Post 60s music from your country
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Post 60s music from your country
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CHI
post some music from your country, user, I'm authentically curious
good stuff
middle two are blocked in the usa tho kek
gracias, sorry for off topic - what movies from your country would you recommend? Even something old.
that's strange, usually Germans block their stuff
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the People's Republic of Poland was called "the funniest barrack in the socialist camp" - even though rock music was oficially related to capitalist decadence we still had some bands, there is also one interesting story:
>This tour would also be one of the first times a rock band from Western Europe performed in Eastern Europe, when on 13 April, they played two shows at the Palace of Culture and Science in Warsaw, Poland. The people who did attend were told to behave accordingly during the concert or they would be removed from the venue, however, a riot started. Visiting Soviet officials were not pleased by the Rolling Stones performance and it would be a long while before the Stones would return to the Eastern bloc nations.
>"They thought the show was so awful, so decadent, that they said this would never happen in Moscow,"-- Mick Jagger.
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>even though rock music was oficially related to capitalist decadence
hmm i never thought about this before. what was typical socialist music like at the time?
This is what people liked in the 60s
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It's hard to define, but rather not typical rock, probably something more serious like:
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But not some North Korea tier military music, even in the USSR, after Slalin's death they had some kind of liberal wave:
>In the mid-1950s, many people were arrested for making musical recordings on "bones" (developed X-ray films).[1][2] Those found guilty of manufacturing and distributing such recordings received from three to five years of imprisonment in labour camps for profiteering.
>In the late 1950s, the catchphrase "Today he dances jazz, but tomorrow [he] will sell [his] homeland" (Ceгoдня oн тaнцyeт джaз, a зaвтpa Poдинy пpoдacт), became the stilyagi's signature and the key idea underlying their social protest. Stilyagi were recognized as an official musical, artistic and pop culture movement that later took on further modern influences, notably rockabilly, rock-n-roll and pop rock musical genres.
>Following the international festival of 1957, however, the USSR became more open to modern culture. The official ban on jazz music was removed, and many records became available in stores from the 1960s. Admiration of modern music, especially the rock-n-roll wave of the sixties, met more tolerance from official ideology and little active resistance. All this contributed to the decline of the movement in the early sixties, as former stilyagi entered their thirties and abandoned the lifestyles of their youth, while the next generation felt no need to follow such a lifestyle in order to enjoy modern culture or a nonpolitical way of life.
en.wikipedia.org
>Slalin's
Stalin's, sorry
Our 60s were very different from your 60s, we only became a developed nation in the late 90s (thanks for da monies EU)
Pikku Rahastaja is much better
>60s
>not already being depressed
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This is great. Were there any interesting German bands at that time?
Glad you like it.
Well, not to many I think. The best years of German music had yet to start.
Debut of perhaps our best band ever, though. I think this album is nothing to their following classics but still worth mentioning.
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>The best years of German music had yet to start.
What groups do you mean?
Can, Neu!, Faust, Popol Vuh, Kraftwerk, Cluster, the works of Dagmar Krause (co-credit to Anglos here), forgetting some for sure.
Basically, Russian beatniks.
At that time, they'd show propaganda films of hippies wallowing in the mud at Woodstock with the narration "Capitalist youth are decadent, use drugs, and have sex with abandon." and then a clip of smiling muscled young men digging a ditch someplace with the caption "Socialist youth work hard for the construction of the motherland."
Thanks, I only knew Kraftwerk
yep
That's basically what official news programms said after that concert
>backbreaking labor in the hot sun is preferable to attending a concert, meeting interesting people, having sex
And now you know why they said Motley Crue and Levi's jeans defeated communism rather than nuclear missiles.
I can't speak for him, but look up
>Krautrock
all popular songs in sweden from the 60's were just covers of foreign songs
fuckin love wolfe tones
Shame too. I wanted to hear that guy jam on his flute.
I reposted it here from another source:
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Guys, why don't you post anything?
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don't forget the glory of 60s folk
I didn't know that last guy, interesting
Wait, Australia had electricity in the 60s?
Probably the most popular Hungarian band in the 60s:
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from Wiki:
>In 1968, the New Economic Mechanism was introduced, intending on revitalizing the Hungarian economy, while the band Illés won almost every prize at the prestigious Táncdalfesztivál. In the 70s, however, the Russians cracked down on subversives in Hungary, and rock was a major target. The band Illés was banned from performing and recording, while Metró and Omega left. Some of the members of these bands formed a supergroup, Locomotiv GT, that quickly became very famous. The remaining members of Omega, meanwhile, succeeded in achieving stardom in Germany, and remained very popular for a time.[1]
Now the most popular group from Czechoslovakia:
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Wiki:
>The Plastic People of the Universe (PPU) is a Czech rock band from Prague. It was the foremost representative of Prague's underground culture (1968–1989), which had gone against the grain of Czechoslovakia's Communist regime. Due to their non-conformism, members of the band often suffered serious repercussions such as arrests.
>From January into August 1968, under the rule of Communist Party leader Alexander Dubček, Czechoslovakians experienced the Prague Spring. In August, Soviet and other Warsaw Pact troops invaded Czechoslovakia. This led to the overthrow of Dubček and to what came to be known as the normalization process. Less than a month after the invasion, Plastic People of the Universe was formed.
>Bassist Milan Hlavsa formed the band in 1968 and was heavily influenced by Frank Zappa and the Velvet Underground (Zappa's band, the Mothers of Invention, had a song called "Plastic People" from their 1967 album Absolutely Free).[2] Czech art historian and cultural critic Ivan Jirous became their manager/artistic director in the following year,[1] fulfilling a role similar to the one Andy Warhol had with the Velvet Underground. Jirous introduced Hlavsa to guitarist Josef Janíček,[1] and viola player Jiří Kabeš. The consolidated Czech communist government revoked the band's musicians license in 1970.
this French singer was very popular in the Soviet bloc:
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