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・ Oleksandr Akymenko
・ Oleksandr Aliyev
・ Oleksandr Andriyevskyi
・ Oleksandr Apaychev
・ Oleksandr Artemenko
・ Oleksandr Azatskyi
・ Oleksandr Babarynka
・ Oleksandr Babiy
・ Oleksandr Babych
・ Oleksandr Bagach
・ Oleksandr Bandura
・ Oleksandr Baranov
・ Oleksandr Batyschev
・ Oleksandr Berezhnoy
・ Oleksandr Bezimov
Oleksandr Bilash
・ Oleksandr Bilozerskyi
・ Oleksandr Bondar
・ Oleksandr Bondar (diver)
・ Oleksandr Bondarenko
・ Oleksandr Bondurianskyi
・ Oleksandr Borodai
・ Oleksandr Butko
・ Oleksandr Chernetskyi
・ Oleksandr Chervonyi
・ Oleksandr Chizhevskiy club
・ Oleksandr Chornomorets
・ Oleksandr Churilov
・ Oleksandr Chyzhevskyi
・ Oleksandr Chyzhov


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Oleksandr Bilash : ウィキペディア英語版
Oleksandr Bilash

Oleksandr Ivanovych Bilash (also spelt ''Olexandr Bilash'', ''Alexander Bilash'', (ウクライナ語:Олександр Іванович Білаш)) (March 6, 1931 – May 6, 2003) was a Ukrainian composer and the author of popular lyric songs, ballads, operas, operettas, oratorios and music for films. Laureate of the Taras Shevchenko State Award (1975), People's Artist of Ukraine (1977), People's Artist of the Soviet Union (1990). Hero of Ukraine (2001).
== Biography ==
Bilash was born on March 6, 1931 in the town of Hradyzk, Ukraine (now Hlobyne Raion of Poltava Oblast, Ukraine) to a family of skilled amateur musicians. His father, Ivan Panasovych Bilash, played balalaika and guitar; his mother, Yevdokiya Andriyivna, was a solo singer at rural gatherings.〔For biography see Oleksandr Bilash / I. Nemyrovych in References〕
After studying for a year in the Kiev music school for adults, Oleksandr traveled to the city of Zhytomyr where he entered the second year of the Viktor Kosenko Music School. In 1951, Bilash had successfully passed the entrance examinations for entry into the faculty of Composition of the Kiev State Conservatory (now The Tchaikovsky National Academy of Music). He studied composition with the outstanding Ukrainian composer and teaching professor Mykola Vilinsky. Oleksandr Bilash graduated from the Kiev State Conservatory in 1957.
From 1956–1961 Bilash worked as an Instructor of music theory at the Kiev Pedagogical Institute (Kiev Teachers Training Institute, now Borys Grinchenko Kyiv University). Already Bilash had emerged as a pre-eminent and prolific Ukrainian composer who had contributed immensely to variety of musical genres and styles. Many of his lyric songs became very popular in Ukraine. His lyric songs have become a part of the 'golden fund' of Ukrainian national culture and many of them are often perceived as traditional folk songs.〔See Olexandr Bilash. Dva kol'ory. (Two Colors) in References〕 He composed the opera "Haydamaky" (1965), "The Ballad of War" ( 1971 ), "The Grooms" (1985), operetta "The Legend of Kiev", "The Bells of Russia". Bilash cpposed the soundtrack to numerous movies. One of them - "Roman and Francesca" (1960)〔See Oleksandr Bilash in the Internet Movie Database in References〕 with the celebrated lyric songs by Bilash was the first Soviet film (musical) where love between a Soviet sailor and a foreign girl was not criminalized. At the time of Chernobyl nuclear accident in April 1986, the popular lyric song "Dva kolyory" (Two colors) composed by Oleksandr Bilash sounded like a revelation.〔(Lubov' i Pechal'(Love and Grief) )〕
From 1976-1994 Bilash served as the Chairman of the Kiev branch of the Union of Composers of Ukraine. Oleksandr Bilash was one of the most highly regarded Ukrainian composers and his creative output was highly praised. Among others, Bilash received the State Taras Shevchenko Award (1975), titles of People's Artist of Ukraine (1977) and People's Artist of the Soviet Union (1990). In March 2001, the honorable title of the Hero of Ukraine (the highest State degree of recognition in Ukraine) was bestowed upon him for his 'outstanding personal contribution to the enrichment of the spiritual treasures of the Ukrainian people and many years of fruitful creative activity' (March 6, 2001).〔(Oleksandr Bilash, Hero of Ukraine, 'Who is Who' in Ukraine )〕
His wife was famous Ukrainian singer Larysa Ostapenko-Bilash (1935–2010) with whom he had two daughters Lesya and Oksana.
Oleksandr Bilash died on May 6, 2003 in Kiev. He was buried at the Baikove Cemetery in Kiev, the burial place of the Ukrainian elite.〔(Oleksandr Bilash tomb, Baikove Cemetery )〕

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