Aquarium or Akvarium (Russian: Аквариум; often stylized as Åквариум) is a Russian rock group formed in Leningrad in 1972. The band is considered one of the founders of Russian rock.[1][2] Aquarium has had many line-up changes over its history, and lead singer and founder Boris Grebenshchikov is the only remaining original member. Former band members include Anatoly Gunitsky, Mikhail Feinstein, Andrei "Dyusha" Romanov, Vsevolod Gakkel, and Sergey Kuryokhin.

Aquarium
Аквариум
Background information
OriginSoviet Union
GenresFolk rock, art rock, psychedelic folk, new wave, reggae, experimental rock, psychedelic rock, indie rock
Years active1972–1991, 1992–present
LabelsAnTrop, Melodiya, Solyd, Soyuz
Websitebg-aquarium.com

Formation, first lineup (1972–1991)

edit

Aquarium was formed in 1972 by two friends: Boris Grebenshchikov, then a student of applied mathematics at Leningrad State University, and Anatoly (George) Gunitsky, a playwright and absurdist poet.[3] The founding members were Grebenshchikov, George (drums), Alexander Tsatsanidi (bass), Vadim Vasilyev (keyboards), Valery Obogrelov (sound).

The popular story behind the name "Aquarium" is that it was inspired by the Budapest street Leningrad pub "The Aquarium" and suggested by one of the band members. However, Grebenshchikov has given differing stories in interviews, suggesting alternately that it came through band word association sessions or was inspired by a glass aquarium-like building.

In late 1973, guitarist Edmund Shkliarsky (later the leader of Piknik) was briefly a member of the band. Bass player Michael Feinstein-Vasiliev (Fan), the first professional musician in Aquarium, joined in 1973. The next year keyboardist Andrew "Dyusha" Romanov joined the band, and, inspired by rock-flautists Richard Meier and Ian Anderson, retrained as a flautist.

Early concerts

edit

Their first performance took place in March 1973 at their rehearsal base, a small country venue,[4] while others place it at the Leningrad restaurant "Hold" at Central Park of Culture and Recreation, for which they were paid 50 rubles in cash.[5]

In the 1970s and early 1980s, rock and roll was strictly regulated in the Soviet Union, and only a few artists managed to be approved and signed by the government record label Melodiya. Aquarium's usual concert venues were private apartments and they faced many years of fierce competition to land a spot on the label. These "apartment concerts" (квартирники) were a unique Soviet phenomenon created by underground musicians. They were usually acoustic, as noise could cause the neighbors to call the Militsiya, but the limited space fostered an atmosphere of intimacy between the group and its audience, who listened with bated breath, perhaps with someone recording the concert on a simple tape recorder. This was similar to the concept of the Russian bards.

In 1973, Aquarium performed their first live concert, but did not follow it up with regular concerts.

Home recording albums

edit

While on vacation in January–February 1974, Grebenshchikov and George recorded their debut album The Temptation of St. Aquarium/Iskushenie Svyatogo Akvariuma (Russian: Искушение святого Аквариума). The band recorded the album with home recording equipment, with variable sound quality results. The Temptation of St. Aquarium was long thought lost, but in 1997 the record was found and released in 2001 on CD in the book Prehistoric Aquarium. All masters of this record appear to have been lost. Their second album was called Parables of Count Diffusor and was written by Grebenshchikov, George Fan and Dyusha Romanov, probably in the spring of 1975. They followed this up in 1976 with their third album, S Toy Storony Zerkalnogo Stekla, or From the Other Side of a Mirror Glass (Russian: С той стороны зеркального стекла), named using a line from an Arseny Tarkovsky poem.

Theatre and regular performances

edit

In 1974 the group became heavily involved in amateur theatre, playing pieces of absurdity on the steps of the Engineers' Castle. However, when the theater was headed by professional director Eric Goroshevsky, Grebenshchikov became disillusioned with the idea of a fusion of rock, poetry and theatre, and shifted Aquarium's focus to concentrate on musical activities (though they only made a complete break from the theatre group in 1977). George left the band, but kept in touch with its members. The following year, cellist Vsevolod (Seva) Gakkel joined the band .

Aquarium began to regularly perform live in 1976. Their first concert was on February 25, 1976, jointly with Grebenshchikov, Gakkel and Dyusha Romanov. On March 10 Aquarium was a surprise guest at the Tallinn Festival of Popular Music, where they played a set of four acoustic songs and won the prize for the most interesting and varied program.

