“We came from the underground and became popular with our pop-culture parodies. One day to my horror I realized that our group has become similar to the objects of our parodies and mockery. We were starting to merge with all those pop-star crowd, but I’m not one of them and never wanted to be,” - Sergey Mikhalok, the band’s leader says. He admits that it wasn’t so easy to give up the show business game and become independent once again.
According to him, “it was very difficult to get our true essence back on top. And the thing wasn’t about any contracts. We had to overcome public opinion and, most importantly, set our own minds free. At first, my internal discomfort from the gap between the authentic “Lyapis Trubetskoy” and its public image was relieved by hard drinking and other stuff, but when my weight peaked at 110 kilograms and my mind was about to collapse, I gave up everything, lost 25 kilograms and started to play the music I like.”
“Capital” is the second independent album by “Lyapis Trubetskoy” after the “Zoloty’ye yaytsy” (“Golden Balls”) created in 2004 under heavy reggae and ska influence. “While working on “Zoloty’ye yaytsy” we didn’t understand what to do with our independence. As a result there were some reflex attempts to score a radio hit with “Rain’ka” or “Pochtal’iony” (“Postmen”), - Sergey Mikhalok says. – But this wasn’t the biggest problem. The whole album was overproduced, we tried to mix too many styles, musical instruments and sounds in it. So, we paid too much attention to the form instead of the essence. We were in need of a real professional who could tell us what was good and what was too much.”
That is why searching for a sound producer was one of the main tasks while working on “Capital”. At some point the band wanted to record their album in London, in the hometown the legendary British ska-band “Madness” (one of Mihalok’s favourites). When almost everything was ready for that, a chance interfered. At a concert in Kiev “Lyapis Trubetskoy” met a famous Ukrainian sound producer Vitaliy Telezin. He worked with “Okean El’zi”, “Brat’ia Grim” and other top Ukrainian/Russian artists. But it wasn’t the thing that attracted Mikhalok and his friends.
“We are from the same generation with him, we had common world outlook, we liked the same music. And it was the music we wanted to record on our new album. I don’t want to offend anyone, but, roughly speaking, for our band he is the first studio guy who didn’t need explanations about what is California wave or how “Green Day” and “Offspring” make their sound,” - Mikhalok says.
And this combination has worked perfectly well. Now it’s already clear that the new album will mean to the band and its fans no less than the legendary “Ty kinula” (“You Gave Me Up”) in 1998 and will give a rise to the new popularity wave for “Lyapis Trubetskoy”. Still, according to Sergey Mikhalok, the ideology of both the new album and the present group is different from what used to be in the years between these two landmarks. He says: “When I started my career I used to write songs that changed me and the world around me, but later I began to create stuff, that didn’t have influence either on me or the world around. At best those songs could be a soundtrack for some wedding or birthday. And what is horrible at some point I even used to be proud of that. But now I have come back to what everything started from – to a mix of biting satire and powerful chords.”
Video clips have played an important role in the album presentation. The first clip for the song “Hare” (“Enough”), a cheerful wedding trash-video, was filmed by a famous actor and new wave director Vladimir Epifantsev. The second clip, animation video “Capital”, which has become a real Internet sensation, was made by Aleksey Terekhov, co-author of the legendary “Au” (1998) and “Rozochka” (1999) videos. "Capital" has hardly appeared on TV, but has already won several prizes and got a lot of nominations on the different video & music festivals in Russia, Belarus, Portugal and so on.
