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Beloved Georgian Singer's Sad Song Hits Wrong Note In Russia

''We simply wanted to remind people that we used to be friends,'' says actor and singer Vakhtang Kikabidze.

March 03, 2009
By Chloe Arnold
MOSCOW -- Against a backdrop of Russian fighter planes bombing Georgian apartment buildings at the height of last August’s conflict, the legendary Georgian singer Vakhtang Kikabidze -- "Buba" to his fans -- speaks of betrayal and "the smell of melancholy" in his controversial new song, "You Disappointed Me."

A video of the tune, which has appeared on the Internet, shows Russians and Georgians in happier times, interspersed with footage of Georgians wounded in Russian attacks, piling their belongings into cars, or crying for help on rubble-strewn streets.

Kikabidze, who performs the song in Russian, says in the chorus, "You haven't betrayed me, you've disappointed me."

The 70-year-old singer tells RFE/RL's Russian Service that the song is aimed not at the Kremlin or the Russian military, but at the Russian intelligentsia, who failed to speak out in Georgia's defense.

“Of course, [the Russian intelligentsia] isn’t to be blamed -- no one is saying that. The point I am trying to make is that politics is one thing, people are another," Kikabidze says. "And this is where the disappointment lies -- because not everyone can say what they feel, you understand. Not everyone allows themselves to speak the truth.”

'Cozy Figure'

The song has provoked outrage among many Russians, who consider the Soviet-era crooner to be one of their own.

As well as being a veteran singer and songwriter, Kikabidze is celebrated in Russia for his acting roles, particular in the much-loved Soviet-era comedy "Mimino," in which he played a homesick Georgian pilot.

We simply wanted to remind people that we used to be friends. That Russians used to come to Georgia; Georgians used to come to Russia.
Anna Malpas, an arts critic at the "Moscow Times" newspaper, says Kikabidze's song likely offends those Russians who grew up with the singer and think of him as a Soviet, rather than as a Georgian, artist.

“In a way, people didn’t think of those Soviet-era figures primarily in terms of their nationality," Malpas says. "I mean, someone like [singer Muslim] Magomayev was from Azerbaijan, but I really don’t think people thought, 'Muslim Magomayev is from Azerbaijan.'

"I guess people just never saw that as any kind of identity, in terms of political identity. And now people actually feel quite threatened by the fact that this cozy figure has suddenly shown that he might disagree with them,” Malpas adds.

Kikabidze first enraged Russians last year when he refused to accept an Order of Friendship award from Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.

Now he has said he will not hold concerts commemorating his 70th birthday in Moscow, as planned, but will perform in Kyiv instead.

RFE/RL’s Russian Service website has been inundated with comments from listeners who stand on both sides of the divide.

One Muscovite, Aleksandr, writes: "I’m disappointed in the Georgians who elected a president" -- Mikheil Saakashvili -- "who is a coward and a traitor. What are we to do when with every decade we have more enemies in Georgia? Ours is a century of disappointment."

Another correspondent says: "There won’t be peace. If we had simply quarreled with Georgia, that would be one thing. But we took their land from them -- so how can Vakhtang, as a Georgian, be on the side of a country which has annexed a part of his homeland?"

A third reader, Yelena in Kyiv, writes: "Politicians should deal with politics. Actors and singers should try to make peace."

'We Used To Be Friends'

Kikabidze says he has been surprised at the outpouring over the song -- which includes clips of Russian poets like Yevgeny Yevtushenko reading lines they've written about Georgia -- and the video that accompanies it.

“We didn’t want to make a music video that was so directed at the war it made people’s hearts break," Kikabidze says. "We simply wanted to remind people that we used to be friends. That Russians used to come to Georgia; Georgians used to come to Russia. We’d have evenings together reading poetry, going to exhibitions and concerts, meeting friends. Georgians were always very good at doing this.”

Kikabidze's song is just the latest sour cultural note in relations between Russia and Georgia.

