Music of Mordovia
| Music of Russia: Finno-Ugric music | ||
|---|---|---|
| History (Timeline and Samples) | ||
| Genres | ||
| Bards – Classical music – Hip hop – Jazz – Opera – Rock | ||
| Awards | MTV Russia Music Awards | |
| Charts | ||
| Festivals | Bard Music Festival | |
| Media | ||
| National anthem | "National Anthem of Russia" | |
| Finno-Ugric regions | ||
| Estonia – Finland – Hungary – Karelia – Khantia-Mansia – Komi Republic – Lapland (Sami) – Latvia – Lithuania – Mari El – Mordovia – Nenetsia – Udmurtia | ||
| Russian regions and ethnicities | ||
| Adygea – Altai – Astrakhan – Bashkortostan – Buryatia – Belarusian – Chechnya – Chukotka – Chuvashia – Dagestan – Evenkia – Ingushetia – Irkutsk – Kaliningrad – Kalmykia – Kamchatka – Karelia – Khakassia – Khantia-Mansia – Komi Republic – Krasnodar – Mari El – Mordovia – Nenetsia – Ossetia – Rostov – Ethnic Russian – Sakha – Sakhalin – Tatarstan – Tuva – Udmurtia – Ukrainian | ||
Mordovia is a region of Russia. Its national anthem is "Shumbrat, Mordovia!" (Hail, Mordovia!) by Sergey Kinyakin and Nina Kosheleva, adopted in 1995 [1].
Mordovian folk music has become part of the repertoire of some modern bands, such as Toorama.
Categories: Music genre stubs | Russia-related stubs | Mordovia | Russianmusic