Bodiul, the First Secretary of the Communist Party of Moldova, authorized composer Eduard Lazarev to modify the anthem in a "Musical Renovation". (Second Edition of the Anthem).[3]
The lyrics were rewritten, removing all references to Joseph Stalin. The music was also altered, removing the original three-stanza structure in favor of a single-stanza three-part structure.[1]
The beginning words of the anthem were changed to "Moldova Sovietică".
History
In 1945 Ștefan Neaga wrote the melody for the Anthem of Moldova SSR, for which the poets Emil Bukov and Bogdan Istru created the lyrics. Thanks to this work, the composer and the writers won the first prize of a great national musical contest in the Soviet Union,[citation needed] where composers from Moldova and other Soviet republics presented their works.[4]
"E. Bukov remembered how demanding and self-critic was Ștefan Neaga. For this anthem, he made dozens of variants, each time being dissatisfied. The Anthem -said the composer-, had to be composed so when a person hears it, he would stand up filled by a deep patriotic sentiment.[5]
The anthem that they created, was highly appreciated by musicians, becoming for over 45 years the main song of the country. Through this musical work, Neaga became the eternal pride and joy of the Moldavian people. (Moldova socialistă, 1951)"Moldavian SSR's anthem is one of the best creations of this genre. Adopted in 1945, it entered for three and half decades in our republic's symbolism".[6]
It was very melodic and it had some ties with folk music. The musicologist Leonid Răilean testified: "In the years of the "greater country" (USSR), one day, the anthem ceased to like. When Stalin died in 1953, during the De-Stalinization, the State Anthems were muted by Nikita Khrushchev and the Moldovian SSR anthem was like a long melody it supposed that they were 25 years of a anthem without lyrics. In 1977, the Soviet Union adopted a new constitution and lyrics of the National Anthem, all its Socialist Republics followed the same path. Bodiul, who took over in 1961, got bored with the long anthem without lyrics and decided to make it shorter and simpler, keeping the original idea. And, as its author was no longer alive, Ivan Bodiul authorized Eduard Lazarev "to renovate" the anthem. The task was given to the composer who maintained the music of the verses, added an introduction, an intermezzo, and in the end a variation of the old Chorus. This renovation deformed and damaged the music structure and thus, its sonority. One way or another, in the early 90s, this anthem was thrown to the garbage dump of history, as well as other signs of the past times".[7]
Ștefan Neaga said that he wanted to represent with his work "the creativity and love of Great Stalin, the certainty of the victory of communism, and his desire to give all his forces in this unique case".[8]
"I wanted to play in this gratifying music event, to create the symbol of these historic victories, in which the Moldovan people regained their freedom."[9]
Neaga was an artist who supervised under his own magnifying glass the weaknesses of his art. French writer Claude Roy said that there is a type of character in which one can see a creation as "an art to shine for yourself and for others, a little more than one can really live your life." [citation needed]
Mystery of lyrics
In the only instrumental recording of the Moldavian SSR National Anthem, made by the Brass Band of the USSR Ministry of Defence in 1968, the original version made by Neaga in 1945 can be heard. It is a "typical" Soviet Anthem with three stanzas and three choruses.
Moldovan politician and historian Valeriu Passat (ro), stated in his exhibition "13 ani de Stalinism. RSS Moldovenească în anii 1940–1953" (13 Years of Stalinism, Moldavian SSR in years 1940–1953) that Iosif Mordoveț (ro) forced the authors to write the anthem.[10]
According to Vladimir Poțeluev,[11] this anthem was created by an order made by the Supreme Soviet in Moscow, after the annexation of the Moldavian ASSR and Bessarabia (the west and east territory of the Dniester River) to the Soviet Union. It also said that the top brass (Stalin and others) set multiple rules for the writers of the lyrics:
- Mention to the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.
- Mention to the "Yugo Liberation" from capitalism.
- Mention to the development of infrastructure under the Soviets.