Earlier this year, Georgia released another anti-Russian song, which is to be its entry at the Eurovision song contest, to be held in May in Moscow. The song, performed by the band Stefane and 3G, makes a play on the English phrase "put in," with the lines: "We don’t wanna put in/The negative move/Is killing the groove."

The Kremlin is furious with the song, which it sees as a direct attack on Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. A Kremlin spokesman accused the musicians of “pseudo-political ambitions or, simply speaking, hooliganism.”

Pro-Kremlin youth groups have protested outside the Georgian Embassy in Moscow, calling for the song to be banned from this year’s Eurovision contest.

RFE/RL's Russian Service contributed to this report.
This forum has been closed.
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Comments page 1 of 7
by: trizarradia
March 19, 2009 22:57
Hi, cool site, good writing ;)

by: Fact
March 17, 2009 08:07
No country murdered more people in the 20th century than the USA. Their murder rate left behind even Germany.

by: Moment of Truty
March 17, 2009 08:00
To Andrew

I toured New Zealand last year and did not see a single Russian person in any supermarkets working but saw some Russian tourists shopping there. I also met a number of Russians tourists in Wai-O-Tapu thermal park in Rotorua, and also in Polynesian Spa. Auckland looks like a provincial Russian town of Soviet era - bleak, gloomy, boring, Most stores are closed at 5 PM, and the town drowns in the darkness with only TV tower lighted in the night.

by: Moment of Truth
March 17, 2009 07:27
To Koba

The overwhelming majority of Russians does not work abroad - they work in Russia. Russians go abroad only to spend their vacations and weekends on their villas in Mediterranean Riviera or Miami Beach. If they live abroad they live in the wealthiest areas of wealthiest cities in their multi-million $$$ mansions, where immigrants from Georgia are washing their cars sweeping their driveways. As for Moscow, it has become one of the wealthiest cities in the world. Koba, you have absolutely noting to do with Washington, DC, just like that "Andrew from Auckland" has nothing to do with Auckland. You both are from Georgia, sore and humiliated by the miserable situation in your poor country.

by: Andrew from: Auckland
March 15, 2009 14:05
Another thing you get wrong about history "Moment of Lies", is that the Korean war started when the communist north invaded the south, the Vietnam war was again started by the communist north invading the south.
All your 'explanations" of why so many people were murdered by Russians are BS.
Russians as a group are murdering imperialist barbarians.
Just look at how your raping pillaging "soldiers" behaved in eastern europe in 44 & 45, or Hungary in 56, or Czechoslovakia in 68, or Afghanistan 79-89.
At least the Germans admit to and apologise for the crimes of the Nazi's.
Russian crimes under the soviet system were many times worse, and in addition we have the purely Russian crimes recently committed in Chechnya, Ingushetia, Daghestan, Georgia.

by: Andrew from: Auckland
March 15, 2009 06:11
To "Moment of Lies",
Try goint to the "Pak'N'Save" in Royal Oak, Auckland. There you will see many Russians working in low paid, low skill jobs. Or try Fort Street, or K' Road where you will see many Russian girls streetwalking. Russia's "booming" economy (now in freefall) was OK if you were Muscovite or from St.Petersburg, but it did not extend outside those cities. Just look at the demographics for your soon to be failed state, your population is dropping like a brick. Putins attempt to lure home Russians failed miserably.
Your blind arrogance about the "special" nature of Russian emmigrants is not reflected in reality.
As for the Iraqi & Afghan refugees in NZ, the vast majority of them fled Saddams regime, so the view they have of the USA is tempered by the fact that although the situation in Iraq is bad, it was far worse under Saddam Hussein than it is now.
Likewise in Afghanistan, the brutal Russian occupation of the 80's killed over 5 million people. During the Russian wa in Aghanistan the Russians used napalm, chemical weapons, and even explosive mines designed to look like traditional Afghan toys against civillians.
The number of 62,000,000 people murdered by the Russian government was compiled by groups such as Memorial (good Russians by the way) and academics who had access to (during Yeltsins period) KGB archives.
Try looking up "Democide" on google.
The only country to murder more people during the 20th century than Russia was China.

