Valeriya

Valeriya
Валерия
Валерия на Детской Новой волне 2016.jpg
Valeriya on stage the Youth New Wave Festival, 2016
Born
Alla Yurievna Perfilova

(1968-04-17) April 17, 1968 (age 51)
ResidenceMoscow, Russia
Alma materGnessin State Musical College
Occupation
  • Singer
  • Photomodel
Years active1992–present
TitlePeople's Artist of Russia (2013)
Musical career
GenresPop
Instruments
Associated acts
Website

Valeriya (Russian: Валерия) is a stage name of Alla Yurievna Perfilova (Russian: Алла Юрьевна Перфилова, born April 17, 1968 in Atkarsk), a Russian singer and fashion model,[1] Valeriya, who is a recipient of the titles People's Artist of Russia (2013) and People's Artist of the Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic (2016), has also won numerous prestigious awards, including Golden Gramophone (thirteen), Pesnya goda (thirteen), Muz-TV (four: Best Performer in 2004, 2010 and 2015, Best Video, 2014), and MTV Russia Music Awards (two, Best Performer, 2004, Best Song, 2005). She has been a member of the Council for Culture and Art under the President of the Russian Federation since 2012.

Biography

Valeriya was born on April 17, 1968 in a small town of Atkarsk in the Saratov Oblast, into a family of classically trained musicians. She studied piano at the only musical school in the town where her father Yuri Ivanovich was a director and her mother Galina Nikolaevna was a teacher. Since her early childhood Valeriya knew that she wanted to be a singer.

Career

In 1985 Valeriya enrolled in the Gnessin State Musical College in Moscow which she graduated 1990. Among her teachers there were professor Iosif Kobzon and Gelena Velikanova.

In 1989 Valeriya recorded two albums. Her first English-language disc, The Taiga Symphony came out in 1991 via Shulgin Records.[2] Pobud' so mnoi (Stay with me), a collection of traditional Russian romances, was released by Lad Records a year later.[3] In 1992 she won the first prize in a national TV contest Morning Star. Also that year she won the international contest Bratislavskaya Lira and received an Audience Choice Award at Yurmala-92.

At the Ritz-Carlton Top Beauty Awards 2010

In December 1995 she released the single "Moya Moskva" (My Moscow), followed a year later by the full-length, Anna. The album, all songs of which had been written by her then husband and manager Alexandr Shulgin, provided a breakthrough for the singer. Later that year she started teaching at the Gnesin Academy of Music herself.

In 1997 Valeriya released the album Familia. Chast 1 (Family name. Part 1), followed by Glaza Tsveta Neba (Eyes the Colour of Heaven, 2001) but the conflict with Shulgin led to her unexpected retirement from the stage. In April, 2003 the contract between the singer and her manager was legally terminated.

The same month she signed a contract with Iosif Prigozhin and his company NOX Music. On 8 October 2003 she released the album Strana Lyubvi (Loveland), which sold better then all her previous albums put together. In 2004 Valeriya received the Best Female Artiste awards from the two main national music channels, Muz-TV and MTV Russia. Among her accolades are numerous Golden Grammophone and an MTV RMA awards.

In 2005 Valeriya was awarded the Honoured Artiste of Russia title and ranked 9th in the Forbes magazine list of 50 most highly paid people in movie, sport, literature and music industry. At that time she founded De Leri, the jewelry and perfume lines of her own. Her 2006 autobiography Life, Tears and Love for the first time revealed the shocking details of her marriage with Shulgin.

In April 2006 Valeriya released the album Nezhnost moya (My Tenderness) which was followed by an international tour which was concluded with a sold-out show at the Olimpisky Stadium in November.

Valeriya's 2007 album Out Of Control (recorded in two versions, English and Russian) featured collaborations with several well-known producers and musicians, including Ray St. John, David Richards and Chantal Kreviazuk. One of the tracks, a cover version of the Bee Gees's "Stayin' Alive" was recorded with Robin Gibb.

