Denis Maidanov

Russian musician and politician (born 1976)
Денис Майдaнов
Maidanov in 2017
Member of the State Duma for Moscow Oblast
Incumbent
Assumed office
12 October 2021Preceded byOksana PushkinaConstituencyOdintsovo (No. 122) Personal detailsBorn (1976-02-17) 17 February 1976 (age 48)
Balakovo, Saratov Oblast, Russian SFSR, USSRPolitical partyUnited RussiaSpouseNatalya KolesnikovaChildren2EducationMoscow State Art and Cultural UniversityOccupationMusicianAwards
WebsiteMusical act
Political office

Denis Vasilyevich Maidanov (Russian: Денис Васильевич Майдaнов, born 17 February 1976) is a Russian singer, songwriter, actor, and politician. An accomplished artist known throughout Russia, Maidanov also serves in the Russian State Duma as a representative of the Odintsovo constituency of Odintsovsky District, Moscow Oblast since 2021. He is a member of United Russia. Maidanov's accolades as an artist include the title of Merited Artist of the Russian Federation, as well as the Golden Gramophone, song of the year, and chanson of the year.[1][2] In his political career, Maidanov has vocally supported the policies of Vladimir Putin, and supported the invasion of Ukraine.[3] In 2022 he was sanctioned by the European Union.[4]

Early life and education

Maidanov performing with a military band in a concert for members of the Main Military Medical Directorate on Medical Worker Day in 2018.

Denis Maidanov was born on February 17, 1976, in the city of Balakovo, Saratov Region, to a family of petrochemical workers. His father was born in the Mogilev Region of Belarus, but moved to Balakovo in the Saratov oblast of southwest Russia to work as an engineer in the state petrochemical industry.[5] Maidanov's mother, Evgenia Petrovna,[6] was born in the suburbs of Luhansk, in the Donbas region of Ukraine;[5] when she moved to Balakavo at the age of 20[7] she worked as an inspector in Saratovgasstroy, later as head of the personnel department in Zhilstroy.[8] When Denis was eight, his parents divorced, leaving Denis to be raised by his single mother. At an early age he was forced to work to provide for the two of them: when he was 13 years old he worked as a janitor, security guard in a kindergarten, and washed cars.[9][6]

By the time of his parents divorce at the age of eight, Maidanov had already begun composing poetry: he wrote his first poems to his mother for International Women's Day.[6] At 13, he learned to play guitar from a neighbor. At that point, he stopped playing the bayan, which he had studied at music school, and began to write his own songs. Alongside the guitar lessons, Maidanov taught himself the piano,[6] and began to get involved in the poetic and theatrical circles of the Balakovo House of Culture, taking part in the vocal-instrumental ensemble.[8] In 1992, at the age of 16, he earned third place at a city competition of variety art with a performance of his own song.[10] As a result, Maidanov secured a spot among the young performers of the studio "MUZ-A" at the city's House of Creativity, and learned to become a songwriter for soloists. Since then he has maintained his affiliation with the House of Creativity, as head of the VIA, methodologist, and head of the "Club of High School Students".[8] In school Denis was successful,[8] but after his ninth year he was forced to drop out and enter a chemical technical college in order to provide for himself and his mother.[9][8]

While studying at the technical school, the future artist decided to enter the Moscow State Art and Cultural University (MGUKI); he studied at the evening school in parallel with the technical school with the intention to receive a certificate a year earlier before the official deadline. In 1995, when he succeeded, Denis entered the correspondence department of MGUKI in the specialty "Manager-director of show programs"; At admission he had significant competition – 72 people for 6 seats.[8] In MGUKI he studied directing and acting.[11] In parallel to his studies Maidanov worked; first at a car-wash, then his mother managed to arrange him a job as a repairman-fitter at the Syzran oil refinery. Despite the good salary, Denis left the factory after a year of work, realizing that this is not his profession.[8] Also during this period he directed the VIA and theater studio in the Balakovo House of Creativity;[8] There was a recording studio which Denis used to record his first songs and for subsequently selling them to local Volga musicians.[8][9] He graduated from MGUKI in 1999, afterward becoming director of the musical theater and the head of the music department of the House of Creativity.[12][13]

Musical career

Vladimir Putin bestowing the title Meritorious Artist of the Russian Federation on Maidanov in 2017

