Let's Go To War!
1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:02,720 NATALIYA MEDVEDEVA LET'S GO TO WAR 2 00:00:24,800 --> 00:00:30,800 It's a fine thing to die in Ochamchire 3 00:00:33,040 --> 00:00:39,040 A slice of sunshine on your lips 4 00:00:41,720 --> 00:00:47,720 In the orange grove so fragrant 5 00:00:50,840 --> 00:00:56,480 Caressing your machine gun like a lover 6 00:00:56,640 --> 00:00:59,280 Forgetting all fear 7 00:00:59,440 --> 00:01:03,680 That the Moscow streets are lawless 8 00:01:03,840 --> 00:01:07,960 You walk as though naked 9 00:01:08,120 --> 00:01:12,280 Good and evil mean nothing 10 00:01:14,800 --> 00:01:18,880 Let's go to war 11 00:01:24,640 --> 00:01:29,680 Let's go to war 12 00:01:34,480 --> 00:01:38,960 Let's go to war 13 00:01:46,600 --> 00:01:52,600 Down narrow hallways to the frontier 14 00:01:55,280 --> 00:02:01,280 Where medieval laws still stand 15 00:02:03,680 --> 00:02:09,680 And bullets rule supreme like God 16 00:02:12,880 --> 00:02:18,520 And you, God-like with your bullets, 17 00:02:18,680 --> 00:02:21,160 Have the right of reply! 18 00:02:21,320 --> 00:02:25,560 But the Moscow snow is tainted 19 00:02:25,720 --> 00:02:30,000 There's danger in your own house 20 00:02:30,160 --> 00:02:34,160 Friend and enemy look the same 21 00:02:36,720 --> 00:02:40,640 Let's go to war 22 00:02:45,480 --> 00:02:49,880 Let's go to war 23 00:02:54,120 --> 00:02:58,680 Let's go to war 24 00:03:06,160 --> 00:03:10,200 You need so little in this life 25 00:03:10,520 --> 00:03:14,400 Just to feel like you're someone 26 00:03:14,760 --> 00:03:18,920 The cool of a weapon in your hand 27 00:03:19,160 --> 00:03:23,200 That bitter, manly scent 28 00:03:23,560 --> 00:03:27,680 A mirage of home in your eyes 29 00:03:28,000 --> 00:03:33,960 Something else in your enemy's eyes That's all! 30 00:03:34,560 --> 00:03:38,920 Let's go to war 31 00:03:43,280 --> 00:03:47,720 Let's go to war 32 00:03:52,040 --> 00:03:56,360 Let's go to war 33 00:04:00,800 --> 00:04:05,320 Let's go to war
Born in Leningrad, Natalia Medvedeva (1958-2003) left the Soviet Union in 1975 and moved first to the United States and later to France, where she worked as an actress, model, and piano bar singer of Russian folk and cabaret songs. She moved back to Russia in the early 1990s with her third husband, Eduard Limonov (1943-2020)—and, like Limonov, soon became a celebrity by cultivating a rebellious image and occupying a niche lying somewhere between counterculture and mainstream.
Medvedeva wrote for Russian periodicals like Novyi vzgliad, Smena, and Limonka, and guested on all the main talk shows of early post-Soviet television, including “Matador,” “Tema [Theme or topic],” “Akuly pera [Sharks of the Pen],” and “Pro eto [About That].” She also published autobiographical novels chronicling her transgressive lifestyle. In fact, in terms of extravagance and excesses, Medvedeva’s reputation outshone even her husband’s, who attained notoriety by detailing alleged sexual encounters with homeless Black men in 1970s New York; befriending Serbian war criminals like Radovan Karadžić (1945-) and Željko Ražnatović (alias Arkan, 1952-2000); and founding the radical nationalist organization-cum-punk movement, the National Bolshevik Party.
Soon after they returned to Russia, Medvedeva left Limonov for the lead guitarist of the trash metal band Korrozia metalla (Metal Corrosion). She died at the young age of 45, likely as a result of drug and alcohol abuse. In the mid-1990s, Medvedeva formed her own band, The Tribunal of Natalia Medvedeva, which released one album of original songs in a genre Medvedeva described as “punk cabaret”—songs that often centered on the sordid, surreal essence of the “wild 1990s.” The song featured here is “Let’s Go to War!” (Poedem na voinu, 1993), which was popular among disenfranchised alternative youth and presents a paradoxical celebration of war as an escape from the mediocrity of modern life. With her deep, heart-wrenching voice, Medvedeva evokes romanticized visions of recent conflicts, celebrating war as absolute freedom and a “beautiful way to die.” From there, the lyrics seamlessly move to post-Soviet bespredel—“the lawless streets of Moscow,” with “dirty snow” and “danger in one’s own house”—where the only way back to reality and meaning is to embrace arbitrary violence and chaos as a new, quintessentially masculine and heroic way of life. As in the cases of Limonov, Yegor Letov, or Alexander Dugin, this initially countercultural view of lawlessness and violence as sources of authenticity and identity soon extended to mainstream media and politics.
Medvedeva wrote for Russian periodicals like Novyi vzgliad, Smena, and Limonka, and guested on all the main talk shows of early post-Soviet television, including “Matador,” “Tema [Theme or topic],” “Akuly pera [Sharks of the Pen],” and “Pro eto [About That].” She also published autobiographical novels chronicling her transgressive lifestyle. In fact, in terms of extravagance and excesses, Medvedeva’s reputation outshone even her husband’s, who attained notoriety by detailing alleged sexual encounters with homeless Black men in 1970s New York; befriending Serbian war criminals like Radovan Karadžić (1945-) and Željko Ražnatović (alias Arkan, 1952-2000); and founding the radical nationalist organization-cum-punk movement, the National Bolshevik Party.
Soon after they returned to Russia, Medvedeva left Limonov for the lead guitarist of the trash metal band Korrozia metalla (Metal Corrosion). She died at the young age of 45, likely as a result of drug and alcohol abuse. In the mid-1990s, Medvedeva formed her own band, The Tribunal of Natalia Medvedeva, which released one album of original songs in a genre Medvedeva described as “punk cabaret”—songs that often centered on the sordid, surreal essence of the “wild 1990s.” The song featured here is “Let’s Go to War!” (Poedem na voinu, 1993), which was popular among disenfranchised alternative youth and presents a paradoxical celebration of war as an escape from the mediocrity of modern life. With her deep, heart-wrenching voice, Medvedeva evokes romanticized visions of recent conflicts, celebrating war as absolute freedom and a “beautiful way to die.” From there, the lyrics seamlessly move to post-Soviet bespredel—“the lawless streets of Moscow,” with “dirty snow” and “danger in one’s own house”—where the only way back to reality and meaning is to embrace arbitrary violence and chaos as a new, quintessentially masculine and heroic way of life. As in the cases of Limonov, Yegor Letov, or Alexander Dugin, this initially countercultural view of lawlessness and violence as sources of authenticity and identity soon extended to mainstream media and politics.