Valeriya 2016.jpg

Valeriya was a member of a jury in the Russian version of the TV show X-Factor and has been invited as a judge to the International contest for young performers New Wave in Jurmala. In January 2009 Valeriya took part in Midem 2009 Rusia! Time for Partnership! day, co-organized with trade publication Billboard Russian Federation. She gave a show at The Midem Opening Night Party Russia at "Palais des Festivales" in Cannes.

In March 2009 Valeriya was invited to join as a special guest Simply Red's "The Greatest Hits" Tour in the UK. She also took part in the Russian National Final for Eurovision 2009 with the song "Back to Love" and later finished second behind "Mamo" by Anastasia Prikhodko. In 2010, Valeriya joined forces with Avon as a celebrity judge for Avon Voices,[4] Avon's first ever global, online singing talent search for women and songwriting competition for men and women.

Valeria's 2013 studio album Po serpantinu featured four duets (with Valery Meladze, Nikolai Baskov, Alexander Buynov and, notably, Goran Bregovich, one of her all-time favourite artists). Most of the reviews, though, centered on the Russian chanson-tinged title track and "I Will Be Waiting for You", the latter included into the comedy Polar Flight soundtrack.[5] It was followed by the Best Of compilation Eto vremya lyubvi (This Is the Time of Love), which included "Ty moya" (You Are Mine), the duet with her daughter Anna Shulgina.[6]

Valeriya's 2016 studio album Okeany served well to "prove the singer's intention to remain a 'a healthy man's perfect female singer'," but her "'formula of happiness' here is here being pronounced with the strictness of a harsh pedagogue," according to critic Alexey Mazhayev.[7] The material for her 2017 studio album K solntsu (Towards the Sun) has been provided by the team of young, unknown songwriters, including Cyrill Yermakov from Belarus, "but if the idea was to bring in the feeling of freshness, it succeeded only in fragments," according to Mazhayev.[8] Highly successful though proved to be the singles "Minor Infarctions" and "The Heart Is Broken". The video for the latter gathered 112 million views on the YouTube in the first week.[9]

Activism

In 2008 Valeriya became a goodwill envoy for the Russian Federation on behalf of the International Organization for Migration (IOM), an agency she has teamed up with for the past year to combat human trafficking. Valeriya's anti-trafficking clips has appeared on Russian television.

Public activities and statements of the singer have triggered and still trigger mixed, at times even strident response in the neighbouring (to Russia) countries.[10][11][12][13][14]

Personal life

Valeriya has been married three times. Her first husband was Leonid Yaroshevsky, her second husband was Alexandr Shulgin. She is currently married to Iosif Prigozhin. Valeriya has three children: Anna, Artemy and Arseny, whose father is her second husband.

Discography

Studio Albums

  • 1992 — Pobud' so Mnoi (Stay With Me)
  • 1992 — The Taiga Symphony
  • 1995 — Anna
  • 1997 — Familia. Chast' 1 (Family Name. Part 1)
  • 2000 — Perviy Internet Albom (First Internet Album)
  • 2001 — Glaza Tsveta Neba (Eyes the Colour Of Heaven)
  • 2003 — Strana Lyubvi (Loveland)
  • 2006 — Nezhnost' Moya (My Tenderness)
  • 2008 — Nepodkontrolno (Out Of Control, also the title of this album's English version)
  • 2010 — Vo Mne Moya Lubov' (My Love Inside Me)
  • 2013 — Po serpantinu (Upon the Serpentine)
  • 2016 — Okeany (Oceans)
  • 2017 — K Solntsu (Towards the Sun)

Compilation Albums

  • 1999 — Samoye Luchsheye (The Very Best)
  • 2010 — Pesni, Kotorye Vy Polyubili (The Songs You've Come to Love)

Singles

Books

  • 2006 — Tears and Love (autobiography, Azbuka-klassika, ISBN 5-91181-135-9)
  • 2010 — Yoga with Valeriya (self-help, Eksmo, ISBN 978-5-699-49341-8)

