The first part of the show introduces some of the western influences on Russian rock (for example, the Beatles, Queen, Bob Dylan, reggae, blues and rockabilly).
Playlist for Part I (complete playlist for the show is here):
Сектор Газа (The Gaza Strip) - "Вступление"("Introduction")
Чайф (Chaif) - "Рок 'н Рол Этой Ночи" ("Rock'n Roll That Night")
Машина Времени (Time Machine) - "Наш Дом" ("Our House")
Зоопарк (Zoo) - "БугиВуги Каждый День" ("Boogie-Woogie Every Day")
Аквариум (Aquarium) - "Странный Вопрос" ("Strange Question")
Кино (Cinema) - "Бошетунмай" ("Boshetunmai")
Оловянные Солдатики (Tin Soldiers) - "У попа была собака" [песня от мультфильмa "Ну, Погоди!"] ("The Priest had a Dog" [song from cartoon “Nu, Pogodi!”])
Машина Времени - "Поворот" ("Turn")
There will be more to add in future posts - but for now - here is Episode 9 of the classic Soviet cartoon, "Nu, Pogodi!" - from 1976. Tin Soldiers (Оловянные Солдатики) wrote the rock song "У попа была собака" beginning at about 3:30 in the video (and their version of "Desert Caravan" is near the end of the clip -- though the story of jazz in the Soviet Union is another matter all together):

The following video of Tin Soldiers is from a 1993 performance -- the year the band reunited after more than ten years apart. Though more than twenty years after they recorded Рассуждения - and performing some new material - you can still hear a 1960's psychedelic rock sound in some of their songs. Andrei Gorin performs lead vocals (and near the end - at about 33 minutes into the clip -- he performs an extended tribute to the Beatles, the biggest influence on early Soviet rock) -
The radio show starts with Sektor Gaza's appropriation of Queen's "We Will Rock You" - but here is an example of the band's more original work - the song "Ява" or "Java" -- a reference to the Ява motorcycle (pictured below). The song is featured on the band's 1991 release «Ночь перед Рождеством» ("The Night Before Christmas"). Sektor Gaza's songs chronicle the darker side of the worker's paradise, featuring slang and swear words from the late Soviet era. The band's name is not a direct reference to the Gaza Strip (the literal meaning of Sektor Gaza), but is instead a reference to a contaminated industrial area in the band's home town of Voronezh. The band no longer exists due to the untimely death of Klinskikh - who performed under the nickname Хой (Khoi) - in 2000. This video was assembled by an enterprising fan of Sektor Gaza, who synced Khoi's vocals with footage from three different concerts:
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