Remove ads
Ukrainian–Russian singer (born 1979) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vitaliy Vladasovich Grachev[a] or Vitaliy Vladasovych Grachov,[b] known professionally as Vitas (Russian: Витас [ˈvʲitəs]; stylised in all caps), is a Russian singer.[1][2] Vitas is known for his falsetto and his eclectic musical style, which incorporates elements of operatic pop, techno, dance, classical, jazz, and folk.
Vitas Витас | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Vitaly Vladasovich Grachev |
Also known as |
|
Born | Daugavpils, Latvian SSR, Soviet Union | 19 February 1979
Origin | Odesa, Ukraine |
Genres | |
Occupations |
|
Years active | 2000–present |
Labels |
|
Vitas became popular in Russia and other Eastern European countries in the early 2000s and also achieved success in Asia, including China, in 2005.[3][4][5] He won the ZD Awards[6][7] and participated in many Russian and European music festivals, including the festival “Christmas Meetings of Alla Pugacheva” and others.[8][9] He performed in a duet with Demis Roussos and Lucio Dalla.[10]
Much of his recognition outside Russia and Asia came in the 2010s, when songs such as "Opera #2" and "The 7th Element" (both from his 2001 debut album Philosophy of Miracle) and "Smile!" (from his 2002 album of the same name) achieved viral success; the unusual music videos for "Opera #2" and "The 7th Element" have been cited as the most prominent examples of this.[11]
Vitas has performed with entertainment labels such as Universal Music Group, and has toured extensively in several countries.[3][12] He designs his own stage costumes,[13] and employs a backing band named DIVA during live performances.[14]
Vitaliy Vladasovich Grachev was born in Daugavpils, which was then in the Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic, on 19 February 1979.[15] He soon moved with his parents to Ukraine, where he was raised in Odesa. In an interview to Ukrainian website Fakty in 2012, Grachev claimed that Vitas was his official first name on his birth certificate. At the age of 16, he officially changed his first name to the name's Ukrainian version Vitaliy.[16]
Vitas has Russian, Lithuanian and Jewish roots.[17] He is the son of costume designer Lilia Mihailovna Gracheva who was Russian and musician Vladas Arkadevich Grachev-Marantzman who was of Lithuanian and Jewish origin. His paternal grandfather, Arkadiy Davydovich Marantzman, who sang in an army choir, was Ashkenazi Jewish while his paternal grandmother was of Lithuanian descent.[note 1][18][19] Arkadiy Marantzman served in the Soviet army during World War II.[20] Vitas showed an interest in music from an early age; his grandfather taught him to play the accordion at the age of 5. He later said that he had composed at least 1,000 songs by the age of 12. He attended an art school in Odesa from the age of seven, and appeared in various theatrical productions as a teenager.[21] His dean at the art school in Odesa reportedly hailed him as "a gift from God".[citation needed]
He took the name Vitas in his teen years as he found "Vitaliy Grachev" sounded too long.[18] He regularly clashed with his father about his late night rehearsing habits. His father threatened to report him to the police as he was "behaving not quite adequately".[22] At the age of 21, Vitas and his 15-year-old girlfriend and future wife Svetlana ran away from home to Moscow, crossing the border into Russia on a train without Svetlana having the right documents.[22] They lived in bitter poverty before Vitas received public attention for his music.[22]
After being rejected from a musical college in his native Odesa, his family did not have the money to send him to a private institution.[16] As a result, Vitas, already using the name as a pseudonym, started performing at night clubs.[23][24] He initially started his career as a Michael Jackson tribute act, but also performed parodies and his own songs. He also made money, amongst others, by selling leftover bread from stores on the street as well as offering services as a photographer.[25] At night clubs, he had acts involving dancing, singing, comedy and magic tricks, including spoon bending.[25] He worked as an actor in an experimental theatre. He applied to perform with his own songs at the 1997 edition of Chervona ruta festival, but was rejected as his repertoire lacked songs in Ukrainian.[26] In 1999, Odesan regional television station Elan shot a music video for his song "Opera #1", which they recorded in Odesa.[27]