Awards

State awards

Valeriya receives the Order of Friendship from President Putin in Kremlin on 27 November 2018

Music awards

  • 1992 — Morning Star TV contest, winner
  • 1992 — International contest Bratislavskaya Lira, winner
  • 1992 — Jurmala-92, Audience Choice Award
  • 1993 — Russian Union of Journalists, Person of the Year
  • 1994 — Song of the Year TV Festival, laureate, with "Business as Usual"
  • 1995 — Song of the Year TV Festival, laureate, with "Airplane"
  • 2000 — Hit-FM Award, "Metelitsa"
  • 2000 — Song of the Year TV Festival, laureate, "Riga-Moscow"
  • 2000 — Golden Gramophone national prize for "Riga-Moscow"
  • 2001 — Alexander Popov Professional National Prize, Radio Favorite of the Year
  • 2001 — Record- 2001, "Riga-Moscow"
  • 2001 — Song of the Year TV Festival, laureate with "I Am Melting". Also: Klavdiya Shulzhenko Prize, Singer of the Year
  • 2003 — 7 Days magazine Awards, Best Female Act, Best Looking Female Act[21]
  • 2003 — Golden Gramophone, for "Chasiki" (Small Watch), Song of the Year
  • 2003 — Song of the Year TV Festival, with "Chasiki"
  • 2003 — Business People 2003 contest, laureate
  • 2004 — Muz-TV Awards 2004, Best Female Act[22]
  • 2004 — MTV Russia Music Awards 2004, Best Female Act[23]
  • 2004 — Record 2004, Radio Hit of the Year, "Chasiki"
  • 2004 — Golden Gramophone, "Black and White"
  • 2005 — MTV Russia Music Awards, Best Duet, "You Are Sad", with Stas Piekha [24]
  • 2005 — Golden Gramophone, for "You Are Sad"
  • 2006 — "Golden Gramophone", Brilliant voice of Russia, for "My Tenderness"
  • 2007 — Record 2007, Radio Hit of the Year, for "My Tenderness"
  • 2007 — Song of the Year TV Festival, laureate, with "We Are Together"
  • 2007 — Golden Gramophone for "We Are Together"
  • 2007 — Olympia Prize (from the Russian Association of Businesswomen)
  • 2008 — Golden Gramophone for "The Rain Man"
  • 2008 — The Ovation Award, the Best Vocalist
  • 2008 — ZD Awards, Best Artist, Best Video
  • 2008 — Olympia Prize, from the Russian Association of Businesswomen
  • 2008 — Song of the Year TV Festival, laureate, with "The Rain Man"
  • 2009 — ZD Awards, Best Female Act, Best Video
  • 2009 — Golden Gramophone for "Nobody Like You"
  • 2009 — Song of the Year TV Festival, Klavdia Shulzhenko Prize, Singer of the Year
  • 2010 — Muz-TV Awards 2010, Best Female Act[25]
  • 2010 — ZD Awards, Best Artist
  • 2011 — Golden Gramophone for "Bird of the Parting"
  • 2011 — Song of the Year TV Festival, Best Duet, "Keeping the Love", with Nikolai Baskov
  • 2012 — Song of the Year TV Festival, "I've Let You Go", with Igor Krutoi
  • 2012 — Stars of the Road Radio, laureate
  • 2012 — RU.TV, Best Duet, "Keeping the Love", with Nikolai Baskov
  • 2013 — Song of the Year TV Festival, for "Do Not Lose Me", with Valery Meladze
  • 2014 — Muz-TV Awards 2014, Best Video for "Do Not Lose Me", with Valery Meladze[26]
  • 2014 — Golden Gramophone for "We Are Afraid to Love"
  • 2014 — Song of the Year TV Festival, with "Time to Love"
  • 2014 — Stars of the Road Radio, laureate
  • 2015 — Muz-TV Awards 2015, Best Artist of the decade[27]
  • 2015 —Muz-TV Awards 2015, Best Duet, for "You Are Mine" with Anna Shulgina
  • 2015 — MUSICBOX-2015, Best Duet, for "You Are Mine" with Anna Shulgina
  • 2015 — First Russian National Music Prize, for "I've Let You Go"
  • 2015 — Golden Gramophone Jubilee, for "Riga-Moscow"
  • 2015 — RU.TV, Best Dance Track for "This Is the Time of Love"
  • 2015 — Song of the Year TV Festival, laureate, with "The Formula of Happiness"
  • 2016 — Stars of the Road Radio, laureate
  • 2016 — Song of the Year TV Festival, laureate, with "Oceans"
  • 2016 — Fashion Summer Awards, the Stylish Female Act
  • 2016 — Fashion People Awards, Artist of the Year
  • 2016 — MUSICBOX-2017, Best Duet, "Love Is Not for Sale", with Kristina Orbakaitė
  • 2016 — Chanson of the Year, for "He and She", with Alexey Glyzin
  • 2018 — Zhara Music Award, Collaboration of the Year, "Chasiki" with Egor Kreed

