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  1. Stepan Charnetsky. The song performed by the military band of the Air Force of the Armed Forces of Ukraine and 3 choirs in Vinnytsia. Oh, the Red Viburnum in the Meadow ( Ukrainian: Ой у лузі червона калина, romanized :Oi u luzi chervona kalyna) is a Ukrainian patriotic march first published in 1875 by Volodymyr Antonovych ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MaammeMaamme - Wikipedia

    Maamme. " Maamme " ( Finnish: [ˈmɑːmːe]; Swedish: Vårt land, Finland Swedish: [ˈvoːrt ˈlɑnːd]; both meaning "Our Land") is the de facto national anthem of Finland. [1] [2] The music was composed by the German immigrant Fredrik Pacius, with original Swedish lyrics by Johan Ludvig Runeberg. It was first performed with the current melody ...

  3. Oi! Captain Oi! Records is a punk rock and Oi! record label based in High Wycombe, England. [1] The company has released over 300 albums by many notable punk and Oi! bands of the late 1970s and 1980s. [2] The label was set up by Mark Brennan, former bassist of The Business, who had previously co-run Link Records and the Dojo subsidiary of ...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MusicMusic - Wikipedia

    e. The most general definition of music is the arrangement of sound to create some combination of form, harmony, melody, rhythm, or otherwise expressive content. [1] [2] [3] However, definitions of music vary depending on culture, [4] though it is an aspect of all human societies and a cultural universal. [5]

  5. The Burial were an English Oi! band that incorporated ska, northern soul and folk influences into their music. Formed in 1981 in Yorkshire, England, they released one album, A Day On the Town, in 1988, and worked with Bradford 's anarchist rant-poet Nick Toczek on various projects under the name Britanarchists. They disbanded in 1988.

  6. Dec 15, 2014 · Music: Dig the New Breed. Oi! has always been the more primal, knuckle-dragging cousin from the wrong side of the tracks counterpoint to punk's loftier intellectual goals. It's sometimes hard to explain the appeal of this stripped down, bare bones music to nonbelievers, but Oi! is, at heart, rock 'n' roll reduced to its bare elements.

  7. Genres 3 Mins Read. Oi! Music. By the end of the 1970s, punk in Britain was splintering into several distinct strains, most of them quite “arty”. Oi! music was an attempt to keep punk a populist, street-level phenomenon, and most of it came from the working class of South London and the cockney East End. When Garry Bushell, then features ...

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