In 1977 Romanov and bassoon player Alexander "Fagot" Alexandrov ("fagot" ["фагот"] meaning bassoon in Russian) were drafted in the military for two years. With the loss of these members, Grebenshchikov recorded a highly successful solo album All Brothers are Sisters (Vse brat'ya - sestry). Aquarium also became popular to the point that Grebenshchikov was recognised in the street. In 1979 the band met with two important figures of Soviet rock, critic Artemy Troitsky and next year start to work with Andrei Tropillo as a manager in whose studio Aquarium recorded its first 'historic' albums.

Tbilisi Rock Festival

edit

Aquarium burst into the consciousness of the Soviet rock scene by competing at the 1980 Tbilisi Rock Festival. The band caused a scandal with their performance, which was considered bizarre and shocking. During the set, Grebenshchikov lay down on the stage and made provocative movements while playing the guitar, causing all the jury members to demonstratively leave the hall. Aquarium was accused of promoting homosexuality (the guitar actions), incest (Grebenshchikov changed words while singing the song "Marina", though this may have been through poor technique) and indecency, and banned from the festival. The incident became known in Leningrad, and as a result Grebenshchikov lost his job and was expelled from the Komsomol (Young Communist's League, expected of working Russians). However, while they did not receive any prizes, the band's performance made them become a symbol of the Soviet alternative culture.

Until 1987, Aquarium recorded all of their albums in live concerts and in a self-assembled underground studio (several members had engineering education) disguised as a "Young Technicians Club". A notable exception was the album Radio Africa (1983), which was secretly recorded using a government-owned mobile studio, after bribing a technician.

Mainstream success

edit

The advent of Glasnost in the second half of the 1980s brought many underground Russian rock musicians to public recognition and Aquarium became one of the most popular acts. They were allowed to play in large concert halls, appeared on state-owned television and recorded soundtracks for several films, most notably Assa.[6] In 1987 they recorded their first album for the state-owned Melodiya record label. With official backing and legalized distribution the album was a huge hit in the Soviet Union, selling well over a million copies within a few months. Grebenshchikov subsequently recorded two albums in English and toured with several different backing bands. In 1992, after the break-up of the Soviet Union, he released music under the name The BG-Band, The Russian Album, a collection of melancholic folk songs influenced by his travels all over Russia and demonstrating a return to his Russian roots.

Second lineup (1992–present)

edit

Grebenshchikov kept touring and shortly returned to calling his band "Aquarium", although the lineup bore little resemblance to the original band. In 1996, Aquarium co-headlined (along with DDT) the VladiROCKstok music festival in Vladivostok; at one memorable point, Grebenshchikov famously invited thousands of fans to stream out of their grandstand seats and into the area near the performance stage.

The band continued to release more albums and tour extensively over the former Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, and places with Russian-speaking immigrant communities in Germany, Israel and the United States. In 2007, Aquarium performed for the first time at the Royal Albert Hall in London. In 2008 the "Aquarium International" project (with participation of over 20 musicians worldwide) was created.

Their 2008 album Loshad' Belaya (White Horse) was released in a similar fashion to Radiohead's 2007 In Rainbows: it was offered for free download in mp3 format with the downloader opting to pay the amount they saw fit.[7]

Although often criticized for departure from their original style and constant line-up changes, which made the later incarnations of Aquarium essentially a Grebenshchikov solo project, the group still enjoyed considerable success in Russia with regular radio airplay of their old and new songs, popular albums, and frequent tours.

Aquarium's lineup in 2017 consisted of Boris Grebenshchikov, Andrey Surotdinov (violin), Alexey Zubarev (guitars), Alexander Titov (bass), Liam Bradley (drums) and Brian Finnegan (flute).

Musical influences

edit

Aquarium were strongly influenced by Western rock music, particularly by The Beatles, Bob Dylan, David Bowie, T. Rex, and progressive rock acts like Jethro Tull, King Crimson and Roxy Music as well as by new wave and reggae artists. This was reflected in the band's often complex compositions and wide-ranging lyric themes, even including references to Celtic and Indian cultures.

