Sunday, March 23, 2014

MARŠ NA DRINU /MARCH ON THE DRINA /DRINA MARSCH




 
MARŠ NA DRINU /MARCH ON THE DRINA /DRINA MARSCH


“March on the Drina”

The March on the Drina (Serbian Cyrillic: Марш на Дрину, Serbian Latin: Marš Na Drinu) is a Serbian patriotic march which was composed by Stanislav Binički during World War I. 
 Binički dedicated it to his favourite commander in the Serbian Army, who had been killed during the Battle of Cer. The song experienced widespread popularity during and after the war and came to be seen by Serbs as a symbol of resistance to the Great Powers. Following World War II, it was prohibited in Communist Yugoslavia. Nevertheless, it was played at the presentation ceremony for the Nobel Prize in Literature when Yugoslav writer Ivo Andrić was named a Nobel laureate in 1961.

The lyrics to the song were written many decades after Binički composed it, by poet and journalist Miloje Popović, in 1964 to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Battle of Cer. English lyrics were added in 1964 by American songwriter Vaughn Horton for a recording by Patti Page under the title Drina (Little Soldier Boy). German lyrics were added by Walter Rothenburg in 1974 and Bert Olden in 1976. Milutin Popović Zahar added Serbian lyrics to a version entitled "Svirajte Mi Mars na Drinu" in 1989. An eponymous 1964 Yugoslav film was made by the Avala Film studio in Belgrade that featured the march in a historical dramatization of the 1914 Battle of Cer.  

 


The composition became an international hit and a staple of world music after Danish guitarist Jørgen Ingmann had a number one hit on the Danish pop singles chart in 1963 in a version arranged for solo electric guitar on the Swedish Metronome Records label. His recording was also released in West Germany, where it reached #5, in the UK, in France, and in the U.S. on ATCO Records, 6277. Patti Page, The Shadows, Chet Atkins, Frankie Yankovic, Horst Wende, and James Last also recorded the song.



Popular international versions:


  *  Jørgen Ingmann - "Marchen Til Drina" as a Metronome 45 single, B 1575, Denmark, 1963. Charts: #1, Denmark; #5, Germany  
  *  The Shadows - "March to Drina" on the EMI Records album Shadow Music (1966)

   * Patti Page - "Drina (Little Soldier Boy)" released as a Columbia 45 A side single, 43078, US; EP in Portugal, CBS 6195, 1964. English lyrics were written by American songwriter Vaughn Horton.

   * Chet Atkins - "Drina" on the RCA Victor album From Nashville With Love, 1966

   * James Last - on the Polydor LP Trumpet A Go Go, Vol. 3, Germany, 1968; James Last recorded the song in 1988 with Dutch flutist Berdien Stenberg, Flute Fiesta LP, Polydor 837 116-1

  *  The Nashville String Band featuring Chet Atkins and Homer and Jethro - "Drina" on the eponymous RCA Victor album, 1969

   * Frankie Yankovic - "Drina (Little Soldier Boy)" on the CBS LP Saturday Night Polka Party, 1967

   * Radomir Mihailović Točak - "Marš..." on the EP "Marš..." / "...na Drinu" (PGP RTB 1984), Yugoslavia

   * Laibach - "Mars on River Drina" on the album NATO (1994), Slovenia, released on the Mute label, based in London

   * The Jokers - "Drina" as a Discostar and Brunswick 45 single, Belgium, 1963

  *  The Spotnicks - "Drina" as a 45 single on Swedisc and W & G, Sweden; on CNR in Holland as "Drina Mars", 1964. Rerecorded in 1977. Charts: #8, Holland.

 *   Leon Young String Chorale- "Drina" as a 45 single, UK, Columbia, 7236, 1964

 *   Will Glahé's Bohème Ballhouse Band - "Drina Marsch" on Decca LP, 1964

  *  Bert Landers & Konrad Grewe - "Drina Marsch" from the album Schlager-Cocktail: Die 16 Spitzenschlager







            






  * Horst Wende und sein Orchester – "Drina Marsch", Polydor 52 172, 7" 45 single, Germany, 1963; Roberto Delgado, pseudonym of Horst Wende, released as 45 single with picture sleeve in Italy as by Roberto Delgado e la sua orchestra, "March to Drina", Polydor 52172

  *  Die Kirmesmusikanten /or De Kermisklanten/  - "Drina Marsch", 7" 45 single, RCA, Germany, 1975.

