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Moscow-Peking

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Wikipedia article




'Moskva-Peking' , also known as 'Moscow Beijing', or 'Russian man and Chinese man are brothers forever' is a Soviet mass song written in 1949 by Vano Muradeli to lyrics by Mikhail Vershinin. The song was written to commemorate the foundation of the People's Republic of China as well as to emphasise fraternal and amicable relations by the Soviet Union and the newly Communist Chinese state. Due to the Sino-Soviet Split during the 1960s, the song generally fell out of official favour by the end of the 1960s, and the lyric "Russians and Chinese, brothers forever" became a common ironic joke.[http://bibliotekar.ru/encSlov/16/71.htm .] // .. . .: -, 2005. 852 . .

History



The lyrics of Moscow-Peking were written in 1949 by Mikhail Vershinin for publication as a poem in a state-run magazine. According to an interview by Izvestia, Vershinin was serving a sentence in a forced labour camp at the time that he wrote the poem, and wrote it in exchange for the reduction of his sentence. By chance, composer Vano Muradeli read Vershinin's poem and decided commit it to music, commemorating both the 70th birthday of Joseph Stalin as well as the foundation of the People's Republic of China. The original version of the song also directly referenced Stalin, although this lyric was replaced after the ascension of Khrushchev. Before the Sino-Soviet Split, the song was used frequently at state events, in particular those involving China. The song was also played personally for Mao Zedong by the Alexandrov Ensemble during a tour of Beijing, a showing which sufficiently impressed Mao to the point of asking to meet the composer. Stalin was also known to be partial to the song, and awarded Vano Muradeli a Stalin Prize. After the Sino-Soviet Split, the song was rarely heard, due to it being considered politically unacceptable.

See also



*Sino-Soviet Split

*Vano Muradeli

*Mass song

*Music of the Soviet Union

*Hindi rusi bhai bhai

References



Category:1949 songs

Category:ChinaSoviet Union relations

Category:Soviet songs

Category:Propaganda in the Soviet Union

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