Tag: live

  • Landmarks in modern Romanian history

    Landmarks in modern Romanian history


    The year 2021 is, among other things, a year of utmost
    importance for the history of Romania. In 2021 we mark 200 years since an
    iconic event occurred in Romania’s past. Historians have been unanimous in
    describing the event as the trigger factor for the process of national rebirth.
    Such a process was possible against the backdrop of a deep-seated social discontent.
    The event is known as the 1821 Revolution. In April 2021,
    Romanian Parliament voted in favor of the year 2021 being officially declared
    the Tudor Vladimirescu Year. By the same token, Ecaterina Teodoroiu and Tudor
    Vladimirescu were granted hero status of the Romanian nation. In one of our previous instalments we focused extensively on the events
    staged in Gorj county, the native region of both Teodoroiu and Tudor
    Vladimirescu. Our host back then was Gorj County
    Council’s spokesperson Oana Palos.
    It is also Oana Palos we have
    approached, so that she may give us details on the whys and the wherefores of
    the 1821 Revolution. First off, Oana Palos emphasized the importance of the
    1821 Revolution.

    Oana Palos:

    In fact, it
    was a revolt known as the Revolution of 1821, which was started right here in
    Gorj, by a bunch of commoners who were known as panduri/pandours (irregular,
    skirmisher troops) and who grouped themselves around Tudor Vladimirescu, a
    chieftain who was also born in Gorj, into a family of freehold peasants. The
    Revolution flared up and galvanized Oltenia, reaching as far as Bucharest, but it was short-lived, it lasted for a couple of months,
    because Tudor Vladimirescu was assassinated, just as it happened to a great
    many other Romanian leaders, at various stages in history. However, for the
    full commitment of those who fought for the Romanian cause, the 1821 Revolution
    earned its place in history and Tudor Vladimirescu gained hero status, being
    associated, according to the traditional mindset, to the status of prince,
    Prince Tudor. Let us perform an exercise in imagination, 1821, 1921, 2021. We
    go across time and space. And here we are, marking 200 years since those
    events. Allow me to invite you to think of the month of June
    1921, when, a century ago, Tudor Vladimirescu’s centennial had also been marked
    through the reinterment, in Targu Jiu, of the remains of Romanian army’s first
    female officer who fought in World War One, we’re speaking about Ecaterina Teodoroiu,
    the young woman who was also born in Gorj, back in the day she took a go-against-the-grain-stance
    and went on to become a symbol of courage and sacrifice.


    Oana Palos also told us that, locally, a yearly
    program has been thought out, dedicated to Tudor Vladimirescu’s bicentennial,
    including cultural and artistic evocative presentations, so each and every
    month, taking into account the circumstances generated by the pandemic,
    exhibitions were mounted as well as stage performances or religious and
    military ceremonies.


    Oana Palos:


    On May 2, but also on June 9,
    the events we staged were held under the aegis of the bicentennial. In Tudor
    Vladimirescu’s birthplace, the commune of Vladimir, in the very house where he
    was born, a wreath-laying ceremony with military honors was held, followed by a
    significant historical and military reenactment of a battle episode in 1821,
    when the apparel was presented, typical for the age, that of the boyars, of the arnauti (the Albanian guards), the pandours. In the same evocative vein, this
    time on June 9, in the center of Targu Jiu municipal city, where The Heroine of
    Jiu is interred, at the Mausoluem that was erected in her honor, a wide-scope
    series of events was held, followed by a traditional manifestation: a
    commemoration round dance was performed, whose significance was twofold: 200
    years since the Tudor Vladimirescu’s Revolution and 100 since the reinterment
    of Eaterina’s bones in Targu Jiu. We should also say that the official
    commemoration divine service was performed by a 100-strong gathering of
    priests, the number of one hundred was purposefully picked, to pay tribute to
    Ecaterina Teodoroiu, the divine service was followed by that ancient, typical
    Gorj custom, the commemoration round dance, usually performed to commemorate
    the departed. The custom has been preserved to this day. Also, as an absolute
    first, a stage performance was presented, titled The Tudor Vladmirescu Case,
    no doubt, a one-of-a kind-performance, primarily because of its concept, we’re
    speaking about a rock opera, a fusion between a ballad, rock and traditional music, which brought before
    the audiences unique episodes of Tudor Vladimirescu’s life way back when the
    battles were waged, led by him, yet the conception is a modern, abstract one.
    We would also like the show to become an element of tourist attraction, it will
    be on in Targu Jiu for the summer.


    Oana Palos once again, this time speaking about other projects they have
    prepared for the Tudor year.


    What else have we prepared for the Tudor Year…Projects,
    that’s for sure, and we want them to have as great an impact as possible. We’re
    speaking about photo-documentary exhibitions, including documents from museum
    archives and the collection that are our property, pertaining to Tudor
    Vladimirescu’s life and activity, launching events for photo and graphic
    albums, street performances, theatre and film festivals. In august, for
    instance, and also as part of the bicentennial, we will mount a street
    exhibition with 50 metal boards being placed in the city center with historical
    images of the Revolution, we will also have images projected on the municipal
    city’s historical buildings, a national historical film and theatre festival
    will also be held, the Vatra/The Hearth festival.