In 2001, Maidanov moved from Balakovo to Moscow, working as a composer-songwriter for other Russian performers. In his first two years living in Moscow, Maidanov had little stable earnings or housing, moving more than 15 times, and couch surfing with friends from college, sometimes sleeping at railway and metro stations.[8][6] His first significant earnings (US$150) came from producer Yuri Aizenshpis for writing the lyrics to the song "Behind the Fog" for singer Sasha Gradiva. The song became a hit, winning the "Song of the Year 2002" festival, and bringing Maidanov his first musical award.[6] Gradually Maidanov received recognition, and many Russian artists began singing his songs, in particular, Nikolai Baskov, Filipp Kirkorov, Turetsky Choir Art Group, Alexander Buinov, Mikhail Shufutinsky, Aleksandr Marshal, Lolita Milyavskaya, Jasmin, Joseph Kobzon, Tatiana Bulanova. He also wrote songs and soundtracks for a number of Russian films and serials.[11]

In 2008 Maidanov switched from songwriting to recording and performing his own songs. After being commissioned by the president of AvtoRadio Alexander Varin to write "This radio is Avtoradio", Varin invited Maidanov to put the song "Eternal Love" on the air, insisting that Maidanov should start his own performing career.[14] Within six months of debut, the track made the rotation of major Russian radio stations, and the song would go on to earn Maidanov the Golden Gramophone. "Eternal Love" was Maidanov's first hit, and remains among his most famous songs.[15][16] In June 2009, he released his first album "I'll Know That You Love Me ... Eternal Love", and soon after appeared on stage as a solo artist for the first time at the Moscow International House of Music.[6] Over the next decade he would go on to release albums "World for rent" (2011), "Flying over us" (2013), "Flag of my state" (2015), "Half a lifetime on the road: Unreleased" (2015), and "What will the wind leave" (2017).

In October 2013, Maidanov joined a group of Russian performers who participated – at the invitation of Defense Minister Sergey Shoygu – in the new performance of the National anthem of Russia. Along with Maidanov, Valeriya, Oleg Gazmanov, Larisa Dolina, Aleksandr Marshal, Jasmin, Alsou, Dina Garipova, Vitas and other artists took part in the recording[17]

In 2017, he was given the honorific Merited Artist of the Russian Federation.

On April 12, 2021, in honor of the 60th anniversary of Yuri Gagarin's flight to space, audioservice Sberzvuk and Roscosmos included tracks from Maidanov among a playlist of music sent to orbiting International Space Station cosmonauts Sergei Kud-Sverchkov and Oleg Novitsky, accompanied by a personal note from Maidanov and each of the other artists.[18]

May 1, 2022, Maidanov and other acts such as folk-rocker Pelageya performed at a Putin-backed concert.

Musical themes

Maidanov performing in Simferopol.

Many of Maidanov's songs feature Russian nationalist and irredentist themes, with several songs about the VDV, OMON, and Spetsnaz, and corresponding music videos which feature soldiers and equipment of the units performing tactical demonstrations.[19] He has performed on many occasions for Russian troops and national pride events, including at the Kremlin.[20] When asked whether the values he espouses in his music would carry over to his political career, Maidanov told Gazeta.Ru:

"many of my songs are of a patriotic and social nature, which is an important cultural contribution to the country's ideological agenda."[21]

In January and June 2016, Maidanov held concerts for Russian servicemen at Khmeimim Air Base in Syria.[22] In 2019 he performed on Lenin Square in Simferopol, at a concert in the Crimean city to commemorate the fifth anniversary of the Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation.[23] In the 2021 music video for the song Spetsnaz, Maidanov sings that "Spetsnaz operates from Moscow to New York", while surrounded by FSB officers and Russian soldiers.[24] His December 2022 release Sarmatushka celebrates the RS-28 Sarmat missile with the lyrics, "Its will is stronger than the Ural Mountains/It’ll scatter our enemies to dust in an instant/It’s ready to carry out the sentence/The U.S.’s air defense is no hindrance to it.” [25]

Political career

Maidanov was politically active prior to beginning his own political career, having been a member of the All-Russia Popular Front, a winner of the Russian FSB Prize [ru] and Prize of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation in the field of culture and art [ru], and a reported confidante of President Vladimir Putin. He is also Deputy Chairman of the Public Council within the Ministry of Culture, and a member of the Cultural Council of the Rosgvardia Russian Army ensemble.