Frontman Siarhei Mikhalok anounced mid-March 2014 that the group would ceased to exist the next 1 September.
offical website
www.lyapis.com
myspace page
www.myspace.com/lyapis
Гойко Митич
Ляпис Трубецкой Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
"Космос", "Гродно" в твёрдой пачке
Братан привёз из стройбата
Джинсы "Odra" и жувачки
Молодёжная субкультура
Свежие тенденции
Европейские процедуры
Как интервенция
Ломанули Гойко Митича
"Modern Talking" со Scooter'ом
ГДРовские индейцы
В плену у Компьютера
Похоронили рок-н-ролла
"Manowar'a", "Kreator'a"
ГДРовские индейцы
В плену у Терминатора
Братан привёз из Риги
Коньки и "Ботасы"
Говорил, что там менты
Носят длинные волосы
Разбудили синтезаторы
Трансформирование
Люди-карбюраторы
Люди-зажигание
Ломанули Гойко Митича
"Modern Talking" со Scooter'ом
ГДРовские индейцы
В плену у Компьютера
Похоронили рок-н-ролла
"Manowar'a", "Kreator'a"
ГДРовские индейцы
В плену у Терминатора
Спирт "Royal" - анабиоз
Вырвал из жизни лет семь или восемь
Многих друзей пустил под откос
А я всё верил - кончится осень
Радуга в небе, новое время
Новые ангелы, новые черти
Слава Богу, я не в системе
Я не на том, я на этом свете
Ломанули Гойко Митича
"Modern Talking" со Scooter'ом
ГДРовские индейцы
В плену у Компьютера
Похоронили рок-н-ролла
"Manowar'a", "Kreator'a"
ГДРовские индейцы
В плену у Терминатора
The lyrics to Ляпис Трубецкой's song Гойко Митич is a commentary on the impact of western popular culture on the youth of Eastern Europe after the fall of the Soviet Union. The song talks about a young man who brings back items like jeans and chewing gum from his construction job in Poland, which become symbols of a new youth culture. The lyrics then touch on the influence of electronic music and the transformation of people into machines, highlighting the disparity between the old and new generation in their attitudes towards popular culture. The chorus of the song mourns the death of rock and roll and its replacement by electronic music, with the "GDR Indians" (a metaphor for the East German youth) being held captive by the "Computer" and "Terminator" (symbols of electronic music).
The song also touches on the issue of substance abuse, with the reference to "Royal" (a brand of vodka) and the singer's alienation from his friends who have fallen prey to addiction. The singer portrays himself as someone who is free from societal norms and is not bound by the system, and the new angels and demons represent the changing social landscape.
Line by Line Meaning
Угощайтесь, ребята
Enjoy, guys
"Космос", "Гродно" в твёрдой пачке
"Kosmos", "Grodno" in a solid pack
Братан привёз из стройбата
My bro brought from the construction site
Джинсы "Odra" и жувачки
"Odra" jeans and chewing gum
Молодёжная субкультура
Youth subculture
Свежие тенденции
Fresh trends
Европейские процедуры
European procedures
Как интервенция
As an intervention
Ломанули Гойко Митича
They broke Gyoko Mitich
"Modern Talking" со Scooter'ом
"Modern Talking" with Scooter
ГДРовские индейцы
Native Communists of East Germany
В плену у Компьютера
Captive to the Computer
Похоронили рок-н-ролла
They buried rock 'n' roll
"Manowar'a", "Kreator'a"
"Manowar", "Kreator"
В плену у Терминатора
Captive to the Terminator
Братан привёз из Риги
My bro brought from Riga
Коньки и "Ботасы"
Skates and "Botas" shoes
Говорил, что там менты
Said that there are cops there
Носят длинные волосы
With long hair
Разбудили синтезаторы
Synthesizers woke up
Трансформирование
Transformation
Люди-карбюраторы
People-carburetors
Люди-зажигание
People-ignition
Спирт "Royal" - анабиоз
"Royal" alcohol - anabiosis
Вырвал из жизни лет семь или восемь
Pulled out of life seven or eight years
Многих друзей пустил под откос
Lost many friends
А я всё верил - кончится осень
But I still believed - the autumn will end
Радуга в небе, новое время
Rainbow in the sky, new times
Новые ангелы, новые черти
New angels, new devils
Слава Богу, я не в системе
Thank God, I'm not in the system
Я не на том, я на этом свете
I'm not on that one, I'm on this earth
Contributed by Mason P. Suggest a correction in the comments below.