Friday, October 10, 2014

416. Canção contra Putin

Cartesiano na música de intervenção.


O General Putin tem andado a dar música a todos,  aos  Russos e aos não Russos. Agora também andam a dar música a ele, com canções anti-Putim. Já temos visto regimes apodrecerem e caírem  com menos.

Ele  e a sua comitiva de oligarcas também sabem que a arma mais eficaz contra eles é a farça, o riso das imbecilidades do Kremlin. 

Só temos um planeta e todos quanto o habitamos precisamos é de união para fazer um mundo melhor para todos quanto o habitamos.

Essas ideias de impérios, poder e all bulshit são coisas do passado e childish nos dias de hoje. Tomem juízo na bola!

Sinceramente, nós aqui em Moçambique sentimos muito pelo sofrimento do Grande Povo Russo, idealista, mas que facto anda sempre a ser enganado pela elite no poder.

Como dissémos várias vezes, há-de chegar a altura em que o Povo Russo se há-de libertar dessa gente malévica e eleger os verdadeiros representantes que defendam os interesses de todos e não só das cúpulas.

O Grande Povo Russo já demonstrou, ao longo da história, a seu grande valor na literaura, na pintura e todas as artes e ciências: campeões do humanismo.

Definitivamente, este Povo tem muito mais a dar ao mundo do que andar a mostrar os dentes, a bater e a chacinar os vizinhos mais fracos do que eles.

Não vamos aqui glorificar o capitalismo ocidental, porque este sistema também não parece  produzir os melhores resultados para o planeta. O Ocidente também terá de encontrar uma terceira via, no interesse do planeta e das populações que nele habitam.


Alaikum Assalam

Youtube anti Putin songshttps://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=2&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CCcQtwIwAQ&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3D8a07JeJ_DvM&ei=2_U3VNWYLYHbarSogZAB&usg=AFQjCNHo7PGPwGhdNOUPdf9yXna6qGxaXQ&sig2=7C-kgz0RIETnt-3txXOf0A&bvm=bv.77161500,bs.1,d.ZWU



https://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=2&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CCcQtwIwAQ&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DT9MT8xf8BQ8&ei=Cfc3VIHUINaxacaFgpgE&usg=AFQjCNEe2EwzRCfPpQevACbEh1qE-ysyUg&sig2=UYX5aQ1jOGsK1hnu1vVZNA 


https://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=3&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CC0QtwIwAg&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3D8a07JeJ_DvM&ei=Cfc3VIHUINaxacaFgpgE&usg=AFQjCNHo7PGPwGhdNOUPdf9yXna6qGxaXQ&sig2=2qRyQYv077jjcgXi30ChDA

Ukranian singer turns popular Russian songs into anti Putim lyrics

https://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=newssearch&cd=3&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CC0QqQIoADAC&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.themoscowtimes.com%2Farticle%2F506939.html&ei=Hfw3VOeqOOT8ygPW44G4DA&usg=AFQjCNEFqGVXXnOFt-5P4CTWGgPgQEk_GQ&sig2=Jc2C_b1WfTaAtqDb5fsEBw

Some of the most scorching, searing sarcasm against Russian President Vladimir Putin has been coming lately from the unlikely stage of a truck driver's seat, and pouring out in a smooth operatic baritone to the tune of popular Soviet songs — but with very different lyrics.
Vadim Dubovsky, a native of eastern Ukraine's Donetsk who has been living in the U.S. for the past decade, drives his truck outside of Chicago and uses his professional music skills and talents to voice just what he thinks about Putin and Moscow's policies in Ukraine.
And the thoughts are not kind.
When Russia recently dismissed the arrests of its paratroopers in Ukraine by saying they had "accidentally" wandered into the country, Dubovsky responded with a song titled "You are the Army of a Freak."
"You shouldn't wander around where you can get lost, accidentally stumbling into other people's war," he blasts in a powerful baritone to an upbeat tune. "Your relatives can now be proud of you: Not every Russian has done time in another country."

