Kogda tvoya devushka bolʹna
"Kogda tvoya devushka bolʹna" | |
---|---|
Song by Kino | |
from the album Black Album | |
Language | Russian |
English title | When your girlfriend is sick |
Released | 1990 |
Recorded | 1990 |
Genre | |
Length | 4:21 |
Label | Metadigital |
Songwriter(s) | Viktor Tsoi, Yuri Kasparyan |
Music video | |
"Когда твоя девушка больна" on YouTube |
Kogda tvoya devushka bolʹna (Russian: «Когда твоя девушка больна», lit. 'When your girlfriend is sick') is a song by the Soviet rock band Kino, included in the "Black Album" (the band's eighth studio album), released after the death of its author, Viktor Tsoi. The song was actively performed by the band's musicians at apartment concerts since 1988. Tsoi had plans to create a boy band that would perform "pop" songs, including "Kogda tvoya devushka bolʹna".[1] Due to its poppier tone and songwriting, the song was not placed on records at the time of its initial performances. Despite the song also not fitting into the atmosphere of the "Black Album", Kino's musicians believed that the public should hear it.[2]
Music experts see certain similarities between "Kogda tvoya devushka bolʹna" and the song by British jangle pop group The Smiths called Girlfriend in a Coma.[3]
Background
[edit]There are many different interpretations of who the song is dedicated to. According to one of them, the composition is dedicated to Marianna Tsoi, the wife of Viktor Tsoi. However, at the time the composition was written, the two were no longer living together.[4] Another possibility was that Viktor Tsoi wrote the song to cheer up bandmate Yuri Kasparyan, whose girlfriend Marina Smirnova, who starred with Tsoi in the leading role of the film The Needle, was ill:[5][a]
I was often sick, and Yuriy ran around with medicines. Vitya couldn't drag him anywhere because of me. That's when the song "Kogda tvoya devushka bol’na" was born, which became a hit at that time. This song and the role in the film "Needle" are the only things I have left from Vitya.
— Marina Smirnova
Kasparyan himself agrees with this version.[6] This is the interpretation that most fans of Kino adhere to.[2]
Musical style
[edit]The lyrics are relatively simple compared to songs Tsoi wrote for Kino – the lyrical protagonist is sad because his girlfriend is sick, and the whole world seems "not the same" without her, and nothing is a joy. Russian music critic Vitaly Kalgin called the lyrics ironic.[7] Viktor Tsoi stated about the song:[8][b]
Yes, I do pop music. Music should cover everything: it should make you laugh when it needs to, amuse you when it needs to, and make you think when it needs to. […] "When your girlfriend is sick" - it has a joke and the simplest rhymes, like "cinema - wine" - and nothing more.
The song was the subject of much controversy for the band due to its noticeable pop sound. Some blamed the change of producer for this, however, Yuri Aizenshpis himself and the band members denied this. Viktor Tsoi researcher Vitaly Kalgin disagrees with this opinion, believing that Kino's work included elements of pop music from the very beginning. Moreover, Kalgin believed that the album Eto ne lyubov... contained songs that were poppier than "Kogda tvoya devushka bolʹna".[9]
Personnel
[edit]- Viktor Tsoi - vocals, acoustic guitar
- Yuri Kasparyan - acoustic guitar, keyboards
- Igor Tikhomirov - bass guitar
- Georgy Guryanov - Yamaha RX-5 programming
Cover versions
[edit]In 2000, singer Yulia Chicherina recorded a cover version of the song for the tribute album “KINOproby”.[10]
Notes
[edit]- ^ Russian: "Я часто болела, а Юрий бегал вокруг меня с лекарствами. Витя не мог его никуда вытащить из-за меня. Тогда и родилась песня «Когда твоя девушка больна», которая стала хитом того времени. Эта песня и роль в фильме «Игла» — единственное, что мне осталось от Вити."
- ^ Russian: "Да я занимаюсь поп-музыкой. Музыка должна охватывать все: она должна когда надо, смешить, когда надо, веселить, а когда надо, и заставлять думать. …"Когда твоя девушка больна" — в ней есть шутка и самые простые рифмы, типа «кино — вино» — и больше ничего."
References
[edit]- ^ Chernin, Anton (2017). Наша музыка. Полная история русского рока, рассказанная им самим [Our Music. The Complete History of Russian Rock, Told by Himself] (in Russian). Russia: РИПОЛ классик. ISBN 978-5-386-12372-7.
- ^ a b "История песни «Когда твоя девушка больна» Виктора Цоя". Song-Story.ru (in Russian). 2017-04-30. Retrieved 2024-12-04.
- ^ Kalgin, Vitalij Nikolaevič (2015). Viktor Coj. Žiznʹ zamečatelʹnych ljudej Serija biografij Malaja serija. Moskva: Molodaja gvardija. ISBN 978-5-235-03751-9.
- ^ "Виктор Цой «Когда твоя девушка больна»: история песни, интересные факты, текст, содержание". soundtimes.ru. Retrieved 2024-12-04.
- ^ Васильева, Ирина; Асмолова, Анна; Петрова, Мария. "Виктор Цой и его женщины: кому Цой посвятил песни Восьмиклассница, Малыш, личная жизнь, биография | theDay". theday.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2024-12-04.
- ^ "Когда твоя девушка больна: о ком речь в песне Цоя". Рамблер/развлечения и отдых (in Russian). 2019-04-20. Retrieved 2024-12-04.
- ^ Калгин, В. Н. (2015). Виктор Цой и его Кино (in Russian). Russia: АСТ. ISBN 978-5-17-091690-0.
- ^ "Виктор Цой о своем творчестве — НАШЕ Радио". www.nashe.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2024-12-04.
- ^ Kalgin, Vitalij Nikolaevič (2016). Coj: poslednij geroj sovremennego mifa. Moskva: Ripol Klassik. ISBN 978-5-386-05812-8.
- ^ RadioRynda (2012-03-16). Чичерина Когда твоя девушка больна. Retrieved 2024-12-04 – via YouTube.