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By the time Oleg Parastaev joined the Alliance in the fall of 1986, the group performed with a program of nine songs: “And this program was boring. I decided to write a song to dilute it. A motive was immediately born in my head. I composed it in G minor, the top notes were in B flat. It's a high note for a vocalist. Zhuravlev never had falsetto. He studied academic vocals. In the version in which he sings it - two and a half octaves. I asked him which sound he prefers. He answered "e". And I immediately had “at the dawn of the voice calling me.” — O. Parastaev[1] The author of music and text is Oleg Parastaev, vocals are Igor Zhuravlev[2]. The whole band[3][4] worked on the final arrangement of the song.

The song was recorded in four hours and the next day was mixed at Muslim Magomayev's studio [5] by sound engineer Igor Zamaraev. According to Zhuravlev's memoirs, drums were programmed on a Yamaha RX-11, keyboards on a Korg Poly-800 and (presumably) on a Yamaha DX21.

She originally appeared on the 1987 Alliance '87 magnetic album (also known as "Give Fire"). The song's live debut took place in February 1987 at the "Festival of Hopes". The performance of the song at "Rock Panorama-87" got on one of the records of the company "Melody", dedicated to the festival [6]. Also, the song (at the suggestion of Oleg Grobovnikov) was broadcast on the Yunost radio station.There is nothing at all about magnetizdat 37.54.230.242 ( talk) 08:21, 13 December 2022 (UTC) reply

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

By the time Oleg Parastaev joined the Alliance in the fall of 1986, the group performed with a program of nine songs: “And this program was boring. I decided to write a song to dilute it. A motive was immediately born in my head. I composed it in G minor, the top notes were in B flat. It's a high note for a vocalist. Zhuravlev never had falsetto. He studied academic vocals. In the version in which he sings it - two and a half octaves. I asked him which sound he prefers. He answered "e". And I immediately had “at the dawn of the voice calling me.” — O. Parastaev[1] The author of music and text is Oleg Parastaev, vocals are Igor Zhuravlev[2]. The whole band[3][4] worked on the final arrangement of the song.

The song was recorded in four hours and the next day was mixed at Muslim Magomayev's studio [5] by sound engineer Igor Zamaraev. According to Zhuravlev's memoirs, drums were programmed on a Yamaha RX-11, keyboards on a Korg Poly-800 and (presumably) on a Yamaha DX21.

She originally appeared on the 1987 Alliance '87 magnetic album (also known as "Give Fire"). The song's live debut took place in February 1987 at the "Festival of Hopes". The performance of the song at "Rock Panorama-87" got on one of the records of the company "Melody", dedicated to the festival [6]. Also, the song (at the suggestion of Oleg Grobovnikov) was broadcast on the Yunost radio station.There is nothing at all about magnetizdat 37.54.230.242 ( talk) 08:21, 13 December 2022 (UTC) reply


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