Voices from Russia

Monday, 4 June 2012

People’s Artist of the RSFSR Eduard Khil, “Mr Trololo”, Dies at 77

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People’s Artist of the RSFSR Eduard Khil died of a stroke at the age of 77. It’s hard to believe that he’s gone. Everyone knew of Khil’s humour and of the optimism that permeated his songs; he remained lively and energetic to the end. Khil possessed a composed but powerful lyric baritone voice, fantastic diction, and great artistry. His life wasn’t easy. At age seven, he was evacuated from Smolensk an hour before the Germans arrived. The spectre of death hung over his head… sinister planes with black crosses bombed a train carrying wounded people, to which the car with the children was attached at the last moment. Eduard remembered for the rest of his life the metallic glint of the low-flying aircraft and the blood of the newly-killed soldiers and children who were buried almost every day. Then, he went to an orphanage in distant Buryatia because his mother had lost him in the chaos of the VOV (by that time she was divorced from her husband). Eduard made two failed attempts to get to the front lines. He suffered from malnutrition. Later, he recalled that he often dreamed about bread at night. Eduard survived. He took part in concerts for the wounded. Towards the end of the war, his mother found him and took back home to devastated Smolensk. It’s no accident that Khil had so many military songs in his repertoire. He used to say, “Those who survived the war are not afraid of anything”.

Having witnessed so many horrors as a child, Khil looked at the bright side for his whole life. He not only survived, he became a professional singer after graduating from the Leningrad Conservatory in 1960. His first performance was in 1949, when he was a student at a vocational printing school. As he recalled later on, he was paid in crackers. Where did this son of a mechanic and an accountant get his talent? He probably inherited it from his grandfather Vasili. He was a church choir director before the Revolution, but he was purged by the Soviets. Why didn’t Khil become an opera singer? After all, he played the role of Figaro in Mozart‘s The Marriage of Figaro; he performed in Rossini’s The Barber of Seville; he sang Janusz from Moniuszko’s Galka and the leading parts in Yevgeni Onegin and The Queen of Spades. Khil probably wanted to transcend the classical genre. He launched his career as a pop singer in 1962 and he soon became one of the country’s best performers. However, he didn’t forget about other musical genres, either. As the host of By the Fireplace on Leningrad television, he described the history of classic Russian lyrical songs and sang them himself.

Audiences in many countries loved Khil, and not just those in the Eastern bloc. Apart from his vocal talents, Khil had the important skill of always being “in synch” with his era. In the 1990s, when many Soviet performers lost their jobs, Khil and the youth band Prepinaki presented a project, “Khil and Sons”, offering updated version of popular Soviet songs. In 2010, Khil became popular all over the world as young American internet users fell in love with a video of him singing Arkady Ostrovsky’s 1966 song, I’m Very Happy ‘cause I’m Finally Goin’ Home. Khil became known as “Mr Trololo” after the sound he repeats throughout the wordless vocalise. He recalled his moment of international fame by saying, “I was sitting at home, peeling potatoes. My grandson rushed in and said, ‘What are you doing, Gran’pa? They’re showing you on the Internet!’ I don’t even know how many people saw me, but I was immediately showered with invitations from all over the world”.

Several generations were raised on Khil’s songs. As one of his fans wrote, “He was a great singer with a unique voice. He sang as if he were reading novels out loud, and it was impossible to be unmoved by his singing”. Khil once remarked, “Only fools believe that pop singing’s a simple genre. Many still consider show business easy, but I’ll tell you that all these things are very difficult”.

4 June 2012

Sergei Varshavchik

RIA-Novosti

http://en.rian.ru/analysis/20120604/173847612.html

4 June 2012. Unknown Images of Eduard Khil “Mr Trololo”

Besik Pipia of RIA-Novosti kept a personal archive of photographs the late Soviet and Russian pop star and People’s Artist of the RSFSR Eduard Khil , shot on the banks of the Neva over many years. We publish these images here for the first time. Eduard Khil was a frequent guest entertainer at the Остров (Ostrov: The Island) night club, he was friends with one of the founders, Sergei Osintsyov.

