The Soviet Union's Most Fearless Punk

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  • Опубліковано 2 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 908

  • @errr2815
    @errr2815 2 місяці тому +688

    And yeah, i remembered reading some info, that he recorded 3 FUCKING ALBUMS. NOT SONGS. 3 ALBUMS IN 1 NIGHT. Its like WHOLE Nirvana discography

    • @kotpar-pw4xp
      @kotpar-pw4xp 2 місяці тому +97

      erhm, actually, he recorded 3 albums in 3 days☝🤓(first day - drums, second - bass and rhythm guitar, third - vocals and solo) but that's still impressive

    • @Embrod
      @Embrod 2 місяці тому +13

      ​@@kotpar-pw4xp but acthulahyyy

    • @parasatc8183
      @parasatc8183 2 місяці тому +46

      In the 80s he used to be very prolific. In 1989 he recorded six albums with GrOb, ten albums for his side project "Kommunizm" with other GrOb members, and produced albums of other Siberian punk groups and musicians.
      Also note that unlike Nirvana, Letov recorded his albums on consumer-grade recording equipment inside his home studio. Well into the 90s his neighbors would complain about noise coming from his flat.

    • @GEMSofGOD_com
      @GEMSofGOD_com Місяць тому +3

      Kurt was a half-asser

    • @sanektorch
      @sanektorch Місяць тому +16

      This happened because he was fleeing from the KGB. When he and Yanka Dyagileva ran away from the city and traveled a lot, he wrote poems and songs on the road. By the time a relatively safe opportunity to return home appeared, he had already made albums based on his notes. In one song, he writes a funny line where he says that all the songs sound the same because he recorded them as quickly as possible.

  • @haramsaddam238
    @haramsaddam238 2 місяці тому +724

    Printing records with old x-ray images is dope as hell. I’m surprised western bands like Carcass never tried it

    • @MSHNKTRL
      @MSHNKTRL 2 місяці тому +39

      back in the days of print media, magazines would often have flexi-discs of promotional tunes tucked in the centerfold. Carcass probably printed a couple for the British rags. The thing is, XRays fade really quick from the light, so the graphics may suffer.

    • @shaunlafountain7189
      @shaunlafountain7189 2 місяці тому +12

      ​​@@MSHNKTRLDecibel Magazine still does flexi

    • @PlutoTheGod
      @PlutoTheGod 2 місяці тому +25

      Why would Carcass try it 😂 they’re in the UK and freely had access to equipment. The ones made from X rays sound horrendous and only last for a few spins. They’re also loose and floppy and more expensive unless you’re stealing the materials.

    • @sycration
      @sycration 2 місяці тому +15

      @@PlutoTheGod just bc its cool and morbid

    • @HonestDepression101
      @HonestDepression101 2 місяці тому +1

      Or Crass

  • @jbaer0
    @jbaer0 2 місяці тому +1411

    This video dropped on the 34th anniversary of Viktor Tsoi’s death, rest in peace Letov and Tsoi

  • @vandarkholme8548
    @vandarkholme8548 2 місяці тому +979

    He is unironically one of the greatest punks ever, not just in Russia. Sadly almost unknown in the west, even compared to someone like Tsoi.

    • @von_maslo
      @von_maslo 2 місяці тому +114

      Well, Letov's music is much harder to understand than Tsoi's, even by Russian speaking, let alone by those who don't know the language. For example, a phrase like "eternity smells of oil" and the question of eternity and death itself is a reference to "Crime and punishment" (Svidrigailov's monologue about "eternity" being a small room filled with spiders). And that is only one phrase from a 13 minute song lol. Letov's music contains many similar references to russian and soviet formal and non-formal culture, and that is something not always interesting for someone outside Russian-speaking world.

    • @Denis_y
      @Denis_y 2 місяці тому +11

      "Русское поле экспериментов" Песня на 10 минут 😂

    • @von_maslo
      @von_maslo 2 місяці тому +7

      14 минут 15 секунд в версии из одноимённого альбома. И я тебе открою, видимо, секрет, у очень многих групп существуют разные записи песен, отличающиеся по длине, исполнению и даже, иногда, тексту. И, чувак, тебе реально больше нечего было сказать?

    • @BrobjeV
      @BrobjeV 2 місяці тому +2

      Цой не был панком, вообще даже никогда

    • @von_maslo
      @von_maslo 2 місяці тому +2

      @@BrobjeV, ну, не знаю насчёт этого. Он как минимум был первым басистом в группе Автоматические Удовлетворители, и это в принципе была его первая группа)

  • @stariyczedun
    @stariyczedun 2 місяці тому +1071

    If you can read Russian, treat yourself with Letov's lyrics. It's a schizo word soup which somehow manages to be just barely meaningful, yet hitting hard emotionally.

    • @questionsfrog1918
      @questionsfrog1918 2 місяці тому +14

      Did he write that song called "god is my slave"?

    • @Cdcollector97
      @Cdcollector97 2 місяці тому +25

      I tried to understand letov’s lyrics I couldn’t make sense of it, though if you look at the lyrics to Без меня I interpreted as a person who knows that they’re dying and that the lyric and the/my world runs away, it runs far away without looking back as the person they loved that didn’t reciprocate back or that the person is moving on to the afterlife but that’s my opinion.

    • @Paul_Sepp
      @Paul_Sepp 2 місяці тому +50

      @@Cdcollector97У Летова много песен, что были сделаны из фраз из книг и фильмов, а также написанные после впечатлений. Поэтому Русское Поле и является до сих пор не разобранным текстом.

    • @stariyczedun
      @stariyczedun 2 місяці тому

      @@questionsfrog1918 hm, I don't know this one.

    • @garyfox7558
      @garyfox7558 2 місяці тому +54

      @@Cdcollector97 Letov's lyrics are hard to translate. There is very free approach to language at play. Impressionistic word-painting. He would use certain words just for their ring or use clusters of words to convey one certain meaning or emotion. Sometimes it was meant to be nonsense. He was into early 20th century avantgarde, Russian futurists... He referred to some of his early lyrics as "absurdist".

  • @Nobody-Nowhere
    @Nobody-Nowhere 2 місяці тому +246

    I like how this is about a punk band and how they were living under such's repression and its "i cant say this or that or this... and cant say this in youtube".

  • @addpowersstreams5364
    @addpowersstreams5364 2 місяці тому +336

    In fact, if you place Yegor Letov in political coordinates, it will look like 4 swastikas in 4 quarters.

    • @Eminovici
      @Eminovici 2 місяці тому +5

      Rainbow 🌈 swastikas by any chance?

    • @addpowersstreams5364
      @addpowersstreams5364 2 місяці тому +23

      @@Eminovici ones in the liberal half

    • @pavelmakarov3565
      @pavelmakarov3565 Місяць тому +6

      I really want to argue with this but I can't

    • @MisterIncog
      @MisterIncog Місяць тому +7

      "I fly outside of all realms"

  • @filorvus6982
    @filorvus6982 2 місяці тому +316

    fun fact: 1:55 that format of disks made from x-ray films was nicknamed "музыка на костях" or "музыка на рёбрах" which means "music on bones" or "music on ribs"

    • @alicelittle2516
      @alicelittle2516 Місяць тому +5

      That’s cool as fuck damn

    • @nikkhin5123
      @nikkhin5123 15 днів тому

      @@alicelittle2516 Cool, but actually kinda low quality kind of record. Those degraded really fast unlike vinyl.

  • @CryoByte115
    @CryoByte115 2 місяці тому +830

    bro was persecuted by the kgb and the soviet party, put in a mental hospital, almost lobotomized, and years later after the fall of the union really said "nah they weren't that bad we should try it again"

    • @KalimbaTV985
      @KalimbaTV985 2 місяці тому +164

      Its kinda his mood because he even a have song "I'll always be against" wich many ppl think against any gov and system that he live on.

    • @lucky1173
      @lucky1173 2 місяці тому +218

      He said in one of his interviews that "real communism is heaven on earth" and called the USSR a failed project.

    • @fatkiller1000
      @fatkiller1000 2 місяці тому

      If he didn't have an enemy to fight then he would lose all relegancy. That's a classic musician move.

    • @ricardoramos4514
      @ricardoramos4514 2 місяці тому +118

      That’s cause what replaced it was even more shit

    • @Stratocaster93
      @Stratocaster93 2 місяці тому +151

      To be fair Russia experienced a massive collapse in living standards afterwards.

  • @panarexia
    @panarexia 2 місяці тому +235

    bro was the embodiment of “ never let them know your next move “

    • @KermitTheFud
      @KermitTheFud 10 днів тому +1

      His political beliefs? depends who he is trolling today

  • @utka_dudka
    @utka_dudka 2 місяці тому +789

    the funniest thing about Letov is that he HAD NO political views. He was just against everything and everyone. On one day he could be communist, and on another he hated communism.
    Anyway, love from Russia!

    • @anothersettlementneedsyour9628
      @anothersettlementneedsyour9628 2 місяці тому +25

      I like his way of thinking

    • @Cdcollector97
      @Cdcollector97 2 місяці тому +70

      From what I’ve heard he was an anarchist which makes sense. He became more of an eco-anarchist in his later years, also I’m pretty sure he said a fan asked him if there was any new music coming soon after his final 2007 album: why do we have dreams? shortly before he passed he said that he used up his creativity and that there were to be no more music coming from him. Fun fact: the album: why do we have dreams? was inspired by a bad lsd trip he experienced and used that for the entire album.

    • @Paul_Sepp
      @Paul_Sepp 2 місяці тому +13

      Ну не верно. Он только после нацбола отказался от полит. идей, а до этого был националистом.

    • @Paul_Sepp
      @Paul_Sepp 2 місяці тому +13

      @@Cdcollector97That’s not right. He was a national Bolshevik party supporter and founder.

    • @MOIMOI-jt6je
      @MOIMOI-jt6je 2 місяці тому +1

      that's what it is all about 🤘

  • @wercatpng
    @wercatpng 2 місяці тому +178

    Its so bizzare feeling to listen about him from english speaking person while being russian, great vid!!

    • @Person0fColor
      @Person0fColor 2 місяці тому +2

      yea thats so crazy because one is English and one is Russian that is like the opposite

    • @xlebochannel5617
      @xlebochannel5617 22 дні тому

      @@Person0fColor Im russian by the way, from Russia, me, Im from Russia and actually.................

  • @imemobutitsokayiswear8403
    @imemobutitsokayiswear8403 2 місяці тому +480

    Egor Letov is, in my opinion, one of the most punk mofos that ever lived

    • @92GreyBlue
      @92GreyBlue 2 місяці тому +4

      cringe

    • @BizarreThing
      @BizarreThing 2 місяці тому +45

      @@92GreyBlue lyrics in his songs alone elevate him above your average punk mofo.

    • @92GreyBlue
      @92GreyBlue 2 місяці тому +1

      @@BizarreThing Average punk mofos are mindless followers so you're probably right.

    • @alexarmstrong9915
      @alexarmstrong9915 2 місяці тому +8

      ​@@BizarreThing B A S E D

    • @Embrod
      @Embrod 2 місяці тому +8

      Being a punk in communist country, is enough.

  • @adoreth93
    @adoreth93 2 місяці тому +74

    Я был на его концерте в Ставрополе в 2006году. Это было охрененно крутое выступление. Егор покойся с миром.

  • @r0r051
    @r0r051 2 місяці тому +256

    About his ideology. He once said "in past I thought that I was an anarchist, now I now that I was the only true communist". He thought that USSR wasn't communism but just dictatorship that pretends to be communism

    • @lettuceatter_9956
      @lettuceatter_9956 2 місяці тому +34

      Many communists at the time also thought so

    • @Embrod
      @Embrod 2 місяці тому

      Typical whitewashing xD

    • @scottashe984
      @scottashe984 2 місяці тому +28

      Aren't they all? Socialism, communism never works. Not for the masses at least..

    • @liveinacake
      @liveinacake 2 місяці тому +15

      This is not a correct definition of who Letov was. It would be more correct to say that he was attracted to political extremism. He could called himself both an anarchist and a fascist. Closer to death, he seems like got tired of politics and went into spiritual matters/Christianity or something like that.

    • @ManiacMayhem7256
      @ManiacMayhem7256 2 місяці тому

      Dictatorship of the Proletariat. USSR never pretended to be communist, they always called themselves socialist. Communism was supposed to be the long term goal

  • @Antanix
    @Antanix 2 місяці тому +187

    Some considerations. 1) The phrase "Lenin is rotting in the mausoleum" has the meaning of "turning over in his grave", therefore he was not attacking Lenin, but rather the corrupt Soviet bureaucracy. Also because as a young man Letov created portraits of Lenin in schools and offices. In fact Letov basically remained a communist, more specifically a sort of anarco-communist, although extremely critical of establishment, especially in the disastrous post-Soviet years. He embraced neutral political views only towards the end of his life. 2) The fact that his mother had reported him to the KGB is still without any source, it is more likely that she had turned to the authorities because he had run away from home - a fact later transformed into a "report to the KGB". Ditto for the "terrorist attack". No source. 3) Admission to psychiatric hospital and heavy treatments were a common practice for "restless" subjects (let's not forget that Letov was an alcoholic) but it was not necessarily due to political reasons - they were common practice in all Europe and US. Letov himself said regarding what he had experienced that "those practices were the same in America too." This fact is omitted in the video. 4) The practice of making discs from x-ray plates was not due to prohibitions, but to the cost and limited availability of the tapes in the 60s. In the 70's and 80's reel-to-reel and then cassette tapes became diffused in USSR too - still they were more expensive than "x-ray records". These tapes made their way all over the USSR. Official records were never enough to satisfy demand, so tapes and x-ray records were how people obtained this music. There was no complete ban on "Western" music as you might understand it. It's just the state owned everything and they had no intention in paying dollars or pounds abroad for royalties. I hope that many clichés about the USSR will one day be proven wrong.

    • @ЮрийМусатов-г2э
      @ЮрийМусатов-г2э 2 місяці тому +5

      ) Letov’s political views have always been just a way to express something more. In the crudest simplification we can say that his work is the embodiment of one of the defining qualities of Russian culture as a direct connection with the transcendent. Also, all his poetry is imbued with Christianity. He was baptized in Jordan in March 2000 2) The mother of one of his fellow gang members reported him. He was not in prison, he was under recognizance not to leave. But he was persuaded to confess to terrorist activities and he sent a note to his friends: “Under the pressure of Major Meshkov, I am forced to commit suicide.” The note was intercepted by the KGB and he was sent to a psychiatric hospital. It was November 1985. Later, after the psychiatric hospital, he participated in the first Novosibirsk rock festival with the group "Adolf Hitler" in April 1987. The public was shocked, but there was no immediate punishment. Returning to Omsk, he understood that this would take a couple of months. And in May-June 1987 he recorded 5 albums in a very short period of time. He is called to the psychiatric hospital. He understands that this is a trap and runs with his friend Yana Diaghileva (he met her in Novosibirsk at a rock festival) from the city to hitchhike throughout the country. He took reels of his albums with him and, staying with friends, made copies for distribution. By January 1988, the persecution was stopped and he returned home. 3) He became heavily involved in alcohol in 1991 after the death of his friend Yana Diaghileva. Until now, the mystery was whether it was suicide or murder. She drowned in the river. He dedicated his song Ophelia to her. And perhaps the lion's share of the album One Hundred Years of Solitude is dedicated to her. 4) With these x-rays, it's complete nonsense. Smuggling of records in the USSR has been very well established since the 70s. Records were sold on the black market in good quality, but were expensive. Letov even made money from their resale.

    • @ПророкМухоед
      @ПророкМухоед 2 місяці тому +6

      I have read only the "Lenin take" of yours, and that's enough.
      The phrase in the song goes like "daddy Lenin is completely dead, he dissoluted into mold and linden honey" -- where you saw the "rolling in his grave, because of soviet bureaucracy"?
      The rest of your post is not worth to even analyse.

    • @cotbegemot371
      @cotbegemot371 2 місяці тому +6

      ​@@ПророкМухоед Dont know about his lenin take, but Letov was without a doubt a staunch Soviet patriot.

    • @eris_irise
      @eris_irise 2 місяці тому +2

      From what I understand he was an anarchist.

    • @cotbegemot371
      @cotbegemot371 2 місяці тому

      @@eris_irise Not uncommon for Russians to have schizo belief combinations

  • @brambourgojgurt7973
    @brambourgojgurt7973 2 місяці тому +81

    I am so fucking happy rn, my favorite music youtuber made video about my favorite musician. It is shame tough you did not mentioed Egor I Opizdenevshie (Egor and fucked ups) Letov's band he formed after the GROB broke up. Their music was combination of psychedelic rock, noise rock and russian folk music.

    • @alexkior
      @alexkior 2 місяці тому +12

      Agreed
      Sto let odinochestva is literally the best fucking album

    • @brambourgojgurt7973
      @brambourgojgurt7973 2 місяці тому +6

      @@alexkior Sto let odinochestva is my favorite album, it is so fucking great

    • @caranta1718
      @caranta1718 2 місяці тому +2

      ❤❤❤

    • @MisterIncog
      @MisterIncog Місяць тому +4

      "fucked ups" doesn't convey the whole meaning of "Опизденевшие". it's something like "the completely and utterly fucked ups"

  • @4sat564
    @4sat564 Місяць тому +22

    He was never anticommunist. He was anti late USSR which he viewed as an embodiment of betrayal of Lenin ideas. He said it in his interviews.

  • @Veersinsky
    @Veersinsky 2 місяці тому +104

    Fun fact:
    When the goverment said "Hey, what if we rename all those nameless airports in honor of some famous people who lived in that cities? That's might be awesome" The Omsk airport was suggested to be named after Letov, but his name was scrapped after he got in to the top. Also the minister of the culture told that "Narrow-minded and marginalized GrOb fans are not representing Omsk. All this commotion is just to gaining some cheap hype" and that naming an airport in honor of a person who is alive is a "poor taste"(Letov has been dead for 10 years at this point) Yes, the man who is responsible for art, cinema and herrritage is THAT dumb(Now Medinsky is in charge of the new stete-promoted history books).
    So in the parralel universe there is might be Egor Letov's Airport

    • @parasatc8183
      @parasatc8183 2 місяці тому +16

      Except the part where the then-Minister of Culture thought Letov was alive and thus it wasn't fitting to name the airport after a living person, I get and agree with his idea that Letov does not fully represent Omsk. That city has a long history that goes beyond him. He is worthy of having a street named after him though, or even a village or a small town.

    • @tripcode1101
      @tripcode1101 Місяць тому +8

      Medinsky once said that Russians are a unique people because they have an extra chromosome. He is also the author of a school history textbook.

    • @hydrodoxxed2
      @hydrodoxxed2 Місяць тому

      There is a kommunizm song that's called "Letov International Airport", by the way

    • @d.whillmar1740
      @d.whillmar1740 Місяць тому +2

      Regardless of Mudinsky's incompetence, I generally don't think that naming an airport after Egor Letov would be a good idea. It would go against punk philosophy, don't you think?

    • @MisterIncog
      @MisterIncog Місяць тому +2

      @@d.whillmar1740 the f they gonna do? He's dead and doesn't care. That would be actually quite a masterful slap on the face of punk community. And I don't mean this as a bad thing, I'm all for punk, but it would really make things interesting if the Machine actively acknowledged the Punk and did something to spite it. Like currently and always the establishment was an enemy of the punk only passively, by the "virtue" of being bad and doing bad things. But what if some element of establishment went like "Well, you wouldn't like if we praised you now, would you?"
      P.s. it's not at all that deep and I'm just goofing around

  • @alexbabkov5935
    @alexbabkov5935 2 місяці тому +73

    Hell yeah! Letov is one of my favorite musicians from Russia. His songs are relevant to this day.

    • @ebaniy_loser
      @ebaniy_loser 2 місяці тому +1

      Смотря какие и как их понимать, потому что сам Летов в интервью редко пояснял их смысл и вовсе считал, что это делает творчество не интересным и не даëт слушателю интерпретировать сказанное, написанное, услышанное и увиденное по своему.

    • @KirylKrotky
      @KirylKrotky 2 місяці тому

      I'm sorry for you

  • @ВанечкаЗвезда
    @ВанечкаЗвезда 2 місяці тому +91

    Flexidiscs were a thing only in a short period of time in early 60s, people listened to music on magnetic tape in the 80s, that's also why early grob albums are exactly 30 minutes, so you could fit two on each side of standard tape reel at 7.5 inch speed

    • @baconsarny-geddon8298
      @baconsarny-geddon8298 2 місяці тому +2

      You mean the x-ray ones, in Russia? Flexi discs in general were a common giveaway with magazines all thru the 80s, into the 90s. And much longer in the punk scene. It was only really torrenting in the late 90s/early 00s that stopped flexis being a common thing.
      But I'm pretty sure there's some throwbacks STILL making paper magazines, with Flexi discs (but it's a rare gimmick, now. In the 80s and early 90s, every suburban newsagency had magazines with Flexi discs; Mostly music, sometimes weird stuff like instructions, interviews, etc. And up til PC's became standardized in the early 90s with the 386, a lot of computer games and software for early home computers like the Commodore 64, zx Spectrum etc were sometimes distributed on Flexi discs.

  • @stevend4600
    @stevend4600 Місяць тому +20

    Любимый исполнитель, недавно видел его, когда гулял по лесу

    • @nadobnooo5526
      @nadobnooo5526 Місяць тому +1

      Патлатого корейца видел?

    • @Eclair0507
      @Eclair0507 29 днів тому

      Дурачок что-ли?

  • @Elio_Kyfe
    @Elio_Kyfe 2 місяці тому +127

    Yegor Letov was not against the Soviet Union, he was against a totalitarian system dominating the USSR at the time. He stated that he is a communist multiple times, not just in the 90s, but also he mentioned that he was a communist for all his life

    • @Embrod
      @Embrod 2 місяці тому +1

      Totalitarian system = communism.

    • @leepictroll643
      @leepictroll643 2 місяці тому +6

      He was nazbol

    • @Elio_Kyfe
      @Elio_Kyfe 2 місяці тому +19

      @@leepictroll643 yeah, but who at some point in their lives didn't get involved in some weird stuff anyways? bc he eventually left this organization

    • @nothingwrong2293
      @nothingwrong2293 Місяць тому +2

      Idk, in Все идёт по плану he doesn't sound supportive of communism at all

    • @Elio_Kyfe
      @Elio_Kyfe Місяць тому +13

      @@nothingwrong2293 he didn't support the thing the USSR became over time, not the ideology

  • @UserSsseven889
    @UserSsseven889 2 місяці тому +92

    Мы вышли за рамки людских представлений
    И даже представить себе не могли
    Что выше всех горестей, бед и мучений
    Мы будем под слоем промёрзшей земли
    Great video!!1!

    • @anon1942_sos
      @anon1942_sos 2 місяці тому +1

      Очень глубокие строчки на самом деле...

  • @animudebilina_3002
    @animudebilina_3002 2 місяці тому +32

    Always nice to see foreigners talk about GrOb. Cheers

  • @errr2815
    @errr2815 2 місяці тому +35

    Btw, egor's letov father was some general. Because of that, they record album "Солдатский сон"("dream of soldier")in side-project "Коммунизм"("Communism") with army-folk songs in it. Letov never serve in the ussr or russian army, and that was confusing so much people, especially casual ussr guys, who was serving in the army, and listening his songs. My father thought he was some army musician.

    • @parasatc8183
      @parasatc8183 2 місяці тому +1

      If I'm not mistaken I remember reading about Letov being forcibly conscripted because of his music and that he was released from it around 1987.

    • @dmchka0
      @dmchka0 2 місяці тому +3

      ​@@parasatc8183No, Letov was sent to a mental hospital, and one of the group members was sent to serve by force in Baikonur

  • @jerrymacctheukrainanlorema7659
    @jerrymacctheukrainanlorema7659 2 місяці тому +96

    Great video.
    Nazbol Party was a complete postmodern irony at the time. One of its co-founders, Serghei Kuryohin, a legendary avant-garde jazz pianist, had been known for his intellectual pranks for years.
    Few years before it, he filmed a legendary documentary on still Soviet TV arguing how Lenin, by consuming amantia mushrooms, became a mushroom himself, and also a radiowave (because mushrooms are solid emobodimend of radiowaves, you see), and Soviet TV viewers either believe it, or were legitimately outraged.
    And the next year after he founded and immediately left the Nazbols alongside Letov, he was giving series of interviews on how he's now a founder of a behavioral paychology institute that turns people into cozy unthreatening bourgeouis with gnome garden statues.
    Nazbols started just like that. "What is the most ridiculous, outrageous, and self-contradictory party we can possibly create?"
    What happened was that among four founders of the Nazbol party, there were Dugin and Limonov. Limonov continued running it for a decade, actually successfully turning it into a popular movement and then a terrorist organization with chaos and protest as a sole goal.
    And Dugin became an ideologue the American edgy right wingers glorify as a mind behind Putin.
    All of that happened long after Letov left, though. As close to a vatnik as he became late in his life in his continuous quest to oppose whatever ideology Kremlin holds, he was no Nazbol.

    • @knyazshyshkin
      @knyazshyshkin 2 місяці тому +3

      Kuryohin wasn't the main founder though, it was Limonov.

    • @jerrymacctheukrainanlorema7659
      @jerrymacctheukrainanlorema7659 2 місяці тому +17

      @@knyazshyshkin He was. He came up with the idea. The confusion comes from Limonov holding the №2 party card (№1 was issued for the name of Joseph Stalin), and from Limonov leading the party ever since.
      But it was Kuryohin's idea nevertheless. It was an attempt to parody Serghey Zharikov, a conceptual rock band drummer turned campaign manager for Vladimir Zhirinovskiy in early 90s.
      The most details on the issue can be found in the Serghey and Egor Letov brothers legendary 2001 interview, the same one where they describe Dugin's bad trip where he got afraid of Kazakhtan swamp folk who worship a swamp cat and poison Russian people's air, if you know what I mean.

    • @knyazshyshkin
      @knyazshyshkin 2 місяці тому +2

      @@jerrymacctheukrainanlorema7659
      Thanks for the reply. Will look that interview up.

    • @ВанечкаЗвезда
      @ВанечкаЗвезда 2 місяці тому

      @@jerrymacctheukrainanlorema7659 he had nothing to do with creation of nbp. He was the first person to join after the partys creation. First 4 party cards were as follows in order: Dugin, Lomonov, Limonov's driver(Letov was very salty about this), Letov

    • @Paul_Sepp
      @Paul_Sepp 2 місяці тому

      Не Курехин, а Лимонов.

  • @cowboy4885
    @cowboy4885 2 місяці тому +28

    9:14 It was called "Адольф Гитлер" for anyone wondering.

  • @thefluffyaj4119
    @thefluffyaj4119 2 місяці тому +37

    now that's a real fuckin punk

    • @KirylKrotky
      @KirylKrotky 2 місяці тому

      no, he is not

    • @thefluffyaj4119
      @thefluffyaj4119 2 місяці тому

      @@KirylKrotky then what the fuck is a punk to you bro

  • @idcseriouslyman7487
    @idcseriouslyman7487 2 місяці тому +51

    The UK probably needs a musician like this right now

    • @pynocyo
      @pynocyo 2 місяці тому +4

      ?

    • @Embrod
      @Embrod 2 місяці тому +2

      To be against socialist party?

    • @HeroSword_P
      @HeroSword_P 2 місяці тому +14

      Seems no one can see how authoritarian the current UK government has become, judging by the other two replies.

    • @bennymountain1
      @bennymountain1 Місяць тому

      @@HeroSword_P Nowhere near as authoritarian as USSR.

    • @d.whillmar1740
      @d.whillmar1740 Місяць тому +2

      @@bennymountain1 I don't remember USSR banning cutlery knives, with all honesty

  • @тимохапосути
    @тимохапосути 2 місяці тому +17

    if you're willing to check out letov's music, you should also try listening to his side project "Egor i Opizdenevshie", which he formed after GrOb's break up in early 90's.
    it was a transitional period in letov's sound, something between his 80's raw noise punk and his 00's shoegazy psych rock. so it has a unique blend of noise rock, psych rock and post-punk.
    their album "sto let odinochestva" ("one hundred years of solitude") has a status of underground classic (also highest rated russian rock album on rym) and it is probably the one album i would put on in my last hour

  • @fedoralord3607
    @fedoralord3607 2 місяці тому +25

    This band is fucking based. ~From Serbia

  • @lucky1173
    @lucky1173 2 місяці тому +68

    ООО БЛЯ БАЗА ПОДЬЕХАЛА!!! Love from Russia

  • @lilienkranz9006
    @lilienkranz9006 2 місяці тому +19

    Отличная работа, друг!

  • @martinthedrainedsedlak
    @martinthedrainedsedlak 2 місяці тому +4

    I needed this so much since im literally obsessed with Letov and all of his projects

    • @martinthedrainedsedlak
      @martinthedrainedsedlak 2 місяці тому +4

      Wish you mentioned Егор и Опизденевшие and Коммунизм tho

  • @ghost_to_a_ghost
    @ghost_to_a_ghost 2 місяці тому +30

    GG Alin got nothing on this fucking madlad ✊✊✊

  • @RolandVaVa
    @RolandVaVa 2 місяці тому +11

    Illegal vinyl made out of x-ray prints is the most metal and cool thing ever

    • @MisterIncog
      @MisterIncog Місяць тому

      they were called "Music on the bones"

    • @RolandVaVa
      @RolandVaVa Місяць тому

      @@MisterIncog я знаю)

    • @MisterIncog
      @MisterIncog Місяць тому

      @@RolandVaVa дэээ музыка на костях. Ну пусть иностранцы тоже образовываются

  • @Gulmanz
    @Gulmanz 2 місяці тому +33

    Много напутано, не совсем все так верно, но что главное что Летов не был антисоветчиком НИКОГДА, он был против тех поздних застоев СССР, но он никогда не хотел распада своей страны в которой он родился и вырос, понимаю вам тяжело такое понять.

    • @orgax
      @orgax Місяць тому +6

      Да, еще как не понять. Этот кровавый гниющий котел противоречий уже не являлся страной ни для кого и развалился бы в любом случае. До этого застоя страна была хуже и безумнее, захваченная самопровозглашенными террористами, буквально главной угрозой для человечества после рейха, и наибольшая угроза была для самих граждан совка.

