Anna Wiktoria German-Tucholska (, 14 February 1936 â 26 August 1982) was a Polish singer (lirico-spinto), immensely popular in Poland and in the Soviet Union in the 1960s and the 1970s. She released over a dozen music albums with songs in Polish, as well as several albums with Russian repertoire. Throughout her music career, she also recorded songs in the German, Italian, Spanish, English, and Latin languages.
Family background and early life
Anna German was born in the town of Urgench in Uzbekistan (Central Asia; then the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic of the Soviet Union).
Her mother, Irma Martens (1909âÂÂ2007), was the child of Plautdietsch-speaking Mennonites with descendants from the Netherlands who exchanged Friesland for the area around the Vistula delta and on Empress Catherine the Great's invitation came to live in the Russian Empire. Martens' mother Anna Friesen had been born in present-day Ukraine. Later, the family settled in the Kuban. Martens' native language was a Plautdietsch variant with both German and Dutch influences. In the 1996 radio programme Spoor Terug on Dutch public broadcaster VPRO, Irma Martens said that she and her family identified as Dutch despite her Polish passport. Martens studied German in Odesa, but had to leave her village due to a lack of work as a teacher and instead moved to Redkaya Dubrava in Altai Krai. Due to NKVD Order No. 00439, Martens fled to Uzbekistan, where she met Eugen Hörmann.
Her accountant father, Eugen (Eugeniusz) Hörmann (in Russian, ÃÂõÃÂüðý), was also of a GermanâÂÂRussian pastor family and born in a Polish city of Ã
ÂódÃ
º, in Congress Poland (then part of the Russian Empire), Eugen Hörmann's father, Anna's grandfather, Friedrich Hörmann, who had studied theology in Ã
ÂódÃ
º, was in 1929 incarcerated in Gulag Plesetsk by communists for being a priest; he died there. In 1937, during the NKVD's anti-German operation, Eugen Hörmann was arrested in Urgench on false charges of spying, and executed (officially, sentenced to ten years in prison).
Thereafter Anna, with her mother and grandmother, survived in the Kemerovo Region of Siberia, as well as in Tashkent, and later in the Kirghiz and Kazakh SSRs.
In 1946, German's mother (who had married Herman Gerner, a Polish People's Army soldier) was able to take the family to Poland to Nowa Ruda and in 1949 to WrocÃ
Âaw.
Career
Anna quickly learned Polish and several other languages and grew up hiding her family heritage. She graduated from the Geological Institute of the University of WrocÃ
Âaw. During her university years, she began her music career at the Kalambur Theater. German became known to the general public when she won the 1964 II Festival of Polish Songs in Opole with her song TaÃ
ÂczÃÂ
ce Eurydyki ('Dancing Eurydices'). One year later, she won the first prize in the Sopot International Song Festival.
German performed in the Marché international de l'édition musicale in Cannes, as well as on the stages of Belgium, Germany, United States, Canada and Australia.
She also sang in Russian, English, Italian, Spanish, Latin, German and Mongolian. She recorded several albums for Polskie Nagrania Muza in Poland and Melodiya in the Soviet Union. In 2001, six of her Polish albums were reissued on CDs. In recent years, many compilation albums of her songs have also been released in both Russia and Poland.
Career in Italy
In December 1966 in Milan, German signed a contract with the CDI company to release her records, thus becoming the first performer from behind the "Iron Curtain" who recorded in Italy. In Italy, German had performed at the Sanremo Music Festival, starred in a television show, recorded a programme with the singer Domenico Modugno, performed at the festival of Neapolitan songs in Sorrento and received the "Oscar della simpatia" award.
Car accident and treatment
On 27 August 1967, while in Italy, on the road between Forlì and Milan, Anna German was involved in a severe car accident. At high speed, the car driven by the impresario of the singer crashed into a concrete fence. German was thrown from the car through the windshield. She suffered multiple fractures and other internal injuries. An investigation revealed that the driver of the car â her manager Renato Serio â fell asleep at the wheel.
After the accident, German had not regained consciousness. After the plaster was taken off, the singer still lay in a hospital bed for half a year. Then it took her a few months to relearn to sit and walk.
Later, she released the autobiographical book Wróàdo Sorrento? ('Come Back to Sorrento?'), dedicated to the Italian period of her career. The book's circulation was 30,000 copies.
Career in the Soviet Union
In 1964, German toured the Soviet Union for the first time as part of a delegation of Polish artists, performing songs by George Gershwin, Mark Fradkin, Arno Babajanian. The editor of the "Melodiya" Anna Kachalina invited German to record some songs in Polish and Italian. Her first songs in Russian were recorded in the fall of 1964.