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Khil at the gala for Yelena Obraztsova, which took place at the Russian Museum in 1999.

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Khil and Alisa Freindlikh at the opening of the Russian-Georgian musical salon in St Petersburg.

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Khil told Besik Pepia, “We should have more such forums for intellectual communication. The ambience here reminds me of my annual trips to Georgia in the Soviet period; it was a sunny country, full of song, with nice tart wines”.

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Khil loved nature, especially out at his dacha in Novgorod Oblast.

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“When I’m in the city, I miss the country… I miss my fruit trees and my berry bushes, as well as my black and red currant beds. I plant herbsdill, celery, and parsley… I really love tilling the soil. I have a greenhouse, but everything’s natural… I refuse to use chemicals”.

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“My wife and I grow cucumbers, tomatoes, potatoes, beets, turnips, and cabbage, even flowers. It’s beautiful countryside out in nature; we have storks and rabbits, many birds, and all other kinds of living creatures”.

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Out at the dacha, Khil loved to barbecue shashlyk. As he said, “I don’t really care for beer, I prefer Burgundy and Georgian wine”.

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4 June 2012

Besik Pepia

RIA-Novosti

http://ria.ru/photolents/20120604/664630965.html

Funeral for “Mr Trololo” Eduard Khil to Be on 7 June

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The funeral of Eduard Khil will be on Thursday at the Smolensky Cemetery in St Petersburg, a secular memorial service will be at the Arkady Raikin Variety Theatre. Dmitri Khil, the singer’s son, said, “The funeral’s set for 7 June at the Smolensky Cemetery. The secular memorial service is set for the Variety Theatre”.

4 June 2012

Voice of Russia World Service

http://rus.ruvr.ru/2012_06_04/76943913/

Eduard Khil Passed Away

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Eduard Khil, People’s Artist of the RSFSR, a veteran entertainer, and the owner of a unique baritone voice, died last night in St Petersburg. The Polenov Russian Neurosurgical Institute released the sad news; Khil had been hospitalised there in the ICU after a stroke. He was 77-years-old. A spokesman for the Institute said, “Khil died at 01.35 on Monday”. In early April, Khil had a stroke was in the Mariinsky Hospital. In early April, Khil had a stroke and was at the Mariinsky Hospital. Until May 23, he received care at the hospital until his doctors transferred him to the Polenov Institute. During the entire time, his condition remained serious; his doctors tried their best to restore his full mental faculties. From the very onset of the disease, vital areas of his brain shut down, leading to disruptions throughout his body. Doctors at the Mariinsky Hospital used protocols developed by Dr Veronika Skvortsova, the Minister of Health, in an attempt to restore circulation in cerebral vessels affected by CVST. Dr Skvortsova is a leading expert on cerebral circulation.

President Vladimir Putin expressed his condolences to the family and friends of Eduard Khil. His telegram, published on the official Kremlin website, said, “Dear Zoya Aleksandrovna, Dmitri Eduardovich, and Eduard Dmitrievich, I sincerely share the sorrow that’s befallen your family, all his fans mourn Eduard Anatolyevich Khil… what a generously-gifted, amazingly bright, and positive person. His name belongs to a whole epoch in the history of our national music. Eduard Anatolyevich had an extraordinary charm and lyricism; he never violated the standards of his professional skills, vocal culture, and creative taste. Many of his songs are ‘golden oldies’ of Russian pop art. The blessed memory of Eduard Anatolyevich Khil will forever remain in our hearts”.

Prime Minister Dmitri Medvedev expressed his personal condolences and those of the government, saying, “The death of the outstanding pop singer Eduard Anatolyevich Khil is an irreplaceable loss for Russian culture as he was truly a people’s artist. The songs that he sang tied together people of different generations; his fans aren’t only in Russia, but in foreign lands, too. Eduard Anatolyevich is no longer with us, but he left us his musical legacy, which will help to keep the memory of this brilliant and talented person. I give my condolences to his wife, in particular”.