    • @Yhorm228
      @Yhorm228 Місяць тому +1

      @@orgax все сказал?

    • @schlangen7889
      @schlangen7889 Місяць тому +2

      @@orgax такое ощущение, что это написал школьник, которому влили понос в голову про СССР и теперь ходит по инету разбрызгивая говно

    • @orgax
      @orgax Місяць тому

      @@schlangen7889 Только школьники могут нагуглить историю совка?

    • @okeana6753
      @okeana6753 Місяць тому

      ​@@orgaxpropaganda

  • @NEKRWSPHERE
    @NEKRWSPHERE 2 місяці тому +8

    I remember that era very well. My family owned a bunch of bootleg cassettes and records. And you're exaggerating the risks. End of 70-s and early 80-s was actually a rather toothless era for the Soviet Establishment. Letov was a pretty scandalous character, and I'm amazed at how little of the repressive apparatus was used against him compared to earlier Soviet "neformal" artists. The State simply had no concept of dealing with people like that, and in the end they basically concluded that these artists were mentally unsound or in the CP jargon "persons with diminished mental and social responsibility". A great example of what happened to people like that was Victor Tsoy and his band "Kino", who after a 2 week stint in a mental asylum (because he refused to serve as a conscript in the Soviet military) was released of his own reconnaissance, deemed mentally unfit and given a job with "reduced social responsibility" that is shoveling coal into the furnaces of the coal electric plant, working a 24 hour shift with 3 days of recuperation in between. As a "lightly mentally disabled" he was also freed from needing to pay his bus fare. In the early 50-s and early 60-s Letov would most likely be given a stern prison sentence of 4-5 years or so but he (and we the youth of early 80-s) were very lucky this was no longer the expected norm.

    • @nikkhin5123
      @nikkhin5123 15 днів тому

      "that is shoveling coal into the furnaces of the coal electric plant" чел, кочегарами постоянно становились всякие поэты, художники и музыканты в СССР. Это не какая-то работа как наказание, а лакомая непыльная работенка для человека, у которого артистические амбиции выше карьерных. Бродский тоже кочегаром в бойлерной работал. Просто закинул несколько лопат в бойлер и сидишь себе стихи и песни фигачишь. Дворниками и сторожами тоже много кто по таким же причинам работал.

  • @Техтроника
    @Техтроника 2 місяці тому +6

    Letov about his work:
    "I am now saying quite soberly and sincerely: all my songs (or almost all of them) are about love, light, joy. That is, about what it feels like when it's not there. Or what it feels like when it is born in you, or rather, when it dies."

  • @chel8568
    @chel8568 2 місяці тому +6

    His political ideology is actually in line with his songs. He said in an intervew that late USSR was nothing like the original communist idea, he thought that the ideals of Lenin were forgotten, and the Lenin himself was turned in a rotting tourist attraction (I don't quite remember the intervew so don't quote me on this)

  • @yannmondehard4171
    @yannmondehard4171 2 місяці тому +9

    Lenin rotting in his grave sounds like a reflection on what was done to what he was trying to build

  • @augustopenaspalmeira471
    @augustopenaspalmeira471 2 місяці тому +20

    i'm sorry but that nazbol party wasn't "a mix of bolshevism and nationalism" , letov was an anarchist, not anticommunist and you are politically illiterate. Nazbol party was a kitsch postmodern performative party

  • @anothersettlementneedsyour9628
    @anothersettlementneedsyour9628 2 місяці тому +27

    Underground music from eastern block countries such as USSR or Czechoslovakia can be the realest shit. It’s really hard to discover it even for me as native speaker, unlike most other music wchich only takes me few minutes to pull up the songs in good quality, it can take several hours to find listenable version of the songs from this era, but it’s still worth it.

  • @withnobodyelse
    @withnobodyelse 2 місяці тому +14

    Thank you Letov for helping create a cool bug.

  • @ariel1050
    @ariel1050 2 місяці тому +6

    Летов это один из тех самых людей которыми ещё долго будут восхищаться, такие люди рождаются раз в 100 лет.
    Hello from Belarus! :P

  • @sireffortlessgarbage7922
    @sireffortlessgarbage7922 2 місяці тому +16

    Today is the anniversary of Viktor Tsoi’s passing, another important mf in Soviet music history. RIP Tsoi and RIP Letov

  • @kurebanov9124
    @kurebanov9124 23 дні тому +2

    Letov was in the National Bolschevik party with Edurad Limonov and Alexander Dugin. They were all fascinated by Hitler and fascist imperialist ideologies. There are videos here on UA-cam of Letov giving an interview with a German Nazi flag behind him. Late Letov coming from a family of a military general was actually praising the goverment and also supporting Kremlin politics. To play alternative music in the USSR you had to be related to a certain family working in the institutions.

  • @mateoatehortua3716
    @mateoatehortua3716 2 місяці тому +3

    Massive video. Just added some new music to my playlists!

  • @beelthazus
    @beelthazus 2 місяці тому +8

    one of the greatest of all time

  • @eugenejakovlev3918
    @eugenejakovlev3918 2 місяці тому +9

    Rock was not unpopular in USSR. There were even official releases of many bands like Pink Floyd, Deep Purple and many others. Some were streamed on radio and western music was not illegal and spread out freely on cassette, tape or vinyl.

  • @iskrabesamrtna
    @iskrabesamrtna 10 днів тому +1

    I'm from Serbia, never heard of him. Deeply grateful for his activism against NATO bombing '99.
    Peace to all!

  • @eerosoots
    @eerosoots 2 місяці тому +2

    I'm in the former USSR (Tallinn, Estonia). This is your best video mate! Awesome job!

  • @ИльяТеть
    @ИльяТеть Місяць тому

    wow, first video on english about my favorite singer, its super pleasantly to see this!
    I think you should have mentioned about his albums "sto let odinochestva"(hundred years of loneliness) and "prug-skok"(idk how to translate), that he wrote after death of his first beloved Yanka Dyagileva. imho,his best albums, with very good arrangements
    anyway, thanks for the video!