- Mention to the unity of Moldavian people with the rest of the union (something typical in the anthems of the Soviet republics).
- Mention to the total expulsion of fascists on Moldavian Territory (Soviet victory over Hitler).
Rejected lyrics:
Emil Samoilă | Leonid Cornenanu | Variant of Liviu Deleanu – rejected for aggression |
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Lyrics
Note on orthography
The Cyrillic script was used officially for the Romanian language (also called Moldovan in Transnistria and by less devoloped rural regions of Moldova)[12][13] during Soviet times. However, after 1989, the Romanian language in modern-day Moldova now officially uses the Latin script; only the breakaway state of Transnistria (claimed internationally as part of Moldova) still officially uses the Cyrillic alphabet.
Original version (1945–1953)
Cyrillic script (then official) |
Latin script (now official) |
IPA transcription (Moldavian dialect) |
Poetic English translation |
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I |
I |
1 |
I |
Post-Stalinist version (1980–1991)
After Stalin's death in 1953, like other SSR anthems, any mentions of the former leader have been removed; however, a new version of the anthem wasn't adopted until 1980. The anthem was rewritten from the typical three verses with choruses—like other SSR anthems—to a three-part single verse without choruses, which was used until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.[1]
The music was composed by Ștefan Neaga and was arranged by Eduard Lazarev, and the lyrics were written by Emilian Bucov and Bogdan Istru.[1]
Moldovan Cyrillic script (then official) |
Romanian Latin script (now official) |
IPA transcription (Moldavian dialect) |
Poetic English translation |
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I |
I |
1 |
1 |
See also
Notes
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h Moldova (1945-1991) – nationalanthems.info
- ^ "Catalog BNRM |". catalog.bnrm.md. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
- ^ "НЯГА Штефан". kishinev84.murvanidze.com. Archived from the original on 2017-05-10.
- ^ Știrbu, Alina. Maestrul Ștefan Neaga la intersecții de culturi: Dezvăluiri genetice și identitare a personalității lui Ștefan Neaga. pp. 102 & 103.
- ^ Nistru, 1975
- ^ Sovet. Moldova, 1990
- ^ Șmurgun, N., Rev. Moldova. – 2011. – Noiem. – Dec. – P. 28-33.
- ^ MS 1950
- ^ MS 1945
- ^ "Tiparire - Eveniment / "Stalinismul", expus de Valeriu Pasat". www.timpul.md.
- ^ "Despre simbolurile "naționale" ale Republicii Sovietice Socialiste Moldovenești". www.curaj.net. Archived from the original on 2017-09-22.
- ^ Article 12 of the Constitution of Pridnestrovskaia Moldavskaia Respublika, kspmr.idknet.com, 24 December 1995
- ^ Population by main nationalities, mother tongue and language usually spoken, 2004 (XLS), National Bureau of Statistics of the Republic of Moldova
- ^ a b Гимн Молдавской ССР
- ^ Духовой оркестр МО СССР - Государственный гимн Молдавской ССР текст песни
External links
- National Anthem of the Moldovan SSR (VOCAL 1945-1980) - "Имнул де Стат ал РСС Молдовенешть" (courtesy of DeroVolk)
- National Anthem of the Moldovan SSR (VOCAL 1945-1980) - "Имнул де Стат ал РСС Молдовенешть" (reupload, courtesy of DeroVolkTV)
- National Anthem of The MSSR (1945-1980) [Full Vocal Version] (courtesy of Kingworld30)
- "History of The National Anthem of The Moldavian SSR (From First Prize to Garbage)" (courtesy of Kingworld30)
- "Moldova SSR National Anthem (THE TRUE ORIGINAL STALINIST VERSION)" (courtesy of Kingworld30)
- "State Anthem of the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic (1945 - 1980) Super Mario 64 Edition" (courtesy of SuperMarioNick B.)
- Instrumental Recording of MSSR National Anthem (1945-1980)
- MIDI file
- Vocal recording in MP3 format
- Lyrics - nationalanthems.info