During one of his night club performances, where he performed "Opera #2", he was spotted by a Russian producer, who recommended Vitas going to Moscow. Vitas had seriously considering going to Moscow for a while around 1998–1999.[25] During a play at the experimental theatre, he was spotted by producer Sergey Pudovkin, whom he gifted a cassette of his song. A week later, Vitas and his girlfriend Svetlana left Odesa.[26]
With Pudovkin, Vitas starting working on his debut for the Russian audience. In order to make money and sustain himself and his girlfriend, he started working for youth channel TV-6.[25] They recorded a music video for "Opera #2", in which Vitas portrayed an eccentric lonely man with fish gills who lives in a bathtub with jars of fish and plays the accordion naked. The music video premiered in December 2000 and received wide public attention. Vitas started performing the song with artificial gills, which let the Russian media compare him to Ichthyander, a character in the novel Amphibian Man.[28]
On February 27, 2001, Vitas premiered his solo concert show "Opera #...", in an abridged form, at the "Russia" Concert Hall in Moscow. Performed as a teaser for the first leg of his "Philosophy of Miracle" tour, the show was filmed by TV-6 and later broadcast as part of the music program "Наша музыка". Although not well documented, official sources recall that the tour began on April 7, 2001, presumably in Naro-Fominsk.[29] Other sources confirm that the tour had already started by March 2001.[30] During that first tour, Vitas performed not only in concert halls, but also on TV shows, festivals,[31] stadiums,[32] casino halls and nightclubs. In March 2002, Vitas made his first tour in the United States of America.[33]
On March 29, 2002, Vitas premiered the second leg of his "Philosophy of Miracle" concert tour with a concert at the State Kremlin Palace in Moscow.[34] The concert was filmed by Channel One Russia and later released on DVD.
In late 2002, Vitas received an invitation from Lucio Dalla, the composer of "Caruso", to perform this song together with him at the "Sanremo in Moscow" concert in the State Kremlin Palace on November 23, 2002.[35] Mr. Dalla then invited Vitas to come to Rome to take part in the rehearsals of Toska, a modern version of Puccini's opera.[citation needed]
In dedication to his mother who died in 2001, Vitas released two albums: "Mama" and "The Songs of My Mother".[36] The latter included classic Soviet songs which were the favourite of Vitas' late mother. During the process of recording the album, Vitas befriended Soviet and Russian composer Alexandra Pakhmutova,[28] who featured in his music video for her song "The Bird of Happiness".[37]
On October 21, 2003, Vitas ended his first concert tour "Philosophy of Miracle" with its last gig in Kaliningrad.
On November 1, 2003, Vitas presented his second concert tour with the show "The Songs of My Mother" in the "Russia" Concert Hall in Moscow. Compared to the flamboyant nature of his previous Philosophy of Miracle tour, The Songs of My Mother was more conservative, drawing on classic Russian songs. From 2004 to 2006, Vitas' management, the "Pudovkin" Production Center continued "The Songs of My Mother" tour in Russia and the United States, Germany, Kazakhstan, Israel and the Baltic states.[3]
In addition to his singing career, Vitas also starred in a murder mystery television series called "Сволочь ненаглядная" ("Beloved Scoundrel"), in which he played a pop singer with an unusually high voice.[38] He also starred in a comedy called Crazy Day.[39]
In June 2006, Vitas was invited by China Central Television to take part in a grand event entitled The Year of Russia in China in Beijing. Vitas performed two songs, "The Star" and "Opera #2" during the event, marking the beginning of his popularity in China.[citation needed]
Vitas' Return Home tour, beginning in 2006, had a conservative atmosphere similar to the Songs of My Mother tour. The concert performed in Saint Petersburg on 4 March 2007 was later released on DVD on Vitas' website, as well as officially in some countries, albeit with many songs removed. The full concert in Moscow was later released on DVD.
In October 2007, Vitas was signed with now-defunct American label Gemini Sun Records. Gemini Sun released the Audio Visual Connect Series Vitas compilation CD + DVD set featuring eight music videos with the corresponding songs also on audio CD, in addition to a bonus audio track.[40] In 2008, Vitas also released "Light of A New Day", a 40-minute track of non-lyrical vocalization and instrumentation. The song is available as a free download on his website.
