Lidia Valenta (born Lidia Valentinovna Nebaba (rus.: Лидия Валентиновна Небаба)) is a singer, songwriter and musician. Her style incorporates elements of pop, jazz, folk, art song, world, and ballads.
Early life
editLidia was born in Brest, Belarus, and grew up in Czech Republik and Russia. Since 1998 she has lived in Germany and calls Dresden her home.[1]
At the age of six she began to study piano, vocals, and music theory. Soon after, she won the Young Composers Competition in Prague. At the age of eight, she began to sing in choirs in Prague and later in Kaliningrad, which became her home in 1986.[1] She studied humanities at Kaliningrad State University (renamed Immanuel Kant Baltic Federal University). Later studied applied linguistics on the Faculty of Philosophy at the Technical University of Dresden. She also studied vocals at the Lidia Nebaba Theater of Romance Music in Moscow.[2]
Singing career
editValenta has performed at major music venues in Russia and Europe, including the Buryat State Opera and Ballet Theater in Ulan-Ude, Central House of Art Professionals in Moscow, Jupiter Concert Hall in Nizhny Novgorod, Nizhny Novgorod Kremlin,[3] Russian House of Science and Culture[4] in Berlin and the Russian Centre of Culture and Science in Rome.[5]
Valenta writes most of her own songs, but she also draws inspiration from Russian, German, British, and American poetry.
In 2015, she formed the Lidia Valenta Band with jazz-pianist and Hammond organist Jo Aldinger, drummer Tim Hahn and double bass player Clemens Voyé.[6][7]
Tours
edit- 2015 – "Love"
- 2016 – "Change of Scene"
- 2017 – "Echo"
- 2018 – "Night Train"
- 2019 – "Weihnachten"
- 2020 – "Oblaka"
Discography
editSingles
edit- Nochnoj Poezd (2010)
- Follow me (2011)
- Not Enough (2013)
- Flowless (2013)
- I Can't Resist (2014)
- I Miss You (2015)
- To The Disco (2015)
Song cycles
edit- Night Train (2013): Six Russian Art Songs -songs on poems by Vladimir Isaichev
- Echo (2015): Five Poetic Jazz Songs – songs on Poems by Emily Dickinson and Christina Rossetti
Music albums
edit- Weihnachten (2019)
- Oblaka (2020)
- Love (2021)
- Gone like a fart in the wind (2024)
- Durchfall disasters, Christmas carols (2024)
- Unrequited love (2024)
Other activities
editValenta is also an environmental activist. In September 2012, she was a member of an expedition that flew across Lake Baikal in a hot air balloon to draw attention to environmental issues related to preserving Baikal's ecosystem.[8]
Art and design
editIn 2014, Valenta began her work as a visual artist and designer, working primarily with porcelain. She collaborated with Dresden Porcelain, one of Germany's oldest porcelain factories, and with Holger John, a German artist whose Dresden art gallery has exhibited her work.[9] The porcelain pieces are handmade and hand-painted.
In April 2016, Valenta combined two art genres, modern art on porcelain and music. Her art song exhibition called "Porcelain Pop" was shown in the historic Barock Gewandhaus in Dresden.[10]
Valenta showed pieces of the collection at the first international porcelain biennale in the Albrechtsburg Castle in Meissen, the birthplace of European porcelain.[11]
References
edit- ^ a b "Lidia Valenta – "Musik verbindet Welten!"". Disy Magazine. Dresden, Germany. Autumn 2014. Retrieved June 26, 2017.
- ^ "About". www.lidiavalenta.com. Retrieved June 26, 2017.
- ^ Таланова, Анна. "Выбраны два новых участника программы "Культурный район" — Культурный район" (in Russian). Retrieved April 4, 2020.
- ^ "Tino Eisbrenner und Lidia Valenta Konzert im Russischen Haus in Berlin am 25 Januar 2020". News DG (in German). January 22, 2020. Retrieved April 4, 2020.
- ^ Lindhorst, Aldo (May 28, 2015). "Konzerte fur Dresden". Musik in Dresden. Dresden, Germany. Retrieved June 26, 2017.
- ^ "Lidia Valenta Band (Германия), Клуб Игоря Бутмана на Таганке, 3 декабря 2019". Jazzmap.ru. Retrieved April 4, 2020.
- ^ "Erst Porzellan, dann Pop-Jazz". saechsische.de. Retrieved April 4, 2020.
- ^ "In Ulan-Ude was a unique concert dedicated to the 5th anniversary of the flight through Baikal". www.visitburyatia.ru (in Russian). September 24, 2012. Retrieved June 26, 2017.
- ^ "Porzellan provakant", Sachsische Zeitung, Freital, Germany. October 9, 2014.
- ^ "Porcelain Pop: an exhibition of Lydia Valenta". berlin24.ru (in Russian). April 18, 2016. Retrieved June 26, 2017.
- ^ Lemke, Udo (September 20, 2016). "Porzellan international". SZ-Online (in German). Retrieved June 26, 2017.