Viktor Tsoi, front man for the popular Soviet band Kino, died in a car crash on August 15, 1990. Twenty-five years later, the lasting influence of the man often dubbed Russia's Jim Morrison continues ...
The iconic frontman of 80s rock group Kino, Viktor Tsoi looms large in the firmament of Russian rock music, in spite of his untimely death almost a quarter of a century ago. Tsoi, who defined the ...
“I Want Changes!” (Khochu peremen!) is one of the most famous songs by the band Kino. During Perestroika, the tune took on a distinct political message, and ever since it’s been associated with ...
A cult figure of Soviet rock, Viktor Tsoi seems never to have been forgotten by his modern-day fans. Many of them are too young to remember the musician, who died in a car crash 20 years ago. His ...
On 30 May, when the Russian journalist Arkady Babchenko, reported dead the day before, appeared at a press conference in Kyiv, the Russian-language internet responded with the meme 'Tsoi lives'. The ...
Viktor Tsoi died on Aug. 15, 1990, at the age of 28 and became a true symbol of the Perestroika during the late Soviet Union. He remains a cult figure many years after his death and his songs are ...
The debut of Russian rock ’n’ roll saga “Tsoi,” based on the life of the iconic rebel singer-songwriter Viktor Tsoi, who died in 1990, has triggered a rights dispute with the performer’s heirs over ...
For anyone watching the protests in Belarus, there is one song that keeps being heard in the crowds. Its name is Khochu Peremen. It's a song about waiting for change, and it has deep resonance for ...
For anyone watching the protests in Belarus, there is one song that keeps being heard in the crowds. Its name is Khochu Peremen. It's a song about waiting for change, and it has deep resonance for ...