References

  1. ^ "Valeriya: Russia's greatest export (after gas and oil)". The Independent. 28 June 2008. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  2. ^ The Taiga Symphony at discogs.com
  3. ^ Побудь Со Мной at discogs.com
  4. ^ http://www.avonvoices.com Archived 2011-03-11 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ По серпантину. Album review. newsmuz.com
  6. ^ Это время любви. Album review.
  7. ^ Океаны. Album review. www.intermedia.ru
  8. ^ К Солнцу. Album review. www.intermedia.ru
  9. ^ Певица Валерия представила новую песню "Сердце разорвано". miamusic.ru
  10. ^ "Russian Pop Stars Banned From Entering Latvia Over Ukraine Crisis". themoscowtimes.com. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  11. ^ "Gazmanov, Kobzon ?i Valeria, interzi?i in Letonia". Unimedia.info. Retrieved 2014-07-26.
  12. ^ "(LETONIA) Kobzon, Gazmanov ?i Valeria sunt apologe?i ai imperialismului ?i agresiunii ruse | Ultima ora". Timpul.md. Retrieved 2014-07-26.
  13. ^ "Латвія заборонила в'їзд Кобзону та Валерії - BBC Ukrainian - Новини стисло". Bbc.co.uk. 1970-01-01. Retrieved 2014-07-26.
  14. ^ BC, Riga, 21.07.2014.Print version (2014-07-21). "Foreign Minister blacklists Russian singers Gazmanov, Kobzon and Valeriya :: The Baltic Course | Baltic States news & analytics". The Baltic Course. Retrieved 2014-07-26.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ "Валерия — биография". to-name.ru. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  16. ^ "Awarded the Russian President's Decree № 1241 on October 25th, 2005". Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  17. ^ Указ Президента Российской Федерации от 8 апреля 2013 года № 340 «О присвоении почётного звания „Народный артист Российской Федерации“» Archived 2015-07-22 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ "Путин присвоил Валерии звание народной артистки РФ". Mail Кино. 9 April 2013. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  19. ^ Указ Президента Российской Федерации № 464 от 11 июля 2018 года «О награждении государственными наградами Российской Федерации»
  20. ^ Вручение государственных наград 27 ноября 2018 года. Пресс-служба Президента России. Новости, 27.11.2018.
  21. ^ Валерия: «Быть красивой легко, если не лениться». 7Дней.ру. 25 November 2014. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  22. ^ "4 июня 2004 - Премия МУЗ-ТВ официальный сайт". premia.muz-tv.ru. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  23. ^ MTV Russia Music Awards 2004
  24. ^ MTV Russia Music Awards 2005
  25. ^ "11 июня 2010 - Премия МУЗ-ТВ официальный сайт". premia.muz-tv.ru. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  26. ^ Muz-TV Awards 2014
  27. ^ Muz-TV Awards 2015

External links


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