  *  Gunter Noris und die Big Band der Bundeswehr - WM-Parade, CBS 80218, Germany, 1974

  *  Arne Domnerus Sekstett - on the LP Ja, Vi Älskar, Zarepta ZA 36010, Norway, 1978

  *  South African organist Cherry Wainer - on the LP Musik Im Blut, Discoton 75289, Germany; Hammond Organ: Light and Lively, double LP album, Polydor, 583 570, UK, 1964; Rhythmus im Blut LP, Polydor, 237 359, Germany, 1967; Cherry Wainer and Her Magic Hammond Organ LP, on Polydor, 236 036, 1967; Hammond Non Stop LP, Polydor Special 2418-188, 1969

 *   Ljubivoje Vidosavljević, Narodni Orkestar Carevac – "Marš Na Drinu", with lyrics by Miloje Popovic, PGP RTB, EP 12298, Yugoslavia, 1966

   * Kurt Henkels und sein Tanzorchester, 1973

  *  Bauernkapelle Mindersdorf - on the album In der Musikscheune, Tyrolis, Germany, 2008

  *  Countdown Studio Band in 2006 as "Drina March"

 *   Moravian Wind Band on the CD collection Leuchtturm, 2003

  *  Captain Harp - on the LP Harmonica Highlights as "Drina-Marsch" as part of "Balkan Medley" by the Picca-Trio in an arrangement for harmonica, ZYX Music, 2010

  *  Henry Arland and Hans Bertram - "Drina Marsch (Mars na Drini)", or "Drina (In den Bergen singt der Wind)", on the LP Clarinet Fascination, Polydor, 2371 208, 1972

   * Bob Kaper's The Beale Street Jazz Band - "Drina-March" b/w "Dominique", 45 picture sleeve single, RCA 47-9509, Dutch Amsterdam pressing.

   * Ansambl "Uroševic" featuring violinist Vlastimir Pavlović Carevac, on Metronome in Sweden, on Jugoton in Yugoslavia, 1963

  *  Gordana Lazarević - "Svirajte Mi Marš na Drinu" ("Play Me 'The March on the Drina'"), lyrics by Milutin Popović Zahar, PGP RTB, 1989

 *   Herbert Wetzler und seine Musikanten

 *   Franca Siciliano as "Drina" on Silver Record, XP 616, backed with "Ma cos'hai?" in Italy in 1966

 *   South African version of "March on the Drina" as "Drina March" by Dan Hill and Sounds Electronic, '8' LP, 42 Great Hits Perfect For Dancing, on RPM Records, 1037 S, 1969

  *  Fischer Choir, Fischer-Chöre, as "Drina-Marsch" on the Polydor album Das Große Spiel, The Great Game, Polydor 2371 500, Germany, 1974. The orchestra was under the direction of Hans Bertram. This vocal version features German lyrics written by Walter Rothenburg

  *  Czech vocalist Karel Gott on the album Singet und freut euch des Lebens, as "Drina-Marsch" with lyrics by Bert Olden, Polydor, 2371695, 1976

  *  The Dutch band Boemerang recorded the song as "Drina Mars" on the various artists album 84 Heerlijke Hollandse Hittroeven released in 2001

  *  German trumpeter Walter Scholz on the 2012 collection Rosen nur für dich as "Drina"

  *  Viva Vox Choir at the United Nations in a vocalized version in 2013 introduced by the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Ban Ki-Moon.





♥♥The March on the Drina: Drina (Little Soldier Boy) by Patti Page♥♥
*** The 1964 American adaptation of Stanislav Binicki’s “The March on the Drina” recorded as “Drina (Little Soldier Boy)” by Patti Page with English lyrics by Vaughn Horton was a bold and original transformation of a musical work written during World War I into a pop song. The release was a bold attempt to insert the song into the American popular musical mainstream. The adaptation of a martial theme to Top 40 radio was daring, innovative, and original. The song showed the impact and influence of the “The March on the Drina” in the U.S. and on American popular culture and music. “The March on the Drina” had an impact, not only globally, but also in the U.S.

