Military jet crash killed 64 Russian Army Song, Dance Ensemble men

The Alexandrov Russian Army Song and Dance Ensemble lost 64 members, and all but 3 of its choir singers, in the crash.
Moscow, Russia – A Russian military plane that crashed on Sunday in the Black Sea on its way to Syria nearly eliminated an iconic artistic outfit that was dubbed “Russia’s singing weapon”, counted Soviet dictator Josef Stalin as a fan and toured the world for decades with an epic combination of song and dance.

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epa04195647 Actors perform during a concert of the Academic Song and Dance Ensemble of the Russian Army in Moscow, Russia, 07 May 2014. The concert commemorates the victory of the Soviet Union's Red Army over Nazi-Germany in WWII.  EPA/YURI KOCHETKOV
epa04195647 Actors perform during a concert of the Academic Song and Dance Ensemble of the Russian Army in Moscow, Russia, 07 May 2014. The concert commemorates the victory of the Soviet Union’s Red Army over Nazi-Germany in WWII. EPA/YURI KOCHETKOV

ts official name is clunky – the Alexandrov Russian Army Song and Dance Ensemble. But in the West, it is mostly – and wrongly – known as the Red Army Choir. Apart from an all-male choir with dozens of singers, it also enlists dancers and musicians playing classical and Russian folk instruments.
All of them are military officers on active duty, with ranks, uniforms and tours to warzones to entertain Russian servicemen – the primary mission of the ensemble.
ut for decades, it has been better known as an awe-inspiring entertainment machine whose renditions of military and patriotic songs, operatic arias and Russian folk songs were performed in concert halls, city squares and stadiums on all continents.
“This is an ensemble of victory, because many military and patriotic songs that were symbolic and sacred were performed by this ensemble,” political analyst Alexei Mukhin told Al Jazeera.
The ensemble included some 180 performers – their number varied depending on the type of performance – and 64 of them were aboard the Defense Ministry Tu-154 plane that crashed on its way to the Khmeimim airbase near the western Syrian city of Latakia on December 25.
Since the performance of the ensemble Syria was supposed to be mostly a cappella, only 14 dancers, balalaika and accordion players were on the plane – along with 50 choir members, led by the ensemble’s head, Lieutenant-General Valery Khalilov, a stern, grey-haired conductor and composer who always performed in uniform.
Only three singers had stayed behind in Moscow. “I stayed home to help my wife” who had just given birth to their first child, singer Vadim Ananyev said in televised remarks.
The rest of the choir were less lucky. Russian military officials said hours after the crash that none of the 92 passengers and crew members survived the crash, and hundreds of fans, musicians and relatives flocked to a brick mansion in central Moscow where the ensemble was based with flowers and candles.
Kremlin’s singing weapon
“They were called the Kremlin’s singing weapon, and that’s who they were,” Alexander Kibovsky, head of the Moscow government’s culture department, told journalists outside the mansion. “Yes, they performed in uniforms, fulfilled their duty, could not refuse if dispatched somewhere, and most of them performed in warzones.”
From its inception, the ensemble was a military outfit – and a well-tuned propaganda instrument.
Its primary goal was to cheer up Soviet servicemen wherever they were – on the frontlines of World War II, where it played more than 1,500 times, in desolate garrisons in the Arctic or on the Chinese border, in war-torn Afghanistan and Yugoslavia, post-Soviet Tajikistan and Chechnya.
Alexander Alexandrov, a classically trained singer with a background in Orthodox church music, had formed the ensemble in 1928 to commemorate the Red Army’s 10th anniversary – and eventually expanded it to forge a flawless fusion of vocal, instrumental music and dance that would befit operas by German composer Richard Wagner.
The 12-man unit soon employed more than 300 performers, and their domestic and international success brought a shower of state awards, including two Stalin Prizes. These laureates were personally picked by the Soviet dictator, who dabbled in singing during late-night parties in the Kremlin.
In 1941, it performed the Sacred War, one of the best-known Soviet WWII songs that became a potent symbol of the USSR’s resistance to the Nazi invasion.
In 1943 Alexandrov wrote the music for the new Soviet national anthem, which has remained Russia’s national anthem after a slight change of lyrics – and the ensemble’s place at the very top of the cultural nomenclature seemed permanent.
It was British Prime Minister Winston Churchill who dubbed the Ensemble “Russia’s singing weapon” – after its performance at the 1945 conference in Yalta, where Soviet, British and US leaders mapped the post-WWII world order. – al-Jazeera