In the 1970s, German toured, performed and recorded in the Soviet Union, working with Aleksandra Pakhmutova, Yevgeniy Martynov, Vladimir Shainsky, David Tukhmanov, Oscar Feltsman, Yan Frenkel, Vyacheslav Dobrynin, Alexander Morozov and others. She had become an acclaimed and popular artist there. She remembers: "I loved touring the Soviet Union. <...> These tours did not bring a lot of money, it was much more profitable to fly to America or even participate in some kind of concerts in Europe. But nothing can compare with the emotional reception in Soviet cities and towns."
Her most notable songs in Russian are "Shine, Shine, My Star", "And I like him" (), "Hope" (), "No Hurry" (), "Randomness" (), "When Gardens Bloomed" (), "Echo of Love" ().
Personal life
On 23 March 1972, married Zbigniew Tucholski. Their son, Zbigniew Tucholski, was born in 1975. In the last years of her life, she composed some church songs. Before she died in 1982 of osteosarcoma (at the age of 46), she joined the Seventh-day Adventist Church. German was buried at the Evangelical Cemetery in Warsaw.
Remembrance
- The main street in Urgench, Uzbekistan, the birthplace of Anna German, bears her name.
- The asteroid 2519 Y discovered in 1975 by Russian astronomer Tamara Smirnova was named in honour of Anna German.
- The amphitheatre in Zielona Góra, Poland, has been named in Anna German's memory.
- In 2002, the Song Festival aimed at popularizing the musical legacy of Anna German and Polish popular music was launched.
- The Anna German Musical High School in BiaÃ
Âystok bears the name of the singer.
- In 2012, a commemorative plaque was unveiled in WrocÃ
Âaw at the entrance to the house where Anna German used to live.
- In 2012, a Russian biographical mini-series (co-produced with Poland, Ukraine and Croatia) about the life of Anna German was filmed.
- A star on the Moscow Walk of Fame honouring Anna German was unveiled.
- Several streets in Polish cities including Warsaw and Rzeszów were named in remembrance of the singer.
- In 2013, a star on the Walk of Fame of the National Festival of Polish Song in Opole devoted to Anna German was unveiled.
Books about Anna German
- 1974 Nagrabiecki Jan: Anna German. 1974
- Aleksander Zygariov: Anna German. 1988
- Aleksander Zygariov: Anna German. 1998 (reissue)
- Mariola Pryzwan: . 1999
- Adriana Polak: . 2000
- Artur Hörmann: . 2003 (The book was written by the uncle of Anna and brother her father Eugene Herman)
- Mariola Pryzwan: . 2008
- : ÃÂýýð ÃÂõÃÂüðý â ÃÂþÃÂø, óþÃÂø, üþà÷òõ÷ôð!. 2010
- Jordan Naoum: Anna German. 2011
- Mariola Pryzwan: . 2012
- Ivan Ilichev: ÃÂàôþûóþõ ÃÂÃÂ
þ (We long echo). 2012
- Mariola Pryzwan: . 2013
- Marzena Baranowska: . 2013
- Ivan Ilichev: ÃÂýýð ÃÂõÃÂüðý. ÃÂõûÃÂù ðýóõû ÿõÃÂýø (White angel of the song). 2013
- German. Ã
ÂpiewajÃÂ
cy anioÃ
Â. Super album. 2013
- Ivan Ilichev: ÃÂÃÂ
þ ûÃÂñòø (Echoes of love). 2013
- Volga Yerafeyenka: . 2014
- Irma Martens-Berner: . 2014, (Consultants books: son A. German, Dr. and her husband, engineer Zbigniew A. Tucholsky)
- Ivan Ilichev: ÃÂýýð ÃÂõÃÂüðý. áÃÂþ òþÃÂÿþüøýðýøù þ òõûøúþù ÿõòøÃÂõ (Anna German. A hundred memories of great singer). 2016
Literary works
- 1970 (Come Back to Sorrento?...)