“The March on the Drina” became an international standard and staple of world music in the 1960s. The song had been composed by Stanislav Binicki to commemorate the first Allied victory of World War I, the Battle of Cer, where Serbian troops had defeated Austro-Hungarian troops invading from Bosnia over the Drina River. The song first became a sensation in Scandinavia in 1963. The popularity of the song subsequently spread all across Europe. Danish guitarist Jorgen Ingmann had a no. 1 pop hit with the song in Denmark, a no. 5 hit in West Germany, and releases of the single in the UK, France, and the United States. By 1964 the popularity of the song had spread to the United States.
♥The first major recording of “The March on the Drina” in the U.S. was by iconic singer Patti Page, “the Singin’ Rage”, the best-selling American female singer of the 1950s in the U.S.  She released the song as a single on Columbia Records in 1964. The release was a major production that transformed the military march into a pop song that was targeted for U.S. Top 40 radio. The release was a bold attempt to insert the song into the American popular musical mainstream. The adaptation of a martial theme to Top 40 radio was daring, innovative, and original. The record did not chart but was a remarkable achievement in musical composition and arrangement, showing what could be done in adapting music from another genre and country.
♥Her recording of “The March on the Drina” as “Drina (Little Soldier Boy)” was the first pop version of the song in the U.S. There would be other notable later recordings of “The March on the Drina” in the United States, by Chet Atkins in 1966, by Frankie Yankovic in 1967, and by the Nashville String Band, featuring Chet Atkins and Homer and Jethro, in 1969.
♥The song is about a toy soldier which is owned by a drummer boy. The Drina in the song is not the Drina River that divides Serbia and Bosnia but a toy wooden soldier. The theme of the song is about how the drummer boy will grow up and get married and leave the toy behind. The motif of the song is one of coming of age. The literary technique that Vaughn Horton uses for the lyrics is personification, attributing human characteristics and emotions to inanimate objects. It is similar to the song “Kaw-Liga” by Hank Williams with the wooden Indian in the song imputed with human feelings and emotions. The song contrasts the military theme with the exuberance and joyousness of life itself.
/Carl Savich/


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SONG LIST:

Title Artist Album
Year
Drina March 100 Serbian Trumpet




The March on the Drina Cherry Wainer, ihre Swinging Hammond Orgel Rhytmus im Blut (Original Album)
2014

Drina Chet Atkins




Drina March Countdown Studio Band The Beautiful Music Box: Guitar, Vol. 1
2010

Mars na Drinu Gorica Ilić Sve za Srpstvo, Srpstvo ni za sta
1993

Drina Marsch James Last Dancing à gogo, Vol. 4
2015

Marchen Til Drina Jørgen Ingmann

1963

Mars na Drinu Ljubivoje Vidosavljevic, Narodni orkestar Carevac Oj, Srbijo, mila mati
2018

Cha Cha del Rio Drina Magnifico Montevideo, Bog te video i Montevideo, vidimo se
2014

March On The Drina (Arr. Jirka Kadlec) Marc Reift Philharmonic Wind Orchestra Majestic Marches 4
2017

Drina Marie Laforêt La cantante dagli occhi d'oro (In italiano)
2016

Mars na Drinu Mica Petrovic, Nikola Urosevic, Gedza Tradicionalne srpske pesme
2010

Drina (Little Soldier Boy) Patti Page The Complete Columbia Singles (1962-1970)
2014

Marš--na Drinu Radomir Mihailović Točak




March on the Drina Shazalakazoo, Filip Mitrovic METANATIONAL
2016

Drina March The Jokers The Best Of vol. 2
1995

March to Drina (1998 Remaster) The Shadows Shadow Music
1998

Drina The Spotnicks Top 60 Classics - The Very Best of The Spotnicks
2015

Mars na Drinu Vlada Mikic i Radomir Rercevic Najlepse Srpske pesme
2019

Marš Na Drinu V. Pavlović 'carevac', Ans.'urošević Solunske Pesme
2012

Drina Walter Scholz Rosen nur für dich
2012

Mars na Drinu Zoran Starcevic Serbia (Srbija)
2006







HERE:    

MnDRI





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VERSIONS, part TWO, HERE >>>









3 comments:

  1. Thanks Slobodan, Great to see you are still posting.
    Regards, Bob

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    Replies
    1. You are welcome, Bob! I thank YOU for your visit and this comment. Still, I can say, I haven't found any good site as ex-MULTIPLY, till now. Here, I am mainly posting versions of "La Golondrina" w.wide -my old passion. I visit from time to time your interesting site and you are working hard to manage all those info, pictures and adds about history of music. All the best, to you and your family, Regards, Slobodan!

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