The Sleepless Night tour included concerts in China and more elaborate presentations than the more conservative Return Home program. Vitas performed his Return Home concert in Bucharest, Romania on 25 February 2009. The concert was broadcast on the Romanian TVR2 and TVRi television networks, achieving their highest ratings in twelve months.[41] A benefit concert, with Vitas performing "The Star", was held on 12 May 2009 in Sichuan province in memory of the victims of the previous year's earthquake there; a song known as "Mommy and Son" was released in late October 2009 in remembrance of the victims. It was the very first title track of the Mommy and Son album (released 1 September 2011), which included new songs, such as "C'est La Vie" (French for "Such is life"), "Once More", "Let the Father Teach!", "Young Rook" and others.[11]
Vitas played the role of Gude in the Chinese film Mulan, which premiered in Beijing on 16 November 2009.[42] He recorded music for the film's soundtrack.[3]
In early 2011, Vitas performed a series of seven Sleepless Night concerts in New York City, Toronto, Chicago, Miami, Vancouver, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. Later that year, he played the role of Bolshevik Comintern official Grigori Voitinsky in the Chinese propaganda film The Founding of a Party. He also starred with Huang Shengyi in the musical A Night to Be a Star.[citation needed] In March 2011, Vitas' concert tour "Mommy and Son" started in several cities of Russia. His large-scale concert at the Palace of Arts "Ukraina" in Kyiv in March 2012 was broadcast in Ukraine's main TV channels and later released in DVD. In 2013 he brought the tour to Germany, performing in several cities.
In 2012, Vitas was a guest star on several Russian talk shows, including Let Them Talk, where he was interviewed for the first time on Russian television after hiding himself from the press for about a decade.[43]
In June 2015, Vitas' unusual music video for his 2001 song "The 7th Element", which featured him as a kind of humanoid alien performing on the 2001 edition of Little Blue Light, became popular after it was posted on Reddit.[44] It sparked memes throughout the internet, where it received a considerable amount of parodies.[45] It reached its peak search on Google in 2017 when the meme became popular in Brazil as Facebook pages such as South America Memes were responsible for memes using footage from his performance of the song at the Songs of My Mother tour. On 5 October, he thanked the pages for his popularity.[46]
In 2019, Vitas released his fifteenth album Bit Bombit. He celebrated his 20th anniversary as an artist starting with a new concert tour in April 2019 in Moscow, while appearing at Evening Urgant on the day of his 40th birthday.[47] He collaborated with Australian musician and DJ Timmy Trumpet on the song "The King" and performed with him at the Belgian rave festival Tomorrowland.[48] In August 2020, Vitas' 20th anniversary EP OPERA20 was released in China.[49] The album contained songs in English, Russian, and Chinese, as well as a collaboration with Chinese singer Elvis Wang. 1,000 limited edition vinyl copies were issued.[50]
Following the COVID-19 pandemic, Vitas' touring abroad stopped and for a while, he solely performed in Russia. Since March 2022, he has withdrawn from performing publicly and focused mostly on his family.[51]
Vitas is a dual Ukrainian–Russian citizen, possessing two passports.[52]
He married his longterm girlfriend Svetlana Grankovska in 2006 in Odesa in a private ceremony solely attended by family members.[25] In 2008, their first daughter Alla was born, followed by their son Maksim in 2015. In 2021, their third child, a daughter named Alisa, was born.[53]
During the early 2000s, Vitas was often guarded in interactions with the media and seldom gave interviews. His producer Sergey Pudovkin actively tried to block opportunities for interviewers and journalists to talk to Vitas.[26] In 2003, Channel One Russia show Good Morning held a rare interview with Vitas on his career.[54] Vitas became more open towards the press in the early 2010s, holding his first in-depth interview in January 2012 on the Russian talk show Let Them Talk while showing his wife and daughter publicly for the first time.[43]