Dubovsky has become something of an Internet celebrity, with his songs viewed hundreds of thousands of times on YouTube, and his performances gaining coverage by Ukrainian television channels and news portals.
He sings in Russian and Ukrainian from his driver's seat, in front of a camera installed in the cabin, as the truck cruises along the highway. While the music comes from familiar Soviet-era songs, the lyrics are Dubovsky's own.
In one of his latest hits, titled "And Hell Rages On" — a take on the popular Soviet-era song "And the Battle Rages On" — Dubovsky first slams the rhetoric of Russia's official proclamations and state-run television coverage.
"For all the troubles and problems, only the West is to blame," he sings in a parody of Moscow's assertions.  "Russia, you are once again a rogue. And Cuba is your best friend."
Then he calls out Putin personally, referring to him by a popular expletive that can loosely be translated as "d*ckhead" and that has worked its way into the lexicon of mainstream politicians, and calling him "crafty and evil as a goblin."
He warns that the Russian leader will be called to account for the shooting down of the Malaysian airliner, the annexation of Crimea and the separatist war in eastern Ukraine.
"Putin, don't expect mercy. The Hague Tribunal awaits," Dubovsky sings. "You won't be pardoned for anything. Neither the Boeing, nor Crimea, nor Donbass."
In another song titled "Farewell March," he casts doubts on Russia's attempts to present itself as a peacekeeper concerned about the well-being of "brotherly" Ukrainians — a claim that seems belied by Putin's reported assertion a few years earlier that "Ukraine is not even a state," and by other Russian politicians' dismissive comments.
"We have never been brothers. The virus of slavery has crept into your souls," he sings. "You've always heaped curses on our faith, our freedom, our language."
Dubovsky is a graduate of Ukraine's Conservatory, he told UA Modna, a Ukrainian online television channel in the U.S. He visited the U.S. on three music tours starting in 2000, and during his last visit decided to stay, Dubovsky said in an interview with RFE/RL's Russian Service.
As for the reason he aims many of his punches personally against Putin: "I consider him my personal enemy," Dubovsky was quoted as saying. "This is a man who cause a lot of evil for my motherland, my friends, my acquaintances. He has really gone too far and it's time to stop him."
See also:

Watch more of Dubovsky's videos here:
"And Hell Rages On" (warning: contains Russian curse words)
The Moscow Times is happy to serve as a platform for intelligent and constructive discussion.
Any comment deemed non-constructive, personal attacks, spam and abuse will not be tolerated and will lead to you being banned from our website.

Belarus: 100 fans held for Putin song at Euro 2016 game


Fans chant at the Ukraine-Belarus Euro 2016 match in Borisov, Belarus, on 9 October 2014The rude chant rings out across the stands
More than 100 football fans have been detained in Belarus after nearly the entire stadium joined in chanting a well-known song insulting Russian President Vladimir Putin, media reports say.
Both local and visiting fans at the Euro 2016 qualifier between Ukraine and Belarus in Borisov came together in a rousing rendition of the song - which has became a popular expression of opposition to Putin in Ukraine,the Belarusian paper Nasha Niva reports.
  Belarusian fans are also heard voicing their solidarity with their Ukrainian counterparts by chantingthe signature slogan of the Maidan protests in Kiev - Slava Ukrayini ("Glory to Ukraine"). The Ukrainians return the favour by chanting Zhyve Belarus ("Long live Belarus").
After the match, about 100 Ukrainian and 30 Belarusian were held and taken to the local KGB station, reportedly on suspicion of using "obscene language", the opposition website Charter '97 reports. According toone report, some of them will be taken to court and are expected to receive a five-day sentence. The Ukrainian fans will also be deported.
It's not the first time the anti-Putin song has made waves. In June, Russian officials called for the resignation of the then Ukrainian Foreign Minister, Andriy Deshchytsya, after he joined Kiev protesters in insulting Putin. 
The authorities in Moscow are frowning on fruity language more generally - in April, parliament passed a bill that bans swearing from films, music and other works of art.
Fans chant at the Ukraine-Belarus Euro 2016 match in Borisov, Belarus, on 9 October 2014Belarusian and Ukrainian supporters also came together in choruses of "Glory to Ukraine"
Use #NewsfromElsewhere to stay up-to-date with our reports via Twitter.



No comments: