@@kensei_z35 In any case, I value that Romania does not try to censor history, I remember to have seen a video in which a police band plays ALL the anthems of Romania since Traiasca Regele on national day. And anyways I meant as a patriotic song without the communist references like Trei Culori, although that one was written before communism, and after the lyrics were modified.
@@hammer3721 Concerning a studio performance I agree that it should be faithful to the original, but here it’s a public performance, where faithfulness may have consequences…
@@hammer3721 Zdrobite catuse does not even reference the USSR, only Te Slavim Romanie. Also, the Soviets were initially well received in Romania. And the people celebrating the proclamation of the RPR in 1947 in one of the videos near here (Romanian People's Republic anthem 1947) do not seem forced to celebrate. In fact, the leaders look much more serious xD.
❤❤❤
E perfect imnul pentru țara noastră
It is still singed?
Obviously not, it's clearly a historical event.
@@kensei_z35 In any case, I value that Romania does not try to censor history, I remember to have seen a video in which a police band plays ALL the anthems of Romania since Traiasca Regele on national day. And anyways I meant as a patriotic song without the communist references like Trei Culori, although that one was written before communism, and after the lyrics were modified.
Seems like the parts referring to communism, leninism and the friendly soviet liberators have been carefully avoided…
I wonder why. It is censoring hsitory. That anthem, just like 'Zdrobite Cătuşe' (Broken Chains), was meant to be an arse-kissing for the Soviet Union.
@@hammer3721 Concerning a studio performance I agree that it should be faithful to the original, but here it’s a public performance, where faithfulness may have consequences…
@@hammer3721 Zdrobite catuse does not even reference the USSR, only Te Slavim Romanie. Also, the Soviets were initially well received in Romania. And the people celebrating the proclamation of the RPR in 1947 in one of the videos near here (Romanian People's Republic anthem 1947) do not seem forced to celebrate. In fact, the leaders look much more serious xD.