  • @Acetylencysteyl
    @Acetylencysteyl Місяць тому +3

    In general, translating from Russian to English considered a hard task (believe me, i had to translate multiple reports on neutron fluence for Korean nuclear institute). And after translating a scientific report or a comedic text you think: "Wow, that was hard". But then you look at something like "Who will die first?" or "Russian field of experiments" and you shoot yourself on a step of trying to understand, which words you can even use to write that down in english, you haven't even touched trying to save the meaning. But as a native speaker, i can say, that sometimes his songs don't having any meaning, but have a lot of ViIiBe. Vibe of cthonic fear and "toska", but a strong vibe nonetheless

  • @psinq_a2837
    @psinq_a2837 2 місяці тому +5

    i'm so glad that one of my favorite bands from my own country is recognized by foreign youtubers

  • @Ajoura
    @Ajoura 2 місяці тому +6

    A few months before Letov's death, when he released his last album, he literally said in an interview:
    "On our previous album, we've done 200% of what we planned. On this album, 500% of what we planned."
    Maybe it was the best time for him to leave.

    • @trillowl7836
      @trillowl7836 2 місяці тому +1

      Spoken like a true communist

  • @LEWIS_sanders_9
    @LEWIS_sanders_9 2 місяці тому +9

    EGOR LETOV MY BELOVEDED

  • @macdonald_duck
    @macdonald_duck 2 місяці тому +3

    Guys, you still don't know the truth about Tolyatti. Letov came to perform there with his GrOb. They came, got in, and then he went out to walk around the city, alone. He was walking down the street, and our local punks came towards him.
    - Stop, they said. - What are you doing, pretending to be Letov?
    - Guys, I am Letov, punks hoy!
    - Oh, and you're also lying?!
    Anyway, they beat up Yegorka. In the evening, he comes out on stage at the concert, his face all smashed. He takes the microphone and says:
    - I'll never come to your shitty city again!

  • @BlackGuardsman
    @BlackGuardsman 7 днів тому

    Never expected to see English video about my favorite musician, very enjoyable video!

  • @IliasKiraly
    @IliasKiraly 2 місяці тому +4

    In Hungary two punk bands went to the jail for long years the CPg (1983)originally from the city of Szeged (near by Serbain part of Yugoslavian border) , and the Közellenség ( Public Enemy in English) (next year the orwellian 1984) from city of Veszprém (near by lake Balaton). The second band hadn't too much gigs, and recognizable lyrics by the way so that was clearly communist style conceptional lawsuit against them. CPg openly had critize the one party system style dictatorship, yes youngsters that was real dictatorship. Also the singer of CPg called Güzü was in a mental hospital when he come out the jail. Unfortunatly I had not finished our punk documentary, but very similar story of his life was in a 2021 Hungarian movie called 'Erase Frank'. That was watchable on Netflix too. The CPg did not got nothing financial recognition for those interesting similarities.
    The CPg had an old documetary from 1999 and the Közellenség too a few years later.

  • @DungeonRutan
    @DungeonRutan 2 місяці тому +1

    this is a great channel. great voice. sounds like that top5 mystery guy that used to be around.

  • @mistermaster____
    @mistermaster____ 2 місяці тому +3

    great video topic! Letov is one of the greats, fucking legend.

  • @guacamole8554
    @guacamole8554 Місяць тому

    Thank you for this video. It also worth mentioning Egor I Opizdenevshie and Yanka Dyagileva's art.

  • @gekinatracksuit9710
    @gekinatracksuit9710 2 місяці тому +4

    He's a real one
    I can't tell if it's because of stupidity or bravery, but he's a real one regardless

  • @absurdist_666
    @absurdist_666 Місяць тому +1

    Someone needs to turn this into a documentary

  • @errr2815
    @errr2815 2 місяці тому +3

    Based. Hi from Novosibirsk

  • @trolltalwar
    @trolltalwar 21 день тому

    bro thank you! i discovered grazhdanskaya oborona over 15 years ago. several years later i tried finding it again and i couldnt find it anywhere because i couldnt remember how the bands name was spelled nor could i remember yegors name. thanks again

  • @yep1935
    @yep1935 Місяць тому +7

    так он в тайге живет все еще, вы че

    • @Cherniy-sq6kf
      @Cherniy-sq6kf Місяць тому

      да, с Цоем

    • @yungrussia4ever
      @yungrussia4ever Місяць тому +1

      @@Cherniy-sq6kfи лил пипом с тентасьоном

  • @Chertila_Art
    @Chertila_Art 2 місяці тому +1

    Thank you for making such a video! Letov's music and story surely deserves much more attention. His heritage tends to be underappreciated in Russia, which is not surprising because of his rebelous nature.
    Regime mainly promotes propaganda music and control/censor everything else in nowadays Russia. Therefore there are many great musicians being claimed as 'foreign agents', which is not surprising as well.
    Anyway, peace and love from Siberia!

  • @shroomlord682
    @shroomlord682 2 місяці тому +8

    oh god jreg viewers are gonna love this one, nazbol punk is crazy

    • @martinthedrainedsedlak
      @martinthedrainedsedlak 2 місяці тому +10

      One comment points out that nazbol was a literal joke at the time. Letov and Kuryohin left when the party stopped being an ironic joke

    • @unpopuler
      @unpopuler 2 місяці тому

      NAZBOL GANG xd

  • @casualkreig6179
    @casualkreig6179 2 місяці тому +2

    I've seen other vids on this guy he's the definition of punk

  • @rodneydelboy6910
    @rodneydelboy6910 2 місяці тому +10

    Bro wrote a song about Lennin rotting in his coffin in the feckin USSR hahahaha what a megachad.