State Duma

In March 2021, Maidanov announced his decision to run for the State Duma in the 122nd Odintsovo single-mandate district of the Moscow Oblast, as a member of the incumbent United Russia party.[26] After prevailing in the internal party primaries in May, he was officially registered as the party's candidate on July 29.[27] In the elections held September 17–19, 2021, he received a majority of votes - 40.39% (102,124 votes), ahead of Communist Party candidate Sergei Tenyaev (19.06%).[28]

On September 22, 2021, Maidanov attended the inauguration of Aleksey Dyumin, following his re-election for a second term as governor of Tula Oblast.[29]

Committees

Upon taking office Maidanov was assigned to the State Duma Committee on Culture as First Deputy Chairman of the committee.[30]

Legislation

In 2021, Maidanov proposed legislation to enshrine Father's Day as a holiday across the Russian Federation. Later in the year President Vladimir Putin took up the idea, announcing it would be celebrated on the third Sunday in October.[31] The legislation served to create a de jure day of celebration, though since the early days of the Soviet Union the traditional celebration of Defender of the Fatherland Day on February 23 had been treated as a de facto Father's Day, often referred to as "Man's Day." Separately, 28 of the Russian Republics had already adopted Father's Day as a regional holiday prior to the national legislation.[31]

In 2022 he voted in favor of recognizing the People's Republic of Donetsk and People's Republic of Luhansk as sovereign states, in violation of the Minsk Agreements.[32]

Political views

Putinism

Maidanov vocally supports the policies of Russian President Vladimir Putin, describing him as a "strong man and leader."[33] He reportedly became a close confidant of Putin during the Russian leader's 2018 presidential campaign.[34] In an interview in February 2018, he reiterated his support for Putin, describing him as a man who tore Russia out of the devastation of the 1990s and restored order, and saying he would put Putin "on par" with Peter the Great.[35]

In 2012, when Putin ran for a third presidential term, Maidanov participated in two political rallies in support. Three times, in 2013, 2015 and 2017, he spoke to the guests of the international professional combat sambo tournament "Plotform S-70", with Putin – a staple among the tournaments guests – in attendance.[36]

Just before the 2013 federal elections, Maidanov took part in a concert rally in support of Moscow mayoral candidate Sergey Sobyanin at the Sochi Olympic Park.[37]

Ukraine

2014 annexation

Prior to holding political office Maidanov supported Russian irridentist views on Ukraine, calling the 2014 annexation of Crimea the "trajectory of historical justice".[38] He took part in a number of public events in support of Russian policy in Crimea, including a public concert and rally in Moscow in March 2014, and a subsequent appearance in Sevastopol in July. In 2015, Maidanov held a public concert in Donetsk, repeating the event in 2016.[33]

In 2017 Maidanov was barred from entering Ukraine by the Ukrainian government.[39] Despite this, in 2019 he performed on Lenin Square in Simferopol, at a concert in the Crimean city to commemorate the fifth anniversary of the annexation.[23] In 2016, Maidanov served a member of the Eurovision jury from Russia, alongside Anastasia Stotskaya and Oscar Kuchera.[40] He condemned the refusal of the Ukrainian authorities to allow Russian representative Yulia Samoilova to enter the Eurovision Song Contest held in Kiev the following year.[40]

2022 invasion

In an editorial for RIA FAN the day before Russia began the invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Maidanov claimed that "everyone understands that this is primordially Russian land... ..everything up to the Dnieper". In it he also claimed the United States was "provoking Russia" in order to sell weapons to the Ukrainian government, which he predicted would soon collapse.[32]

In a second editorial with the Internet Research Agency released in the hours after the invasion, Maidanov closely echoed the Russian leader's late night televised declaration of war. He claimed the relationship Russia had with Ukraine in 2022 was analogous to when Nazi Germany attacked the Soviet Union in 1941, asserting that Russia was playing the role of the Soviets in the analogy. He echoed Putin's claim that the invasion was a peacekeeping operation for the "demilitarization" and "denazification" of the Jewish-led Ukrainian government, and spoke effusively of Putin's speech announcing the invasion and the speech two days prior recognizing Donetsk and Luhansk as "a kind of charter, a political bible for the future leaders of our state." Despite precipitating unprecedented sanctions and economic ruin, Maidanov called Putin's actions "the standard of how a president should think, how he should take care of his country."[3] In the week following the invasion Maidanov told local outlet Odin.ru that the invasion was necessary to end the "genocide of the people who opposed the [euro]maidan."[41]

When asked about domestic opposition to the war he claimed there was no room for peace activism, saying "to be both a pacifist and a patriot is now simply impossible!"[42] He also told Russia-24 he supports efforts to block access to Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, and increase controls on VKontakte and Odnoklassniki "for the duration of the special operation" in order to "control misinformation."

