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Oskar Strok's tango : Leshchenko sings -Tell Me Why, Madame?

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Uploaded by on May 23, 2008

Piotr LESCHENKO (b. 1898 in a village Isaeva, Ukraine) was known as 'the king of the Russian tango' and his singing was passionate and rich. Born in a Russian town south of Odessa in what was to become Romania after the 1st world war, he became an icon throughout Eastern Europe, one of the most sought after popular singers of his time. Having left Russia after the Bolshevik revolution, he toured in Europe, gaining enormous success in Warsaw, Paris, Riga, Bucharest - where he finally settled, and run his own cabaret. These 1931 -35 recordings are part of the work from what were considered to be his peak years, from the early to mid 1930s.

After World War II the Soviet army came to Romania, Leshchenko and his wife Vera were arrested by communist Romanian militia. Vera was sent to the Soviet Union, where she was condemned to penal labour and Piotr was imprisoned near Bucharest. He died in a prison hospital on July 16, 1954.

Oscar Davidovich STROK was born in Dvinsk (Latvija) on 24 December 1892. His father was a theatre orchestra musician. O.Strok started getting interested in music very early. First he learned to play violin, then - piano. At the age of 12 he entered the St.-Petersburg Conservatoire where he studied in the piano class. In Latvia in 20s.-30s. of the 20th century, O.Strok worked as a pianist and conductor of a dance orchestra and composed musical romances, waltzes, and jazz compositions. In 1928 he went to France on a concert tour. In the interim between the 1st and the 2nd World Wars, his dance music was extremely popular in Europe. It could be heard everywhere -- in Paris, London, Warsaw and Berlin or Moscow -- at restaurants and cafes, concert halls and dancehalls, thousands and thousand records of his music were issued. After the composer's trip to Shanghai and Tokyo in 1935, his most beautiful tangos, such as: „Ach, eti cziornyje głaza" (Ah, Those Black Eyes), „Skazitie, poczemu?" („Tell Me Why, Madame?) or „Siniaja rapsodija" (Lunar Rhapsody) became well-known in China and Japan as well. That is why O.Strok was called "Tango King" already on his lifetime. He died on 22 June 1975 in Riga.

Recording:
Piotr Leshchenko - Skazhitie, pochemu? (Tell Me Why, Madame?) (Oskar Strok), Columbia c. 1932

The photograpsh show pre-war Bucharest.

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  • im romanian and im Petre Lescenco's great-grandaughter :)

    his songs are simply great and just for the information of everybody...his son (Igor Lescenco-my grandfather) was a great ballet dancer :)

    and btw. nice picutres of Downtown Bucharest in the old days :)

  • Это просто сказка!

    

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All Comments (17)

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  • @iubirexo

    Lucky you.. You should be proud.. He was, great composer..

    So many fabulous tango songs.. Passionate and little bit nostalgic..

    I love to dance tango with his music. And I understand russian language too.. Beautiful lyrics also...

  • Hello! I am an American of Romanian descent and I love this video. I have been to Romania two times (and yes obviously Bucharest.) Fortunatly there are still most of these buildings and seeing them in their former pre-communist glory was very nice.  I agree the the spirit of the city must be quite different now, but I feel that if you go down the right streets and get just a quiet moment to your self, maybe some coffee at a cafe, you can imagine what life must have been like during this era.

  • Nice video!

  • O FRUMUSEŢE!!!

  • @dropsofmusic: in fact most of them are still there... i counted and there are only 6 buildings that are not anymore :))). But the spirit of the city is different and the new buidings that r quite agressive are guilty for this. And traffic.:)

  • god bless you and your children

    let them be good the god

  • Thank you for sharing your information. There is a special place in my heart for his wonderful performances.

  • nice buildings don't see those around as much any more (:

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