by: Koba from: Washington, DC
March 15, 2009 00:12
Hey, 'Moment of Truth' (not):

You are right, there are number of Russian IT specialists who work for GOOGLE, MICROSOFT, etc. But they constitute a small percentage of Russian work force abroad. The overwhelming majority of Russians employed abroad work in 'adult entertainment business.' Nightclubs and brothels in Istanbul, Sofia, Bucharest, NYC, Miami, LA, Dubai and all former Soviet republics are well-supplied by Russian prostitutes. This is the main 'occupation' of Russian immigrants abroad. The number of Russian scientists and IT specialists pale in comparison to the number of Russian hookers.

If life is so good in the contemporary Russia, how come the Russian interest groups lobbied so hard to have the Russian Federation put, for the first time in a long time, on the list of DV Lottery participant countries? How come there is bigger than ever demand for Green Cards in Russia? Life is tough in Russia these days and there is nothing shameful about it (maybe there is something wrong with being an impoverished nation when you possess richest natural resources in the world.)

You speak about the ever improving living standards in Russia but forget to mention and take into account that, despite windfall oil and gas profits, there was not a single interregional highway built in Russia during Putin's reign. With the exception of Leningrad (yes, Leningrad and not St. Petersburg, since Putin decided to go back to using the Soviet national anthem. That speaks volumes about his political character, by the way) and Moscow, population shrank during Putin's reign.

by: Moment of Truth
March 14, 2009 14:47
To Andrew from "Auckland" ("majority of Russian emmigrants are most sertainly not")

Your English shows very well that if some people are still sweeping streets in some cities (as you insist), you are one of them. Many commentators here may do mistakes and misspellings, too, but no one claimed to be a native English speaker except for you. And it is really funny that you should pick such right name for your imaginary "Andrew Webb from Auckland" - you are really "Andrew-The-Webb-of-Lies" as some other commentator remarked. Modern Westerners know very well where to look for Russian immigrants should they have a specific need to do so. They would go to the wealthiest areas of wealthiest western cities, they would go to colleges and universities, to computer programming departments of big companies, they would go to hockey games and ballet performances. It is millions of your Georgian countrymen - among other Africans-Asian immigrants - who are sweeping supermarkets and train stations in Moscow, New York, London, Paris and maybe Auckland. Long gone the short period in Russians history (Yeltsin/Berezovskiy time) when Russians sought any job abroad. It's been already almost decade as Russia's booming economy brought all of them back home (unfortunately not only them but also millions of immigrants from Georgia and other countries) . Of course, the present financial crises hit Russia but not in the least harder than any other country. Everywhere the situation is alike.

by: Andrew from: Auckland
March 14, 2009 04:24
To Andrey,
You are the BS-er.
They use immigrants in Moscow, London, and many other cities. They may use machines, but it is still low paid work.
So what?
Some Russians may be rich, but the majority of Russian emmigrants are most sertainly not.
Go to any large western city, and you will see Russians working in the supermarket checkouts, McDonalds, and other menial jobs, cities like Sydney, Auckland, San Francisco, Dallas.
You Russian racists deride the immigrants from the former soviet union that do the same work in Russia, but just remember that for all your superior airs, you are the same thing to us.

by: Maria
March 14, 2009 01:48
Another funny thing about that Andrew-The-Webb-of-Lies is how he had no problem with calling Russian people "stupid", but when I answered him and told that it is Americans, Europeans and Jews who are stupid (and I supported my point with facts) he took no offence concerning Americans and Europeans but at once started yelping and bawling about "anti-Semitism". Isn't it hilarious? ;-)
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