In late February 2022, Maidanov was sanctioned by the European Union, part of a comprehensive travel ban and foreign asset seizure package implemented against members of the State Duma who voted to recognize the Ukrainian regions of Donetsk and Luhansk as independent republics in violation of the Minsk agreements, and authorize Russian military intervention.[4][43]

On March 26, 2022, Maidanov and Roman Razum, leader of the ensemble of the 2nd Army Corps of the Luhansk People's Republic released a collaboration called "Victory is ours" in support of the Russian attack on Ukraine.[44] In April and May 2022, Maidanov participated in a series of concerts organized in order to support the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[45]

Personal life

Maidanov is married to Natalya Maidanova (née Kolesnikova). Born in Tashkent, Uzbek SSR in 1981,[46] she has acted in his music videos on occasion, and serves as his creative director. The two met when Natalya went to support her friend in an audition for Fabrika Zvyozd ("Star Factory"), an influential televised talent competition which Maidanov was attending.[47] Together they have two children, Vlada, born in 2008, and Borislav, born in 2013.[20][48] In 2022, Maidanov began performing with 13 year old Vlada, whom he says wants to "continue the musical dynasty", predicting she would begin an independent career at age 15.[49]

Discography

  • I will know, that you love me... Eternal love (Я буду знать, что ты любишь меня… Вечная любовь) (2009)
  • World for rent (Арендованный мир) (2011)
  • Flying over us... (Пролетая над нами…) (2014)
  • Flag of my nation (Флаг моего государства) (2015)
  • Half of life on the road... Unpublished (Полжизни в пути… Неизданное) (2015)
  • What wind leaves (Что оставит ветер) (2017)

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Denis Maydanov.
  • Official music website
  • Official State Duma website

