Valery Mikhailovich Didula

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DiDuLa
Background information
Born24 January 1970
Grodno, Byelorussian SSR, Soviet Union (now Belarus)
Genrespop folk, new flamenco, new age
Instrument(s)Classical guitar, flamenco guitar
Years active2000 - present
Websitewww.didula.com

Valery Mikhailovich Didula (Belarusian: Валерый Міхайлавіч Дзідзюля, romanizedValiery Mikhaylavich Dzidziulia; born 24 January 1970) is a Soviet and Belarusian guitar virtuoso, composer, arranger, music producer, leader of the DiDuLa band.[1][2] Performs folk and fusion music with a new age influence.

Biography[edit]

Didula[3] was born in a family of music lovers. The first guitar was given to him by his mother at the age of five.[1] He began to practice and quickly mastered it. At sixteen he wrote his first compositions.[4] He later got a job as a third guitar ensemble "Scarlet Dawns" led by Nikolai Khitrik. Concerts were held in different cities, collective farms and state farms, and then in restaurants. After graduation school, he entered the radio engineering school[5]

Confirmation of his style[edit]

After the collapse of the ensemble, Didula took up sound engineering in the Grodno song and dance ensemble “White Dew”, where mostly Polish, Belarusian, Ukrainian, gypsy folk dances and motifs played, sang and danced.[6] As part of this team, Didula first went on tour in Europe - in Spain, Italy, Poland, Switzerland, France, Germany.[1][6] In Spain, he became acquainted with the flamenco style - the traditional Spanish music and dance style, which influenced its final formation (Didula's work traces some passages and rhythms characteristic of flamenco and other Spanish movements, but you can't call this music 100% flamenco).[6] He claims to have been "infected" with this traditional Spanish style of music and dance. “I know the style I'm working in now,” the musician says in one of his interviews, “this is the sound of a classic Spanish instrument with nylon strings and the sound of a tree that fascinates me".[7] "My pulse accelerated when I heard this Spanish music." This style is now my business card."[4] The first DiDuLa "Flamenco" album was released in 2000.[1]

DiDuLa Group[edit]

In 2002, DiDuLa gathered a group of musicians and began touring in Russia[8] and the United States.[1]

DiDuLa Group consists of: percussionists (Michail Drumberg and Andrei Atabekov), keyboard (Khaibula Magomedov), bass (Philip Borodin) and wind instruments (Valery Skladanny and Ramil Mulikov).[6]

Discography[edit]

Studio albums[edit]

2000 - Flamenco (Audio CD)

2002 - The road to Baghdad (Audio CD)

2004 - Legend (Audio CD)

2006 - Cave town of inkerman (Audio CD)

2006 - Color Dreams (Audio CD) 2007 - Music of an Unreleased Movie (Audio CD)

2010 - Fragrance (Audio CD) 2012 - Ornamental (Audio CD)

2013 - Once Upon a Time (Audio CD + DVD)

2017 - Aquamarine (Audio CD)

2019 - The Seventh Sense (Audio CD)

2021 - 2021 (Audio CD)

Live albums and videos[edit]

2006 - Live in Moscow (Audio CD, DVD)

2009 - Live in Saint Petersburg (DVD + 2CD)

2009 - Dear Six Strings (film about the group, DVD)

2013 - Live in Kremlin (2DVD + 3CD)

Collections[edit]

2006 - Grand Collection (Audio CD, MP3 CD)

2003 - The Best (also known as Satin Coast) (Audio CD)

2013 - DiDuLa. 100 best songs (MP3 CD)

Production work[edit]

2008 - Denis Asimovich “Hommage to Cheslav Drozdievich”

2012 - Igor Dedusenko “Prayer”

Video clips[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e "– Russian Guitar Virtuoso to Perform in New York". Retrieved 2020-02-13.
  2. ^ Якубовская, Анжела (May 29, 2013). "Интервью с музыкантом, композитором, уникальным гитаристом ДиДюЛей". Правда.Ру.
  3. ^ "Дидюля". 24SMI.
  4. ^ a b "Didjulja". abc-guitars.com (in French).
  5. ^ "Иллюстрированный биографический энциклопедический словарь". www.abc-guitars.com. Retrieved 2020-02-20.
  6. ^ a b c d "Биография Валерий ДиДюЛя". www.peoples.ru.
  7. ^ "Дидюля: Российский зритель широк душой". Российская газета. 3 March 2011.
  8. ^ "The concert of Belarus guitarist Valery Didula was sold out in Penza". penzanews.ru. Retrieved 2020-02-14..

External links[edit]