    The organizers are set to facilitate participation in
    the events to all those who so wish, so they assured us we’re only one click
    away from that. We can follow, live online, all the events, if we search Gorj,
    Targu Jiu, Tudor Vladimirescu on our computers.

    (Translation by Eugen Nasta)


  • Pages of history on Radio Romania

    Pages of history on Radio Romania

    On November 1, 1928, Radio Romania started emitting in Bucharest, growing into the voice of the times, of the ideas and aspirations of Romanians, which shaped the contents of the institution’s broadcasts. Ever since, the development of the public broadcaster has mirrored all the transformations experienced by the Romanian society as a whole, and reflected the major landmarks of the history of the 20th Century.



    On August 23, 1944, Romania joined the Alliance of the United Nations, a move which was to shorten the second world war and limit the human and material losses it caused. Taking part in the Council convened by King Michael I that night was, among others, the head of Radio Romania, Vasile Ionescu:



    Vasile Ionescu: “In the office of the Sovereign of Romania, starting at 6 PM on August 23, 1944, for 4 hours, until 10:05, I took part in all the preparations and formalities required in order to consolidate the coup that started with arresting Marshall Antonescu and his main collaborators, namely Prof. Mihai Antonescu, the vice-president of the Council of Ministers and also Foreign Minister and Propaganda Minister; Constantin Pantazi, War Minister; Gen. Piki Vasiliu, chief inspector of the gendarme corps and secretary of state with the Interior Ministry; and Prof. Gheorghe Alexianu, the former governor of Transdniester.”



    In 1968, troops from the Warsaw Pact countries, except for Romania, invaded Czechoslovakia in order to end Alexander Dubcek’s reformist policy. Engineer Ilie Dragan of the Radio Romania team in charge with the live broadcasting of Nicolae Ceausescu’s speech condemning the armed intervention, recalls:



    Ilie Dragan: “In 1968, we were called at home and asked to come to work one hour earlier. They told us we had to do an emergency transmission from a rally to be held in Republica Square. I went there immediately with a team of technicians, I remember we had an outside broadcasting van where we improvised a seat for the anchor, up on the vehicle. We had problems installing everything, because lots of people had started to gather in the square. I remember we had to move the car somewhere in a corner of the square, near a window, on a patch of grass. Together with the team from the national telecoms company, we managed to put up the circuits and 15 minutes before the event started we were live with the radio studio.”



    In turn, Radio Romania International covered the milestones of world history in spite of political barriers. Landing on the Moon was one such moment and Sergiu Levescu, a journalist with the French Service of Radio Romania International, remembers very well July 20, 1969 the day when the Apollo 11 crew set foot on the Moon:



    Sergiu Levescu: “Apollo 11’s landing on the Moon was the topic of a non-politicised meeting of the RRI’s producers. When Armstrong left the lunar module to explore the Moon surface we all got together in the office of Hortensia Roman, the then editor-in-chief, to listen to the radio programme. It was a really emotional moment.”



    In a broadcast from the Olympic Games in Rome, in 1960, radio journalist Ion Ghitulescu was reporting on the moment when Iolanda Balas became an Olympic champion.



    Ion Ghitulescu: “The Olympic Stadium is silent again. Iolanda Balas is getting ready for her third 1.85-meter high jump. She heads towards the horizontal bar, gets ready and jumps… We will witness the award ceremony in the high jump event. World record holder and Olympic champion, Iolanda Balas, is the winner. We congratulate you, Iolanda, on this extraordinary win and your hard work!”



    Poet Ana Blandiana, was one of the first intellectuals to speak on Radio Romania during the days of the 1989 Revolution:



    Ana Blandiana: “Friends, I have just arrived at the Radio coming from the Palace Square, where I joined the thousands of people who could hardly believe this day has finally come. It is very hard to believe that after so many years of humiliation, we have managed to do this, all by ourselves, due to our inner strength, which I almost believed we had lost forever, and without any political schemes or support from more influential and powerful people. The victims in Timisoara and the victims in Bucharest have restored our trust in ourselves and in the power to be ourselves.”



    On January 1, 2007, Romania joined the European Union, the most exclusive club of the world’s developed countries. On December 20, 2006, Radio Romania broadcast live the Romanian Parliament’s solemn meeting, celebrating the event. The then president, Traian Basescu, delivered a speech at the meeting:



    Traian Basescu: “Two concise sentences, of exceptional political value, will be imprinted in the history of Romania and also in the history of the European Union. The European Council hails the EU accession of Romania and Bulgaria as full member states, starting January 1st, 2007.”