    • @lettuceatter_9956
      @lettuceatter_9956 2 місяці тому +6

      Funny enough those lyrics weren't actually poking fun at Lenin but criticising what the ussr had turned into, which was far different from what lenin had envisioned

    • @evgeniydragondog
      @evgeniydragondog 2 місяці тому +1

      L decomposed on a mold and honey

    • @Человекквадрате
      @Человекквадрате Місяць тому

      Тогда шла Перестройка и такие песни не были чем-то за гранью возможного

  • @ragberkotobuki41
    @ragberkotobuki41 2 місяці тому +1

    Нихуя себе, смотрю тебя уже давно, не думал что об этом когда-нибудь напишешь, truly incredible work, thank you for spreading the culture, ngl, you are the best

  • @ВанечкаЗвезда
    @ВанечкаЗвезда 2 місяці тому +3

    Do a vid on les rallizes denudes, they deserve more attention

  • @Shiptoast0
    @Shiptoast0 2 місяці тому +1

    Good documentary about a topic i'm interested in, neat

  • @DrunkCringeman
    @DrunkCringeman 2 місяці тому +48

    Letov never was against communism. He was against the way how soviet union used that ideas to hold their power. He was a very controversial guy, but people who are against everything bad and support everything good are just... Not interesting. If you go deep inside his biography and other projects, you may see a lot of crazy and charming stuff. He died in his hometown because of drinking too much portwine being fully apolitical(during his political career he saw enough to claim that every political corner was pretty same bullshit as the others) spiritual old hippie. Rest in peace, Egor, you died early enough to miss all that following bullshit...

    • @fatkiller1000
      @fatkiller1000 2 місяці тому

      Or maybe he was just a tard.

    • @seshmacintosh
      @seshmacintosh 2 місяці тому +1

      Who was as badass as he was and apolitical too is rare. Respect to him and fuck all corners of the political compass

  • @MileyWoodson
    @MileyWoodson 2 місяці тому +1

    For a lot of Russian punks Letov became an icon.
    Great video, privet from Siberia.

  • @etica8
    @etica8 2 місяці тому +3

    Please make the voice louder, can't hear a thing on my shitty laptop while munching biscuits. Great edits!

  • @Дарья-ц3ы2т
    @Дарья-ц3ы2т 2 місяці тому +2

    thank you very much for this video! I'm hope that sometimes you can tell the history of АукцЫон (or "Auction").
    It is fantastic band which play experimental, alternative and psychedelic (!!!) rock in USSR(since 1978 !!!!). I'm from Russia, but it is blow my mind that it was happend) They are still playing their songs and have very sophisticated music and lirics.
    Just try to find their perfomanse. Garcusha's \ Гаркуша dances in jacket with epaulettes are signature of the band)

  • @Shaddify
    @Shaddify 2 місяці тому +4

    Nice video Coolea, greetings from Russia from a long time subscriber

  • @scorpions1965
    @scorpions1965 2 місяці тому +2

    I’m totally unable to eat lunch without Coolea yapping in the background

  • @SamBrockmann
    @SamBrockmann 2 місяці тому +5

    Letov is a badass.

  • @ThyCCTV
    @ThyCCTV 2 місяці тому +1

    I love to see recognition for this guy, he deserves it. Greatest punk musician in my opinion

  • @Siger5019
    @Siger5019 2 місяці тому +3

    Room temperature IQ analysis

  • @ReFaSol
    @ReFaSol Місяць тому

    It's nice to know that some musicians from my country have made so much noise that even abroad they have become known

  • @rowboatmiami
    @rowboatmiami 2 місяці тому +7

    real fucking shit

  • @zodiactheduck
    @zodiactheduck Місяць тому

    I've been a fan of Letov's music for a while, glad people in the us start to appreciate him as well!

  • @phatrhymes_4019
    @phatrhymes_4019 2 місяці тому +3

    COOLEA - It will be fantastic if you review music of band Himera(Химера) someday. It was one of the most authentic bands in history of russian music and personality of its frontman - Eduard “Ratd” Starkov is a whole other conversation.

  • @bioswat96
    @bioswat96 Місяць тому

    His voice, intonation, lyrics literally burn into memory

  • @Amoralllll
    @Amoralllll 2 місяці тому +8

    YEEEEEAAAS U HEEEARD MEEEEE
    YEEEAAAAAS I LOVE U MATE
    U can dive even deeper. Research Оргазм Нострадамуса. Theres a whole philosphic idea behind it

    • @Amoralllll
      @Amoralllll 2 місяці тому

      ill add u on discord tonite!!

    • @Amoralllll
      @Amoralllll 2 місяці тому +1

      oh btw theres a really good movie about Letov, directed by his wife. Its called здорово и вечно. or 'I Don't Believe in Anarchy'. the film has a big melancholic vibe

  • @galielkarmi995
    @galielkarmi995 Місяць тому

    So glad that there’s a video about him in English
    Incredible guy with a great talent
    magnificent and chilling lyrics btw

  • @fuguthefish
    @fuguthefish 2 місяці тому +2

    so he had no real ideology, he just was the "i hate the current thing" guy

  • @nikolataylor3888
    @nikolataylor3888 2 місяці тому +1

    I don’t know if this fits with the rest of your content, but I’d love it if you could cover Yuri Hoi and the band Sektor Gaza.

  • @lbyt-MEGA
    @lbyt-MEGA 2 місяці тому +6

    it would be cool if you made video about russian emo from 2007. Groups like Amatory, Stigmata, Soularise and Слёзы are very good, but sadly forgotten by time

    • @retrocomputing
      @retrocomputing 2 місяці тому

      Это не эмо, это металкор

    • @phatrhymes_4019
      @phatrhymes_4019 2 місяці тому +2

      Лучше рассказать о психее, их творчество для западных людей было бы гораздо интереснее

    • @lbyt-MEGA
      @lbyt-MEGA 2 місяці тому

      @@retrocomputing А я ебу что ли

  • @g4r541
    @g4r541 2 місяці тому

    Cool vid! ty for spreading the a word of most punk of punks to Murican folks!!

  • @MisterIncog
    @MisterIncog Місяць тому +4

    Don't try to understand the political views of Egor Letov (worst mistake of my life)

  • @junkie47
    @junkie47 2 місяці тому +2

    you should check out Gorki Águila, he’s basically this guy but for cuba! very cool punk rock musician

  • @serviustullius7133
    @serviustullius7133 2 місяці тому +7

    Летов жил, Летов жив, Летов будет жить

    • @mrkyle5774
      @mrkyle5774 2 місяці тому

      Страшный кошмар Летова воплотился в твоём лозунге,поздравляю,ты убил его.

  • @West_Coast_Mainline
    @West_Coast_Mainline 15 днів тому +1

    Crodie got nuked so many times that he became a punk