References

  1. ^ Указ Президента Российской Федерации от 13.02.2017 № 59 «О награждении государственными наградами Российской Федерации»
  2. ^ "Денис Майданов". Russkoe Radio. Archived from the original on 2017-08-31. Retrieved 2017-09-09.
  3. ^ a b Maidanov, Denis (February 24, 2022). "Депутат Госдумы Майданов об Украине: "Мы обозначили красные линии для НАТО, но нас не услышали"" [State Duma Deputy Maidanov on Ukraine: “We have drawn red lines for NATO, but we were not heard”]. RIA FAN (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-02-25.
  4. ^ a b "Под санкциями: депутатам Госдумы РФ от Саратова и Пензы запрещен въезд в Евросоюз. Но не всем — Володин не голосовал" [Under sanctions: Russian State Duma deputies from Saratov and Penza are banned from entering the European Union. But not all - Volodin did not vote]. Бизнес-вектор (in Russian). February 24, 2022. Retrieved 2022-02-25.
  5. ^ a b У Майданова возникли проблемы из-за Майдана - InterMedia.ru
  6. ^ a b c d e f g "Денис Майданов: "С хорошим настроением легче жить!" (интервью студентки отделения журналистики ЧувГУ Светланы Морозовой)". Archived from the original on 2017-08-31. Retrieved 2017-09-09.
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  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Денис Майданов: «Я был никто и звали меня никак» — 7Дней.ru
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  10. ^ "Автор и исполнитель Денис Майданов: "Работаю, пока не упаду"". Argumenty i Fakty. 23 April 2016.
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  15. ^ Денис Майданов: Мы с Москвой долго мучили друг друга — Собеседник
  16. ^ «Вечная любовь» Дениса Майданова - Аргументы и Факты
  17. ^ Звёзды спели новый гимн России — Starhit, ru
  18. ^ Arnoldova, Elena (April 12, 2021). "Sberzvuk and Roscosmos sent holiday playlists to astronauts". Gazeta.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2021-04-30. Retrieved 2021-12-09.
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  24. ^ Денис Майданов - Спецназ, retrieved 2021-07-22
  25. ^ "The RS-28 Sarmat Annihilates America in New Russian Military Song". VeteranLife | Welcome Home. 2022-12-28. Retrieved 2023-06-25.
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  27. ^ "Денис Майданов подал документы для участия в выборах в Госдуму". bezformata.com. July 16, 2021. Archived from the original on 2021-09-15. Retrieved 2021-10-10.
  28. ^ "Сведения о проводящихся выборах и референдумах". www.moscow-reg.vybory.izbirkom.ru. Archived from the original on 2021-10-10. Retrieved 2021-10-10.
  29. ^ "Певец Денис Майданов: "Я часто бываю в Туле и вижу, как преобразился город"". ИА «Тульская пресса» (in Russian). September 22, 2021. Archived from the original on 2021-10-10. Retrieved 2021-10-10.
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  31. ^ a b Akimov, Ivan (August 30, 2021). "Terrorist attacks in Kabul and other events of the week: what telegram channels write". Gazeta.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2021-08-30. Retrieved 2021-12-09.
  32. ^ a b Maidanov, Denis (February 18, 2022). "Депутат Госдумы Майданов о ситуации в Донбассе: "Украина стала для Запада разменной монетой"" [State Duma deputy Maidanov on the situation in Donbass: “Ukraine has become a bargaining chip for the West”]. RIA FAN (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-02-22.
  33. ^ a b "Maidanov performs in Donetsk".
  34. ^ "ЦИК зарегистрировал 259 доверенных лиц Путина на выборах президента". ТАСС. Retrieved 2021-10-10.
  35. ^ "Майданов рассказал, как спас день рождения Путина". PITER TV (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-10-10.
  36. ^ "VIII международный турнир по профессиональному боевому самбо "ПЛОТФОРМА S-70" состоится 8 августа в Сочи | S-70" (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-10-10.
  37. ^ "Митинг-концерт в поддержку кандидата в мэры Москвы Сергея Собянина прошел в спорткомплексе "Олимпийский"". TASS. Archived from the original on 2017-08-31. Retrieved 2021-10-10.
  38. ^ "Денис Майданов: Если бы я опасался санкций, я бы не поехал в Крым". РИА Новости Крым (in Russian). August 22, 2018. Archived from the original on 2021-08-11. Retrieved 2021-10-10.
  39. ^ Шаблинская, Ольга (2017-06-02). ""За "Бульбу" ответишь". Украина расширяет список "запрещённых" артистов". aif.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-10-10.
  40. ^ a b "Майданов предложил отправить на "Евровидение" Шнура" [Denis Maidanov suggested sending Leningrad to Eurovision. “They will explain everything popularly”]. ura.news (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2017-05-09. Retrieved 2021-10-10.
  41. ^ Maidanov, Denis (March 2, 2022). "Денис Майданов: Донбасс для меня — часть моей личной истории" [Denis Maidanov: Donbass is a part of my personal history for me]. Одинцовский Городской Округ (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-03-03.
  42. ^ Maidanov, Denis (March 1, 2022). "Пригожин и Майданов высказались по ситуации на Украине" [Denis Maidanov: “To be both a pacifist and a patriot is now simply impossible”]. Moskovskij Komsomolets (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-03-03.
  43. ^ Emmott, Robin (2022-02-22). "EU to sanction Russian individuals and entities over Ukraine". Reuters. Retrieved 2022-02-22.
  44. ^ Lazarev, Valentin (March 30, 2022). "Депутат Денис Майданов призвал обогатить российскую культуру конкурсом "Этновидение"" [Deputy Denis Maidanov called for enriching Russian culture with the Ethnovision competition]. Ridus (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-04-01.
  45. ^ "Гастроли патриотов. Как кремлевские эксперты и шоу-бизнес зарабатывают на концертах "Za Россию"". BBC (in Russian). 11 May 2022.
  46. ^ "Наташа Майданова | OK". OK.RU. Retrieved 2021-10-10.
  47. ^ "Биография Натальи Майдановой". Сборник ответов на ваши вопросы онлайн - 1-vopros.ru. Retrieved 2021-10-10.
  48. ^ "Denise Maydanov acted with the wife in a bed scene in the new clip "It Is Doomed to Love"". news.myseldon.com. Retrieved 2021-07-22.
  49. ^ Petrova, Irina (February 17, 2022). "Денис Майданов объяснил, почему решил 23 февраля выступить на сцене вместе с 13-летней дочерью" [Denis Maidanov explained why he decided to perform on stage on February 23 with his 13-year-old daughter]. RIA FAN (in Russian). Retrieved 2022-02-22.
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