Rock Goes Red: Rock Music Comes to Soviet Russia {5}
Rock Goes Red
It did not take long for rock and roll culture to begin to permeate the Iron Curtain. The 1960’s spawned the era of rock with the advent of some of the most influential bands, such as The Beatles and The Rolling Stones, producing some of the most famous music in modern history. The west was producing great bands and great music, exporting yet another form of cultural imperialism around the world, but the west was not the only place where rock and roll gained momentum and popularity. Behind the Iron Curtain the youth of Soviet Russia began to party, and not in the communist way, pioneering yet another underground movement that put rock in full swing by the 1970’s in Russia.
Rock music was very similar to other forms of western influence in the Soviet Union. The Soviet party did not allow for the distribution of records, airing of songs, or performance of any of the music that was becoming so popular in the west. Rock and roll became popular and proliferated through the country the same way that most other illegal things did, such as American blue jeans, secretly, and underground. Although the state controlled record label and largest controller of music, Melodiya, did eventually allow some hits to air and be sold on record, the hunger for more music was already set in motion and Russian bands began forming across the country.
Early music emulated the sound of their western originators and found success in the underground scene by primarily performing rock and roll covers of popular western music, undoubtedly the performers were blue jean Levi clad and away from the prying eyes of officials. The first band to eventually popularize and champion true Russian rock would be a Moscow based group named “Mashina Vremeni“, or Time Machine, in the 1970’s. Rock was not allowed to be performed publicly, and bands did not receive permission from the state to participate in festivals or concert series for quite sometime. Not until the 1973 did Russian rock make it’s first actual appearance by official channels. The song “My Address is the Soviet Union” was a break through, overly patriotic song, that made Soviet approval while maintaining the rhythm and sound of early western rock. Shortly after, rock bands were allowed to perform under the state approved category of VIA (Vocal-Instrumental Assembles), a title less offensive and less western than Rock and Roll.
So what is the big deal? Why should anyone care about rock and roll invading Soviet Russia? The issue was never necessarily the music itself, but rather the message that rock and roll carried. Rock wasn’t an all age phenomenon in the west either, largely championed by the younger generation, but Soviet’s saw rock as yet another conduit towards the rebellion and materialism that they categorized as their capitalist western counterparts. However, Russian rock was actually unique and should be considered a source of national pride. Elsewhere in Europe, rock was considered an English language phenomenon and was reproduced, written, and created primarily in English. Russian rock took the lead in producing the genre in their own language, with a message for their own people.

Russian rock breaks out and hits the west later on in the 1980’s, carrying with it an organic sound that is unique and completely their own.

Early Russian Rocker sporting a Fender Stratocaster prototype guitar featuring three pickups, 6 strings, but with no whammy bar installed, or electricity invented yet for the amplifier
*** Side note, Time Machine actually sounds pretty good. Kind of like a Russian version of The Beatles…kind of. Here’s a Youtube link to one of my new favorite songs.
Works Cited
http://soviethistory.macalester.edu/index.php?page=subject&show=music&SubjectID=1973rock&Year=1973&navi=byYear
http://soviethistory.macalester.edu/index.php?page=subject&SubjectID=1973rock&Year=1973
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_rock#The_late_1960s_and_1970s:_First_signs
http://www.russia-ic.com/culture_art/music/380/#.VGlKMvkc60E
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_rock#mediaviewer/File:Beer,_Russian_boy_with_balalaika.jpg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_rock
The Party Stops the Party: Soviet Russian Curbs Alcohol Consumption1985-1987 {7}
Anti Alcohol Campaign Poster
1985 was a tumultuous time for Soviet Russia. Gorbachev took over as the Secretary General and saw that it was part of his mandate to see an end to a rampant problem in the Soviet states. Alcohol had long been a cultural and traditional part of Russian society, usually accompanying celebration. Alcohol itself held a prominent place, and does so currently, in Russian society. However, statistics of the day showed that alcoholism was greatly tied to a large amount of social problems that plagued society and made the dream of a pure communist ideal harder to achieve through problems of absenteeism from the work place, domestic abuse, suicide, divorce, and work place accidents as workers were found to be drunk or drinking on the job.
Alcohol Leading the Way to Social Corruption
Alcohol Affects the Brain
Gorbachev’s first two years saw the beginning of a crackdown on alcohol production, and sales, but ironically not consumption. The vast majority of the populace turned to methods of home brewing various types of alcohol in order to subsidize their own consumption in light of the government crackdown. This is reminiscent of the effects of prohibition in the United States. Although the Soviet crackdown was not a complete outlaw of alcohol, it was certainly close to it when it came to prosecuting these home brewers. Organized crime spiked as a result of the downsizing of the substance’s availability for public purchase. The crime involved bootlegging and the sale of liquor, beer, and wine in a fashion that promoted a black market for alcohol in Soviet Russia, as well as producing an increase in the production of moonshine, or samogon.
The state controlled media sources jumped on the bandwagon in order to produce anti-alcohol propaganda and write compelling news articles against the consumption of alcohol while condemning alcoholics to the level of being worthless to society.
“Just what are they being treated for? Undisciplined parasitism, absenteeism and hooliganism? But there’s just one remedy for these ailments-punishment. They must receive treatment in mines and the logging camps, be held to a strict regime, and fed a semi starvation diet-then perhaps, all this nonsense will be driven out of them. Every alcoholic is a potential criminal. They must be treated with the most resolute severity…protect society from drunkards!” – Newspaper article link.
The campaign, although produced with good intention, was not an effect way to counter the issue of alcoholism. The government went to the extremes of limiting the kinds of shops that could sell alcohol, similar to ABC stores in Virginia, the shutting down of many vodka distilleries, as well as the destruction of vineyards in the regions that had climates acceptable for wine production such as Moldavia, Armenia, and Georgia. Perhaps the greatest hit to the Soviet government, aside from the rise of organized crime and home distilleries, was the loss in revenue that was felt sharply in the budget from the decrease of sales tax derived from alcohol purchasing. In 1979 alone the state was able to gain 25.4 billion rubles from the sales of alcohol, this alone actually eclipsed the revenue from income tax to put it into perspective.
Needless to say the campaign was eventually abandoned in the latter part of 1987. The resulting loss of revenue and apparent failure to actually curb any sort of consumption led to the state returning to normal and allowing the party to continue. Still, the government had great intentions to help save the society from the ravishing effects of what was surely a problem, and continues to be a problem. A quick Google search will produce results that show Russia, along with many other former Soviet republics, as being in the top 5 contenders for the most alcohol consumption globally per capita. The top five per liter of consumption countries in 2010, in order of succession, were Belarus, Moldova, Russia, Romania, and the Ukraine. Coincidence? I think HET.
Works Cited
http://soviethistory.macalester.edu/index.php?page=subject&SubjectID=1985drylaw&Year=1985&navi=byYear
http://soviethistory.macalester.edu/index.php?page=article&ArticleID=1985boikova1&SubjectID=1985drylaw&Year=1985
http://soviethistory.macalester.edu/index.php?page=subject&show=essay&SubjectID=1985drylaw&Year=1985&navi=byYear
http://orthodoxyandrecovery.blogspot.com/2011/11/anti-alcohol-campaigns-nice-art-little.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_alcohol_consumption
http://dlib.eastview.com/browse/doc/19986564
By piercedc Category: Uncategorized