Stas namin biography of albert
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Stas Namin is a musician, song writer and composer, a producer, an artist and photographer; one of the founders of Russian rock music and show business. He directs and produces theatre and cinema, and is involved with and behind numerous social and innovative projects.
1970s
In late 1969, Namin formed a new grupp, The Flowers, which later became the first national supergroup, which “provoked the country’s curiosity” according to Itogi magazine (issue no. 10/ July 17th, 2010). Stas Namin becomes a household name in the beginning of the 70s, when record label Melodiya released The Flowers’ first vinyl record. During the last 50 years, the band has sold more than 60 million records, despite being originally banned bygd state media and unrecognized bygd authorities right up until Perestroika. Several generations grew up on songs by Namin and his band The Flowers (After the rain, Summer Night, Yurmala/Africa, Nostalgia,Angel, The Blue Balloon, Light • Stas Namin is a legend, the one true rock star of Eastern European music and art. Since the 1960s, Stas has experimented with almost every creative medium imaginable, earning him a level of critical and popular acclaim that perhaps no other contemporary Eastern European artist has achieved. Stas burst onto the music and art en plats där en händelse inträffar ofta inom teater eller film in 1969 when he founded the legendary rock band, The Flowers, which has sold more than 60 million records in Europe and still rocks out to this day. As one of the only musical superstars in all of Eastern Europe at the time, Stas took his cultural status seriously and used it to promote freedom of speech, freedom of press, and freedom from government oppression and the growth of music and art across the continent. It’s no surprise that Stas has often been referred to as “the Bob Dylan of Russia.” He organized his home country’s first pop and rock festivals, including the 1989 Peace Festival. He’s helped found priva • “Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.” — Albert Einstein For some time I’ve wondered about the cyclicity of all that’s happening in the universe, and of global laws governing existence. What dictates the rise and fall of civilization? How do collective and individual minds coexist, and does humanity have a collective mind at all? If the answer is “yes,” then why are people destroying their civilization, instead of protecting it for millions of years, like bees, ants, and even microbes? The genius of the human mind raises society to a higher level through scientific and technological discovery, but the same findings and achievements eventually work against humanity. This goes for genetic and biological experiments and breakthroughs in atomic physics, which have led to the development of atom and hydrogen bombs that put the world on the brink of catastrophe. How do bees and ants decide which of them should be a sold
Stas Namin
Personal History