Discography

edit

Albums

edit
Date Title Translation Notes
Albums (archival) from the 1970s
1973 Iskushenie Svyatogo Akvariuma Temptation of St.Aquarium
Menuet Zemledeltsu Farmer's Minuet
1974 Pritchi Grafa Diffuzora Parables of Count Diffusor
1976 S Toy Storony Zerkalnogo Stekla From The Other Side of Mirror Glass
1978 Vse Bratya – Syostry All Brothers are Sisters
Studio albums
1981 Sinii Albom The Blue Album
Treugolnik Triangle
Elektrichestvo Electricity: History of Aquarium, Vol. 2
1982 Akustika Acoustics: History of Aquarium, Vol. 1
Tabu Taboo
1983 Radio Africa
1984 Ikhtiologia Ichthyology
Den’ Serebra The Day of Silver
1986 Deti Dekabrya December's Children
1986 Desyat’ Strel Ten Arrows
1987 Ravnodenstvie Equinox
1987 Feodalizm Feudalism
1992 Russkii Albom Russian Album Released as BG-Band
1993 Lyubimie Pesni Ramzesa IV Favorite Songs of Rameses the IV
1994 Kostroma Mon Amour Kostroma my Love
Peski Peterburga Sands of Petersburg
1995 Navigator Navigator
1996 Snezhnii Lev Snow Lion
1997 Hyperborea Hyperborea
Lilit Lilith (US: Black Moon ) Released as BG and The Band
1999 Psi
2002 Sestra Haos Sister Chaos
2003 Pesni Ribaka Fisherman's Songs
2005 Zoom Zoom Zoom
2006 Bespechny Russkiy Brodyaga Careless Russian Rover
2008 Loshad' Belaya White Horse
2009 Pushkinskaya 10 Poushkine Street, 10
2011 Arkhangelsk Archangelsk
2013 Aquarium Plus Aquarium Plus
2020 Tor Thor
Live albums
1982 Arox & Shtyor
Desyat Let Ten Years
Electroshock Electric Shock
1993 Pis'ma Kapitana Voronina Letters of Captain Voronine
Vizit v Moskvu Visit to Moscow
1994 Akvarium na Taganke Aquarium at Taganka
1995 Tsentr Tsiklona Center of the Cyclone
1996 Sezon dlya Zmey Snake Season
Dvadtsat Let Spustya Twenty Years Later
1997 Akvarium-25, Istoriya Aquarium-25. The History
1998 Molitva i Post Prayer and Fasting
2008 The Royal Albert Hall
Songs performed by Aquarium Incognito
1994 Anna Karenina Quartet
1997 Russian-Abyssinian Orchestra “Bardo”
2000 Terrarium. "Pyatiugolnii Grekh" Terrarium. "Pentangular Sin"
Compilations
1986 Red Wave
2003 Russian Songwriter: A Collection from Boris Grebenshikov US release
2020 Aquarium in Dub Remix album feat. Lee "Scratch" Perry
2021 Dan' Tribute album to various Russian artists

Filmography

edit

Documentary films about Aquarium and Grebenshchikov

edit

Soundtracks by Aquarium

edit

Other

edit

In 1991, Dyusha Romanov appeared as on-screen narrator in Leningrad Television's Khraniteli, a two-part version of J. R. R. Tolkien's The Fellowship of the Ring. He also composed the film score, which Aquarium played.[10]

References

edit
  1. ^ Хромов, Алексей. "Рождённый в СССР: краткая история русского рока". DTF. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
  2. ^ "Русский рок: история и основные группы". Rock-history. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
  3. ^ Vera Ivanova and Mikhail Manykin (14 February 2007). "The legends of Russian Rock Music". Russia-InfoCentre. Guarant-InfoCentre. Retrieved 5 July 2012.
  4. ^ "Events: July 1972 (translated)". Archived from the original on 5 January 2012. Retrieved 4 October 2012.
  5. ^ "Events: July 1972 (translated)". Archived from the original on 1 February 2014. Retrieved 4 October 2012.
  6. ^ "Assa". Film. IMDb. Retrieved 5 October 2012.
  7. ^ Aquarium (2008). "Aquarium". Kroogi (in Russian and English). Kroogi. Archived from the original on 10 March 2011. Retrieved 5 July 2012.
  8. ^ "...ИВАНОВ (1981)". Kino-teatr.ru. 2019-09-19. Retrieved 2020-12-10.
  9. ^ Dva kapitana II at IMDb.
  10. ^ Roth, Andrew (5 April 2021). "Soviet TV version of Lord of the Rings rediscovered after 30 years". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
edit