    Radio Romania has been, in its 91 years of existence, an actor and an observer of history and will continue to be so.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu, Elena Enache)

  • Billions of listeners and viewers will follow the Romanian Radio National Orchestra

    Billions of listeners and viewers will follow the Romanian Radio National Orchestra

    The Romanian Radio public broadcaster has been in the last years a true cultural ambassador of Romania in the Asian area through the tours undertaken by the Romanian Radio Orchestras and Choirs in such countries as Japan, China and, from September 2014, Malaysia. The Romanian Radio National Orchestra has been invited to attend a major musical event: World Summit on Media for Children, where, on



    September 9th and September 10th 2014, the Romanian artists will be welcomed by the audience from Kuala Lumpur — the capital of Malaysia.



    According to the organizers of the event, the two concerts performed by the Romanian Radio National Orchestra are the “main attraction” of the 7th edition of the summit. This is the first time that the international event is organized on the Asian continent, after Melbourne, London, Thessaloníki, Rio de Janeiro, Johannesburg and Karlstad.



    The two concerts will be audio and video recorded by the public radio and TV broadcaster from Kuala Lumpur and will be broadcast by all members of ABU – Asia Pacific Broadcasting Union, reaching thusly a potential audience of several billions of listeners and viewers , in a geographic area which covers half of the planet. The tour is organized by Radio Romania and ABU.



    The concerts will be held in the Kuala Lumpur Philharmonic Hall, hosted by the legendary Petronas towers, an emblematic building of the city, two twin skyscrapers which have been considered to be the highest building in the world from 1998 to 2004. The first concert, scheduled on September 9th, will be dedicated to the summit participants, while the second performance will be addressed to the wide audience.



    The Romanian Radio National Orchestra will perform under the baton of TIBERIU SOARE, the principal conductor of the Romanian Radio Orchestras and Choirs, who has conducted the ensemble on all tours undertaken in the last seasons. The soloists of the two concerts will be GABRIEL CROITORU — violin and


    HORIA MIHAIL — piano, two musicians widely acclaimed in numerous events held at the Romanian Radio Hall.



    The programme will be a special one: two Romanian compositions, true “business cards” of the Romanian culture, namely the Rhapsody no. 1, Enescus famous work, and Ciocârlia, composed by Angheluş Dinicu and made famous by the exceptional performance and arrangement carried out by his nephew, violinist


    Grigoraş Dinicu. Besides these two works, the Malaysian audience will also listen to several pieces from the international repertoire: the Swan Lake suite by Tchaikovsky, the Burleske for piano and orchestra, signed by Richard Strauss and the Gypsy Melodies, by the Spanish violinist and composer Pablo de Sarasate. The two concerts will also feature two original Malaysian compositions. The tour is organized with the support of the Romanian Cultural Institute.



    OVIDIU MICULESCU, President Director General of Radio Romania: “We will go there to build a new bridge, a subtle and important one, between our European – rooted culture and the surprising Asia. When voices so different speak with so much love, generosity and talent the same language, which is music, we can say throughly that there is still hope for a better world”.



    The participation of the Romanian National Radio Orchestra in Malaysia is an important step in the frame of extending Radio Romanias partnerships beyond the European Broadcasting Union.


    “I think that this tour is important especially in terms of media. We are permanently focusing on maintaining our cultural and informative mission and this international attendance brings them together very well. We are speaking about an Asian media summit of great importance and about a concert which will be broadcast by the major Asian televisions, which reach potentially billions of listeners and viewers, therefore our artistic message will be multiplied”, stated Oltea Şerban — Pârâu, the artistic director of the Romanian Radio Orchestras and Choirs and director of Radio Romania Media Cultural Centre.



    Organized between September 8th and September 10th, World Summit on Media for Children (WSMC) will have as main topic Mass-media for the 21st century children, will host 2000 participants and is organized by Asia — Pacific Broadcasting Union (ABU), the Malaysian Radio Television and the WSMC Foundation.


  • RRI în română, dialectul aromân, engleză, spaniolă şi chineză, pe telefonul mobil în SUA

    RRI în română, dialectul aromân, engleză, spaniolă şi chineză, pe telefonul mobil în SUA

    Dragi prieteni, ne puteţi asculta pe telefonul mobil şi fix în SUA prin intermediul platformei AudioNow.



    Emisiunile noastre în limba română sunt disponibile non-stop la numărul de telefon 716.274.2507.



    Emisiunile noastre în dialectul aromân sunt disponibile live sau on demand la numărul de telefon 716.274.2514.



    Emisiunile noastre în limba engleză sunt disponibile live sau on demand la numărul de telefon 716.274.2526.



    Emisiunile noastre în limba chineză sunt disponibile live sau on demand la numărul de telefon 716.274.2516.



    Emisiunile noastre în limba spaniolă sunt disponibile live sau on demand la numărul de telefon 716.274.2518.



    Toate apelurile sunt taxabile cu preţul unui apel normal în SUA.