词条 | Alexander Barykin | ||||||
释义 |
| name = Aleksander Barykin | image = Alexander Barykin.jpg | caption = | alt = | background = solo_singer | birth_name = Aleksander Aleksandrovich Byrykin | alias = Aleksander Barykin | birth_date = February 18, 1952Beryozovo, Khanty–Mansia, USSR[1] | death_date = March 26, 2011 (aged 59)Orenburg, Russia[2] | instrument = Guitar | genre = | occupation = singer, songwriter | years_active = 1973–2011 | label = Melodiya | website = }} Aleksander Aleksandrovich Barykin (Byrykin) ({{lang-ru|Александр Александрович Барыкин (Бырыкин)}}; February 18, 1952 — March 26, 2011) was a Soviet and Russian singer and songwriter. BiographyAlexander Barykin was born on February 18, 1952, in Beryozovo (Khanty-Mansia). He was a young boy when his parents moved to Lybertsy, a suburb near Moscow. While still in school, Barykin sang and played guitar in an amateur band called Allegro. He went to musical school and then earned a degree in the classical vocal program at the Gnesins Musical College.[3] In the 1970s, Barykin was a member of the VIA bands Moskvichi (1973 — 1974),[1] Vesiolie Rebiata (1974 — 1976, 1978 — 1979), Samotsvety (1976) and Jemchug (1976 — 1978).[4] In August, 1979, Barykin collaborated with the guitarist of Samotsvety, Vladimir Kuzmin to organize a new band called Carnaval.[5] It was considered to be the first Russian band to embrace new wave. Carnaval combined a range of styles and influences, including glam rock, rhythm and blues, and white reggae on the base of Russian melodic.[6] In 1982, Kuzmin has organized his band Dynamic, and Barykin became the single leader of Carnaval. In 1985, the band experimented with pop rock (and after the album Rock'n'roll Marathon passed to this style). In 1989, they released a pure rock album Hey, Look! and broke up soon thereafter.[7] As member of Carnaval, Barykin released 15 albums, including 3 releases with the Soviet recording monopolist Melodiya,[7] 5 compilations, and 1 live album at Moroz Records (see Discography of Carnaval). In 1990, Barykin started a successful solo career (in the beginning as a pop singer)[7] and subsequently released 13 albums (see Discography of Alexander Barykin). Barykin is considered by many as a father of Russian reggae.[8] (See in External links Video No. 2 and Video No. 4 from second row and Video No. 1 from third row). A number of Russian musicians and songwriters were influenced by Barykin. For example, the reggae styled hit of the band Chaif Argentina — Jamaica 5:0 was made in a style reminiscent of Barykin. In 2008 he sang the cover version in the TV show Superstar. Vadim Nikolayev: "I regretted that it isn't Barykin's song almost ten years. But it became his song — at least for me" (Notes About Russian Rock).[9] In the 1990s, Barykin began to experience problems with his vocal chords. After Islands (1996), Barykin did not release any new songs for a period of four years. After that period, he recovered and was able to continue his solo career.[9] Near the end of his life, Barykin had reconstituted Carnaval together with such ex-members as guitarist Andrey Vypov, saxophonist and flutist Valentin Ilyenko, drummer Alexander Filonenko, and bass player Petr Makienko, with whom he played in Jemchug.[6][10][11] Personal lifeBarykin had four children: Georgy Byrykin (born in 1974, also known as Georgy Barykin, singer, songwriter, the musician, he played on a guitar in the accompanying band of his father),[12][13] Kira Byrykina (born in 1992, adopted in 1995), Yevgeniya Barykina (born on April 10, 2006) from his second marriage with singer Nelly Barykina (maiden name was Vlasova),[9] and illegitimate son Timur Sayed-Shah (born in 1987, became a rapper) from singer Raisa Sayed-Shah. Barykin died of a heart attack on March 26, 2011, in Orenburg after a concert. He was 59 years old.[2] Discography of Carnaval