Subsequently, he appeared on the Channel One Russia show Everybody Is At Home. Later that year, he appeared on the show again to address a man's allegations that he was Vitas's biological father. After much backlash from friends and family, and the man's admission of lying, the DNA results proved that he was not Vitas's father. To show that he had no hard feelings, Vitas sang and danced with the man's mother on the show.[citation needed]
Russian[55] | English[11] | Year |
---|---|---|
Философия чуда | Philosophy of Miracle | 2001 |
Улыбнись | Smile! | 2002 |
Мама | Mama | 2003 |
Песни моей мамы | The Songs of My Mother | 2003 |
Поцелуй длиною в вечность | A Kiss as Long as Eternity | 2004 |
Возвращение домой | Return Home | 2006 |
Криком журавлиным. Возвращение домой, Часть 2 | Crane's Crying: Return Home, Part 2 | 2007 |
Хиты ХХ века | 20th Century Hits | 2008 |
** | Audio Visual Connect Series: Vitas (CD + DVD)[12] | 2008 |
Скажи, что ты любишь | Say You Love | 2009 |
Шедевры трех веков | Masterpieces of Three Centuries | 2010 |
Романсы | Romances | 2011 |
Мама и Сын | Mother and Son | 2011 |
Только ты. История моей любви, Часть 1 | Only You: My Love Story, Part 1 | 2013 |
Я подарю тебе весь мир. История моей любви, Часть 2 | I'll Give You the World: My Love Story, Part 2 | 2014 |
** | Come Just For You! | 2016 |
** | Made in China | 2016 |
Бит бомбит | Bit Bombit | 2019 |
Russian[55] | English[11] | Year |
---|---|---|
Витас в Кремле | Vitas at the Kremlin | 2002 |
Песни моей мамы | The Songs Of My Mother | 2003 |
Лучшее от Витаса на DVD | The Best from Vitas on DVD | 2007 |
Возвращение Домой в Санкт-Петербурге | Return Home in Saint Petersburg | 2007 |
Возвращение домой в Москва | Return Home in Moscow | 2007 |
Бессонная ночь Петербург | Sleepless Night in Saint Petersburg | 2010 |
Две столицы | Two Capitals | 2011 |
Лучшее от Витаса на DVD (2) | The Best from Vitas on DVD (2) | 2011 |
Мама и сын | Mommy and Son | 2013 |
Лучшее от Витаса на DVD (3) | The Best from Vitas on DVD (3) | 2014 |
Original[55] | English[11] | Year |
---|---|---|
Опера #2 | Opera #2 | 2001 |
Good Bye | ** | 2001 |
Свет Нового Дня | Light of a New Day | 2008 |
真童话 | Fairy Tale | 2010 |
That Song (Remix of 7th Element by Drangabeats) | ** | 2015 |
Делю любовь на доли | I Divide Love Into Shares | 2015 |
Roll With The Beat | ** | 2018 |
Opera #2 (HD) | ** | 2018 |
Back to the Stars | ** | 2020 |
За ней | After Her | 2020 |
无词歌 | Song Without Words | 2020 |
向着太阳
(with Elvis Wang) |
Towards the Sun | 2020 |
"The King"[56] (with Timmy Trumpet) |
** | 2020 |
OPERA20 | ** | 2020 |
Original[57] | English[58] | Year |
---|---|---|
Опера No.2 | Opera #2 | 2000 |
Опера No.1 | Opera #1 | 2001 |
Дождь в Тбилиси | Rain in Tbilisi | 2001 |
Блаженный Гуру | Blessed Guru | 2001 |
Улыбнись | Smile | 2002 |
Звезда | Star | 2003 |
Мама | Mama | 2003 |
Птица счастья | The Bird of Happiness | 2004 |
Поцелуй длиною в вечность | Kiss As Long As Eternity | 2004 |
Берега России | Shores of Russia | 2005 |
Lucia Di Lammermoor | Lucia Di Lammermoor | 2006 |
Криком журавлиным | Crane's Crying | 2006 |
Ямайка | Jamaica | 2007 |
La Donna è Mobile[59] | The woman is fickle | 2009 |
Люби меня | Love Me | 2009 |
Раз, два, три | One, Two, Three | 2011 |
Фронтовики | War Veterans | 2012 |
Мне бы в небо (Дуэт с Ксеноной) | I'd Like To Go Up To Sky (feat. Ksenona Ksenia) | 2012 |
Я подарю тебе мир | I'll Give You The World | 2013 |
Делю любовь на доли | I Divide Love Into Shares | 2015 |
Made in China (feat. Sergey Pudovkin) | ** | 2016 |
Roll With The Beat (feat. Nappy Roots) | ** | 2018 |
Подари мне любовь | Give Me Love | 2018 |
Симфоническая | Symphonic | 2018 |
Делала | Did | 2019 |
Back to the Stars | ** | 2020 |
Original | English | Year |
---|---|---|
Опера No.... | Opera #... | 2001 |
Философия чуда или Улыбнись | Philosophy of Miracle or Smile | 2002–2003 |
Песни моей мамы | The Songs of My Mother | 2003–2006 |
Возвращение домой | Return Home | 2006–2009 |
Бессонная ночь | Sleepless Night | 2009–2012 |
Мама и сын | Mommy and Son | 2011–2013 |
Скажи, что ты любишь | Say You Love | 2011 |
15 лет с вами. История моей любви | 15 Years With You. My Love Story | 2014–2017 |
Come Just For You! | ** | 2016 |
Подари мне любовь | Give Me Love | 2018–present |
20 Years | ** | 2019 |
OPERA20 | ** | TBA |
Year | Title | Role |
---|---|---|
2002 | Сволочь ненаглядная | |
2005 | Сумасшедший день | |
2009 | Mulan | Gude |
2011 | The Founding of a Party | Grigori Voitinsky |
2012 | A Night to Be a Star | Himself |
Year | Category | Recording |
---|---|---|
2001, 2002, 2003 | Best selling single Russian Record Prize | "Opera #2" |
2001 | Komsomolskaya Pravda and Internet Survey "Forum 2001" Musical Discovery of the Year | — |
2000, 2001, 2002 | Three-time-laureate of the festivals "The Song of the Year" (2000, 2001, 2002) | "Wax Figures" |
2001, 2002 | Two-time-laureate of the People Prize "Golden Gramophone" | "Opera #2", "Smile!" |
2001, 2002, 2003 | Three-time-laureate of the Musical Prize "PODIUM" for the most stylish achievements in pop music | — |
2001, 2002, 2003 | Russian "People's HIT" Prize | "Opera #2", "Smile!", "The Star" |
2001, 2003 | Radio station "HIT FM" Prize "100 Per Cent HIT" | — |
2002 | National Musical Prize "Ovation" Soloist of the Year | — |
2004 | Russian Internet portal AFISHA.COM | — |
2007 | Order of Service to the Arts | — |
2007 | Best Album – NewsMusic Poll[60] | "Crane's Crying" |
2011 | International Song Writers Contest Winner, 3rd place Music Video Category for "Opera #2". Also won second place in People's Choice vote.[61] | "Opera #2" |
Vitas is also known in Russia for several high-profile incidents, following the investigations of which he had to face criminal and administrative liability. For example, in 2003, a criminal case was initiated against him under Part 4 of Article 222 of the Russian Criminal Code (illegal arms trafficking). However, according to the prosecutor, the case against Grachev was closed due to his active repentance.[62][63]
On May 10, 2013, in Moscow, Grachev hit a cyclist, Olga Kholodova, with his car near the VVC (All-Russian Exhibition Center).[64][65][66] After being taken to the police station, the singer handed over a Makarov pistol mockup to the officers.[66] A video recording was released showing Vitas kicking one of the police officers and using obscene language against the operatives. During the investigation, it was revealed that in 2007, Grachev had been stripped of his driving license for 23 months by a Russian court for driving under the influence.[67][68] In 2008, as a Ukrainian citizen, Grachev obtained a new driver's license from Ukraine but again violated traffic rules by driving into the oncoming lane.[69] On May 27, Grachev was stripped of his driving license for 1.5 years by a magistrate of the Ostaninsky district of Moscow for refusing to undergo a medical examination under Part 1 of Article 12.26 of the Administrative Code of the Russian Federation;[68] on July 18, Grachev was formally charged with using violence against a representative of authority. During the investigation, Grachev fully admitted his guilt and cooperated with the investigation.[70] On August 26, 2013, the Ostaninsky court in Moscow found the singer guilty of committing a crime under Article 318 of the Russian Criminal Code and fined him 100,000 rubles for the incident involving the police officer.[71]
On March 21, 2018, Grachev fired a starting pistol in the courtyard of his house in the village of Barvikha on Rublyovka. The shooting continued for five hours and caused concerns among his neighbors. When police officers arrived, Vitas refused to open the door and continued shooting. As a result, the police broke down the door and took the singer to the police station, where an administrative protocol was drawn up against him. Grachev refused to undergo an alcohol intoxication test. During the inspection of his property, 45 shell casings, four cartridges, and a signal pistol were found. According to the singer's neighbors, this was not the first such shooting incident he had organized in his courtyard.[72][73]
On March 27, 2018, the Odintsovo city court sentenced Grachev to seven days of arrest under Article 20.1 of the Administrative Code (petty hooliganism), which he served in the Istrinsky special reception center; he had previously been fined 500 rubles.[74][75]
On October 23, 2022, in Moscow, at a karaoke club on Sadovaya-Kudrinskaya Street, Grachev got into a fight with an official from one of the federal ministries, made a remark using obscene language, and sprayed pepper spray into the official's eyes. The conflict was broken up by security. Vitas quickly left, while the official went to a trauma center where he was diagnosed with chemical eye burns. The injured official filed a complaint with the police. A criminal case was initiated against Vitas for causing minor harm to health.[76][77] During the investigation, the case was closed due to the reconciliation of the parties.[78]
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.