Pelageya
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Pelageya Пелагея | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Polina Sergeyevna Smirnova[1] |
Born | Novosibirsk, Russian SFSR, USSR | 14 July 1986
Genres | Folk rock, folk, art rock |
Occupation(s) | Singer |
Years active | late 1990s – present |
Labels | FeeLee Records, Soyuz, Misteria Zvuka |
Pelageya Sergeyevna Telegina (Russian: Пелаге́я Серге́евна Теле́гина; before marriage Pelageya Sergeyevna Khanova; born Polina Sergeyevna Smirnova; 14 July 1986), known mononymously as Pelageya, is а Russian singer. She sings folk-songs from different nations in different languages, romances and compositions written by the members of her group, mostly in rock arrangements.[2][3]
Life and career[]
Pelageya's mother, Svetlana Gennadiyevna Khanova (Russian: Светлана Геннадьевна Ханова), formerly a jazz-singer, theatre director and performing arts instructor, is now a producer and art director of her daughter's band.[4] Pelageya's father is unknown. Her last name Khanova is the surname of her mother's last husband.[5] At the age of eight Pelageya entered the musical school attached to Novosibirsk Conservatoire. At nine she was awarded the title "Best folk-singer of Russia in 1996" at a television contest.[3] And at ten she signed a contract with FeeLee Records label and the family moved to Moscow. At the age of 14 she completed her school education through correspondence and entered Russian Academy of Theatre Arts, from which she graduated with honours in 2005.
In 1997 she sang at Moscow's 850th Anniversary Pageant concert, was the sole performer at the Heads of Government of Three States Summit (Jacques Chirac, Helmut Kohl, Boris Yeltsin)[6] and participated in KVN TV show as a member of Novosibirsk State University team.
In July 1999 she was invited by Mstislav Rostropovich to a musical festival in France alongside Evgeny Kissin, Ravi Shankar, B.B. King.[7] In an interview to a French newspaper Galina Vishnevskaya – Rostropovich's wife – called her then "a future of the world's opera".[8] In 2000 Pelageya assembled a band under her name.
In 2009 Pelageya was awarded the title "Best female soloist of the year" according to Nashe Radio.[9] In January 2010 she took part in Bobby McFerrin's project Bobble.
Pelageya was one of the four coaches of the Russian reality talent show The Voice in seasons 1–3 and 6. Also she was one of the three coaches of The Voice Kids in seasons 1–3, 5–6 as well as a coach of The Voice Senior, season 1 and 2.
During the 2014 Winter Olympics opening ceremony, she performed the Russian folk song Oy, to ne vecher (Ой, то не вечер).
In 2015 she was awarded "Best Folk Artist" at the Russian National Music Awards.[10]
After the birth of her daughter, she returned to music by taking part in the anniversary concert of Nikolay Rastorguyev, the leader of the band Lyube, where she performed the song Конь (Horse) in duet with him.[11]
Personal life[]
In 2010 Pelageya married Dmitry Efimovich, a television director. They divorced two years later. In 2016 she married Russian hockey player, Ivan Telegin. They have a daughter Taisiya (Russian: Таисия). On December 2019, Pelageya announced on Instagram the separation from Telegin[12]
Discography[]
- 2003 — Pelageya (Пелагея)
- 2007 — Maid's songs (Девушкины песни)
- 2009 — Siberian drive (Сибирский драйв)
- 2010 — Paths (Тропы)
Band members[]
- Pelageya – vocals
- Pavel Deshura – guitar, back vocals, arrangement
- Svetlana Khanova – producer, lyrics, arrangement, audio mixing
- Daniil Oplachkin – drums
- Alexander (Sanya) Savinykh – bass guitar, back vocals
- Anton Tsypkin — bayan (accordion), keyboards
- Sergey Poluboyarinov – sound director
References[]
- ^ Андрей Ханов. Немного о Пелагее
- ^ "Pelageya Khanova – Biography (from official site)". Archived from the original on 13 March 2012. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Пелагея Ханова – Биография – Рождение фолк-этно-рок певицы и создание группы". Archived from the original on 13 February 2012.
- ^ Хальзова, Анастасия. "Воспитание детей – это тоже творчество". Здоровье школьника (№9 2008). Archived from the original on 13 February 2012. Retrieved 9 January 2011.
- ^ Бирюков Сергей (21 January 2010). "Пелагея: "На телевидении и без меня тесно"". Труд. Archived from the original on 13 February 2012. Retrieved 9 January 2011.
- ^ Вундеркинды. Телефильм. ООО «Альфа-фильм». Канал «Rossiya 1». Автор сценария — Юлия Семёнова, режиссёр — Илья Цветков, 2006. фрагмент с 14:10 по 20:32
- ^ Грум-Гржимайло Тамара (6 July 1999). "Безудержный Ростропович". Moskovskiye Novosti. Archived from the original on 17 October 2013. Retrieved 27 December 2012.
- ^ Новые известия 2006-03-06 Archived 21 January 2014 at archive.today Певица Пелагея. Я хочу делать модную русскую музыку
- ^ Чартова дюжина
- ^ "Вручена Первая российская национальная музыкальная премия". Intermedia News Russia (in Russian). 11 December 2015. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
- ^ [1] Pelagia for the first time after the birth came on the scene
- ^ "Пелагея рассталась с мужем". lenta.ru. 26 December 2019. Retrieved 27 December 2019.
External links[]
- 1986 births
- Living people
- Russian pop-folk singers
- Russian folk musicians
- 21st-century Russian singers
- Russian child singers
- 20th-century Russian women singers
- 21st-century Russian women singers
- Russian National Music Award winners