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Anna MARLY

photo Anna MARLY

Anna Marly, born Anna Betoulinski (Russian Анна Юрьевна Бетулинская) (1917 - 2006), is a singer and guitarist from Russia. Born October 30, 1917 in St. Petersburg during the Russian Revolution, during which his father was shot, Betoulinski Anna left Russia for France in the early 1920s with his mother, his sister and her nanny. At the age of thirteen years the nanny gave him a guitar. This gift she will never separate his life will change. A few years later, she took the name of Anna Marly (surname found in the directory) to dance in the Ballets Russes before embarking on a singing career in Parisian cabarets. Anna Marly knows another exodus in May 1940 which leads, via Spain and Portugal, to London in 1941 where she enlisted as a canteen at the headquarters of the Free French Forces of Carlton Garden. There she composed at the guitar, his Song of the Partisans. It was composed in 1942 the music and lyrics of Russian Song of the Partisans, whose French lyrics were written in 1943 in London by Joseph Kessel and Maurice Druon. The Song of the Partisans, "the Marseillaise of the Resistance", was created in 1943 in London. Immediately, it became the anthem of the French Resistance, and even European. There is also a call to the fraternal struggle for freedom: "It is we who break through the prison bars for our brothers" the certainty that the battle is never in vain, "if you fall, a friend comes out of the shadow in your place ". Become indicative of the issue of BBC radio Honneur et Patrie, then as a sign of recognition in the bush, The Song of the Partisans had become a worldwide success. Anna chose to whistle the song because the melody whistled remained audible above the jamming of the BBC made by the Germans. She also composed 300 songs, including The lament of partisan takeover by Joan Baez and Leonard Cohen (The Partisan), and three-time A song for Edith Piaf. After the war, Anna Marly left France for South America and travels Africa before settling in the U.S.. June 17, 2000, Anna Marly sang at the Pantheon, with Ch heart of the French army, the Song of supporters on the eve of the 60th anniversary of the Appeal of 18 June 1940 General de Gaulle. She died February 15, 2006 in Alaska, where she lived. A small square named after him at Meudon, where she is also an honorary citizen.
Google machine translation: Anna MARLY's original bio

cover Chant des Partisans Robert Martin
Chant des Partisans
Anna MARLY
Publisher : Robert Martin
Genre : Orchestra
Group : Wind band
Style & options : Official ceremonies
Set Wind Band (MARL04380-BA) : 100,29
Choirs (MARL04380-CH) : 32,85
Full score (MARL04380-CO) : 27,96

cover Chant des Partisans Robert Martin
Chant des Partisans
Anna MARLY
Arr : MONNIOTTE
Publisher : Robert Martin
Genre : Orchestra
Group : Wind band
Style & options : Music with choirs, voice
Set Wind Band (MARL00163-BA) : 67,64
Full score (MARL00163-CO) : 27,96

cover Chant de la Libération (le) Robert Martin
Chant de la Libération (le)
Anna MARLY
Arr : CLOWEZ
Publisher : Robert Martin
Genre : Orchestra
Group : Wind band
Style & options : Official ceremonies
Set Wind Band (MARL00162-BA) : 67,64
Full score (MARL00162-CO) : 22,37