Vladimir Kuzmin (ex-Nadejda, ex-Samotsvety), lead vocals (2), lead guitar, keyboards, violin, flute, vocoder (2), back vocals (1, 3) Alexander Barykin, lead vocals (1, 3), rhythm guitar, acoustic guitar, back vocals (2) Evgeny Kazantsev (ex-Vesiolie Rebiata, ex-Samotsvety), bass, back vocals Vladimir Boldyrev (ex-Modo), drums[7][14]
See also David Tukhmanov
Discography of Alexander Barykin
Tribute
References1. ^1 {{ru icon}} Alexander BARYKIN — Biography {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130507042123/http://www.barykin.ru/bio/index.html |date=2013-05-07 }} 2. ^1 {{ru icon}} Alexander Barykin has died of a heart attack in Orenburg 3. ^{{ru icon}} Nikolai Dobrykha. Rock From First Hands. Moscow, 1992. Pp. 80—82, 87. 4. ^{{ru icon}} Nikolai Dobrykha. Rock From First Hands. Moscow, 1992. Pp. 92—94, 103—104. 5. ^{{ru icon}} Nikolai Dobrykha. Rock From First Hands. Moscow, 1992. P. 104. 6. ^1 {{ru icon}} Alexander BARYKIN {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130507030242/http://www.barykin.ru/index/index.html |date=2013-05-07 }} 7. ^1 2 3 4 5 {{ru icon}} A. Alexeev, A. Burlaka, A. Sidorov. Who Is Who in Soviet Rock. Pp. 116—118. Moscow, 1991. 8. ^{{ru icon}} [https://web.archive.org/web/20080930011306/http://www.superstar.su/players/22/ Superstar 2008. Team of USSR ALEXANDER BARYKIN] 9. ^1 2 {{ru icon}} International register of memorials and cemeteries: Alexander Alexandrovich Barykin 10. ^Musicians {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130921060631/http://www.barykin.ru/musicians/index.html |date=2013-09-21 }} 11. ^{{ru icon}} Nikolai Dobrykha. Rock From First Hands. Moscow, 1992. P. 92. 12. ^{{ru icon}} GEORGY BARYKIN {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130921055941/http://music.tonnel.ru/index.php?l=music&alb=17356 |date=2013-09-21 }} 13. ^{{ru icon}} Russian Society of Authors — Georgy Alexandrovich Byrykin {{Webarchive|url=https://archive.is/20130706093514/http://rao.ru/index.php/pravoobladatelyam/informatsiya/reestry/reestr-ros-pravoobladateley?search_type=catalogofworks&limit=50&author_id=CCE263DC-564C-4480-9A5A-E9B24E2F64D5 |date=2013-07-06 }} 14. ^{{ru icon}} EP of Carnaval 15. ^{{ru icon}} Lifebuoy 16. ^{{ru icon}} The Airport 17. ^{{ru icon}} Legends of Russian Rock 18. ^{{ru icon}} Sudden Impasse 19. ^{{ru icon}} I Will Long Drive the Bicycle 20. ^{{ru icon}} Live in Kuybyshev 21. ^{{ru icon}} The Festival Robin Hood in Lytkarino 22. ^{{ru icon}} Russian Beach 23. ^1 {{ru icon}} Alexander BARYKIN - Discography {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130727190210/http://www.barykin.ru/discography/index.html |date=2013-07-27 }} 24. ^{{ru icon}} Now I Know 25. ^{{ru icon}} Alexander Barykin - Rock Ne Star 26. ^{{ru icon}} Star Carnival External links
15 : 1952 births|2011 deaths|People from Beryozovsky District, Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug|Soviet composers|Soviet male composers|Russian composers|Russian male composers|Honored Artists of the Russian Federation|Soviet male singers|Russian male singers|Soviet male singer-songwriters|Russian male singer-songwriters|Russian pop musicians|Burials in Troyekurovskoye Cemetery|20th-century male singers |
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