Khil’s fans from around the world expressed their condolences to the family and friends of the deceased artist. On Monday, fans posted dozens of comments and condolences on a webpage created in his memory, expressing sorrow from not only from Russian fans, but from foreigners, too, including from the USA. Elena wrote, “I give condolences to the family, I often saw Eduard Anatolyevich on Rubinshteyn Street, even though he lived on Marat Street. He’d walk on Rubinshteyn to go home and to go to work. He’d quietly walk down the street. He always acknowledged people. He always stopped to talk to everybody”.

On Monday morning, the name “Khil” was amongst the top ten most mentioned phrases in Russian Twitter. Members of social networks remembered “Mr Trololo”… Khil’s nickname in recent years, when there was a surge in popularity for his video, I’m Very Happy ‘cause I’m Finally Goin’ Home. Online, in the USA and Europe, his video gained millions of views and the popularity of the video even surpassed one with US President Barack Obama. Badges, mugs, and T-shirts with Khil’s picture became hot commodities in British shops. Of course, his fans enthusiastically imitated Khil, they sometimes parodied his songs, and they made animations to go with the songs. More than 14,000 people logged on to the webpage of the singer’s Facebook fan community.

Khil was almost the last person in the world to learn of his internet triumph, his grandson told him all about it. With some surprise, he then remembered about the insane popularity of the song forty years ago, saying, “It was my signature piece in the 60s. Imagine, I wasn’t singing a lullaby, it wasn’t a march, but it was a song without a single word for 2½ minutes. I haven’t sung it for about five years. I think that fate is telling me that I should return to it”. Composer Arkady Ostrovsky wrote the vocalise I’m Very Happy ‘cause I’m Finally Goin’ Home, but it took on life when it was coupled with Khil’s talents, as the performer always had intense energy, vivacity, and optimism. He was like that in Soviet times, and his répertoire reflected that. However, those days are over, and Khil, along with his songs, seemed to disappear from the stage and from the TV. The former idol of millions had to leave to work abroad. His conservatory training from his native St Petersburg came in handy here, as he moved on to other genres, he sang Russian romances in Paris at the “Rasputin” Cabaret.

He did that for three years, but Khil couldn’t take it any more… his homesickness for Russia tortured him. He returned home, knowing full well that he had no prospects. He couldn’t know that, soon, people would say that he “blew open the internet”, and opened up new opportunities for a continued artistic life for himself. Until recently, his fans believed that he’d be able to go on a world tour, because, despite his age, he continued to perform and was in good shape. Nevertheless, again, fate decreed differently.

Edward Gil was born on 4 September 1934 in Smolensk. After graduating in 1960 from the Rimsky-Korsakov Leningrad State Conservatory, he began as a soloist with Lenkontsert, performing a classical and chamber repertoire. He participated in the productions of the Opera Studio of the Conservatory, where he made his début whilst still a student. Khil performed many leading operatic roles in productions of The Marriage of Figaro, The Barber of Seville, Yevgeni Onegin, and The Queen of Spades, amongst others. In 1962, he first took part in a pop concert, at the Central House of Artists in Moscow. Khil quickly became one of the most beloved and popular singers. His repertoire includes such famous songs as С чего начинается Родина? (Where does the Motherland Begin?), У леса на опушке (At the Edge of the Forest), На безымянной высоте (On a Nameless Height), А люди уходят в море (And People Go To Sea), Голубые города (Blue City), Как хорошо быть генералом (How Good It Is to Be a General). In 1968, Eduard Khil became an Honoured Artist of the RSFSR; in 1974, he went on to become a People’s Artist of the RSFSR.

Until recently, Khil toured extensively in Russia and CIS countries with the concert programme, “Eduard Khil and Sons”. In 2010, the singer became internationally known for the song I’m Very Happy ‘cause I’m Finally Goin’ Home. The video on YouTube gained great popularity in many countries around the world. That’s why Eduard Anatolyevich became known as “Mr Trololo”. Eduard Khil received the Order of the Red Banner of Labour, the Order of Friendship of Peoples, and the Order of Merit for the Fatherland, 4th class. He won the Lenin Komsomol Prize in 1976.

4 June 2012

Roman Pesotsky

Tatiana Zavlyalova

Voice of Russia World Service

http://rus.ruvr.ru/2012_06_04/76943913/

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