- (The tale of the winged Starling). The book is written by Anna to her son
- 1988 ëÃÂõÃÂýøÃÂàò áþÃÂÃÂõýÃÂþ?...ûhttps://lib.ru/MEMUARY/GERMAN_AN/german.txt translated from Polish into Russian by R. Bello
- 2002 reissue
- 2012 reissue
Discography
Albums
- ' (1964) [Onto that shore]
- ' (1965) [Dancing Eurydices]
- ' (1967) [A recital of songs]
- I classici della musica napoletana (1967) [Classics of the Canzone Napoletana]
- ' (1968) [Anna German Sings]
- ' (1970) [Fate of Man]
- ' (1971) [Domenico Scarlatti â Arias from opera Tetide in Sciro]
- ' (1972) [Wind lives in wild poplars]
- ' (1974) [It has to be May]
- Anna German (1975)
- Anna German (1977)
- Anna German (1979)
- ' (1979) [Think about me]
- ' (1979) [Only in tango/Summer is all around]
- ' (1979) [Anna German is singing]
- ÃÂðôõöôð (Nadezhda, 1980) [Hope]
- ' (1983) [Last meeting]
Singles
- "The Man I Love" (1964)
- "" / "" (1965)
- "" / "" (1965)
- "" / "" (1965)
- "" / "" (1965)
- "" / "" (1965)
- "" / "" (1967)
- "" / "" (1967)
- "" / "" (1967)
- "" / "" (1969)
- "" / "" (1970)
- "" / "" (1970)
- "" / "" (1970)
- "" / "" (1971)
- "" (1971)
- "" (1972)
- "" / "" (1972)
- "" (1974)
- "" (1975)
- "" / "" (1975)
- "" (1977)
- "" (1977)
- "" (1979)
- "" (1982)
Later reprints and compilation albums
- 1984: LP
- 1987: ÃÂÃÂ
þ ûÃÂñòø (Echo lubvi) â live '79 LP
- 1989: Anna German LP
- 1989: LP
- 1990: vol. 1 LP
- 1990: vol. 2 LP
- 1991: CD
- 1991: CD
- 1994: CD
- 1994: MC
- 1995: part 1 MC
- 1995: part 2 MC
- 1996: ÃÂõ÷ðñÃÂÃÂÃÂù üþÃÂøò (Nezabitiy motiv) CD
- 1996: ÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂøõ ÿõÃÂýø (Luchshie pesni) CD
- 1998: ÃÂþóôð ÃÂòõûø ÃÂðôà(Kogda tsveli sadi) CD
- 1998: CD
- 1999: CD
- 1999: CD
- 1999: CD
- 1999: CD
- 1999: ÃÂýÃÂþûþóøàÃÂþòõÃÂÃÂúþóþ ÃÂûÃÂóõÃÂð (Antologia sovetskogo shlagera) MC
- 2000: ÃÂýýð ÃÂõÃÂüðý. àþÃÂÃÂøùÃÂúðàÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂðôýðàüÃÂ÷ÃÂúðûÃÂýðàÃÂýÃÂøúûþÿõôøà(Rossiyskaya estradnaya muzikalnaya encyclopaedia) CD
- 2000: ÃÂþÃÂûõôýÃÂàòÃÂÃÂÃÂõÃÂð (Poslednyaya vstrecha) CD
- 2001: Quiet words of love (Russian) (ÃÂÃÂñòø ýõóÃÂþüúøõ ÃÂûþòð) CD
- 2001: ÃÂðÃÂø ûÃÂñøüÃÂõ ÿõÃÂýø (Vashi lyubimie pesni) CD
- 2001: CD
- 2001: CD
- 2001: CD
- 2001: CD
- 2001: Domenico Scarlatti â "Tetida in Sciro" CD
- 2001: CD
- 2001: CD
- 2001: Luchshee â Zvyozdi sovetskoy estradi CD
- 2002: CD
- 2003: ÃÂðÃÂø ûÃÂÃÂÃÂøõ ÿõÃÂýø (Nashi lyubimie pesni) CD
- 2003: collection CD
- 2003: ÃÂþûþÃÂþù òõú ÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂúþù ÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂðôà(Zolotoy vek russkoy estrady) CD
- 2003: ÃÂþÃÂøôøü, ÿþüþûÃÂøü. ÃÂþûýþõ ÃÂþñÃÂðýøõ ÿõÃÂõý (Posidim, pomolchim) vol.1 CD
- 2003: áÿðÃÂøñþ ÃÂõñõ üþõ ÃÂõÃÂôÃÂõ. ÃÂþûýþõ ÃÂþñÃÂðýøõ ÿõÃÂõý (Spasibo tebe moyo serdtse) vol.2 CD
- 2004: CD
- 2004: áðüþõ ûÃÂÃÂÃÂõõ (Samoe luchshee) CD
- 2007: MP3 collection
- 2008: ÃÂðôõöôð CD
- 2013: CD
- 2019: ÃÂýýð ÃÂõÃÂüðý. ÃÂ֖ÃÂðýýþõ LP
Filmography
See also
References
External links