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Аркадий Островский Free Music

Biography

Аркадий Островский Free Music

Аркадий Островский

Real name: Абрам "Аркадий" Ильич Островский (Abram "Arkadiy" Ilyich Ostrovskiy)

Effective period / Period of releases: 1962 - 1974

Arkady Ostrovsky (25 {O.S. 12} February 1914, Syzran, Simbirsk Governorate, Russian Empire — 18 September 1967, Sochi, USSR) was a Soviet composer and songwriter of Jewish descent, an Honored Art Practitioner of the RSFSR (1965), and uncle of American piano technician Alexander Ostrovsky (1937—2015). He authored numerous critically acclaimed songs for leading Soviet singers like Muslim Magomaev, Iosif Kobzon, Oleg Anofriev, Valery Obodzinsky, and Edyta Piecha, including the 1965 non-lexical vocalize I'm Glad Cause I'm Finally Coming Back Home sung by Eduard Khil, which went viral on YouTube in 2011 as a "Trololo" meme. Arkady Ostrovsky died at only 53 from a severe perforated ulcer in a Sochi hospital on the Black Sea coast, where he attended an inaugural opening ceremony for Red Gilliflower ("Красная гвоздика") music festival, and buried in Moscow. In February 2004, on his 90th anniversary, Ostrovsky's memorial star was inaugurated at the Star Square in front of "Russia" Concert Hall.

Born into a prosperous Jewish family, Abram was the son of Ilya Ilyich Ostrovsky, a music shop owner, piano tuner, and chairman of the local Jewish Assembly in Syzran. His elder brother, Rafail Ilyich Ostrovsky (1905—1989), also became a keyboard instruments technician. As Abram grew older, he adopted a more Slavonic name, "Arkadiy," to avoid antisemitic discrimination. The family relocated to Saint Petersburg (then Petrograd) circa 1927, where Arkady's father became chief piano technician at Leningrad Conservatory. Ostrovsky studied as a blacksmith at a professional technical school before pursuing music; by 1930, he enrolled in the Central Musical College. Between 1935 and the beginning of the Great Patriotic War (WWII Eastern Front) in July 1941, Arkady Ostrovsky played accordion in Emil Kemper's Leningrad Jazz Orchestra.

Ostrovsky spent most of the wartime in Novosibirsk, where he began composing. From 1940 to 1947, he served as a pianist and accordionist in Leonid Utyosov's renowned Variety Jazz Orchestra, often arranging scores for the ensemble. In 1956, Arkady Ostrovsky relocated to Moscow. He gained nationwide acclaim as a songwriter by the early 1960s, particularly renowned for children's songs. Like many other musicians, writers, and cartoonists deemed by the Soviet government as potentially "unreliable" for ideological reasons — or Jewish origins, in Arkady's case — Ostrovsky proliferated in children's art with fewer restrictions and censorship than any adult-oriented genre. Many of his songs became staples of Russian-speaking kids' vocal repertoire, such as May There Always Be Sunshine ("Пусть всегда будет солнце") and Tired Toys are Sleeping ("Спят усталые игрушки") lullaby on Zoya Petrova's lyrics — an opening theme from a long-running Soviet-Russian TV program Good Night, Little Ones! ("Спокойной ночи, малыши!").

According to later interviews with the composer's son, Russian scientist Mikhail Arkadyevich Ostrovsky, his accidental posthumous viral hit, I'm Glad As I'm Finally Coming Back Home ("Я очень рад, ведь я наконец возвращаюсь домой"), also known as simply Vocalize ("Вокализ"), was written on a bet with Ostrovsky's close friend and collaborator, poet Lev Oshanin. After one of their arguments, frustrated Arkady composed the tune to prove he could make a great song without any lyrics. With its uplifting and rollicking melody, Ostrovsky commissioned Eduard Khil to record the song with the All-Union Radio Variety Orchestra. However, conductor Yury Silantiev objected, insisting the song needed proper lyrics. He suggested poet Vadim Semernin, with whom Ostrovsky previously collaborated on Maya Kristalinskaya's song Stork ("Аист"). The resulting text about Wild West cowboy didn't pass ideological censorship, and the song remained a "pure" acapella; the only remnant of Severnin's unused lyrics was in its full title.

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External Pages

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arkady_Ostrovsky

ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Островский,_Аркадий_Ильич

a-ostrovskii.narod.ru

viaf.org/viaf/96923496/

kino-teatr.ru/kino/composer/sov/38072/bio/

историческая-самара.рф/каталог/самарская-персоналия/о/островский-аркадий-ильич.html