On August 13, music fans in Bulgaria mark the 100th anniversary of the birth of Lea Ivanova - one of the first female jazz performers in Bulgaria. She was born in 1923 in Dupnitsa but grew up in Tsarigrad (Istanbul), where her singing talent manifested itself in the children's choir of the Bulgarian Exarchate. She arrived in Sofia in the 1940s, when she joined various jazz and swing formations.
Repressed by the communist regime because of the so called "decadent Western music" she performed, the singer was more appreciated abroad, where she managed to perform actively in the 1960s - in Romania, Hungary, then Yugoslavia and East Germany, and later - in the USA, Canada, South America, etc.
With her charismatic personality and captivating stage presence, Lea Ivanova remains one of the biggest legends of Bulgarian music.
Often described as “the Bulgarian Verdi” or “the Bulgarian Puccini,” composer Parashkev Hadjiev (1912–1992) has long been recognised as a central figure in Bulgaria’s operatic tradition. The country’s most prolific creator of musical-stage works, he left..
Admirers of schlager music and expressive stage presence are certainly looking forward to the pre-Christmas meeting with Veselin Marinov. It has already been a long-standing tradition for the singer to have a concert in the National..
Photos: ubc-bg.com, архив, Facebook/ Filmotechno podcast Discover more Bulgarian music in Radio Bulgaria's series "Highlights of Bulgarian musical culture": Highlights of Bulgarian musical culture: ''Barefoot times'' -..
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