HomeNewsWorldFor aging Belarusian rockers, a late shot at stardom

For aging Belarusian rockers, a late shot at stardom

Forced underground in the 1990s to a life of cover gigs and guitar lessons, they are re-emerging amid Belarus' political awakening.

September 07, 2020 / 09:56 IST
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Image by Sergey Ponomarev © 2020 The New York Times
Image by Sergey Ponomarev © 2020 The New York Times

Pit Pawlaw, guitar in hand, bobbed before the line of riot police guarding the presidential palace, belting out the chorus of his band’s biggest hit even as a siren blared. The protesters joined in behind him: “Hey, la-la-la-lai, don’t wait, don’t wait.”

Police stayed silent during this recent protest. But, Pawlaw said, “I felt like, in terms of their body language, they were singing along.”

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Thirty years ago, when the Soviet Union fell, rock music was Eastern Europe’s sound of change and freedom. In Russia, some of the rockers whose anthems bid farewell to communism rose to stardom, wealth and mainstream acclaim. But in neighboring Belarus, where President Alexander Lukashenko soon re-established authoritarian rule, many were forced back underground — and they have stayed there ever since.

Now, it is as if Belarusian rockers — grizzled, jaded, tired of playing cover gigs and giving guitar lessons — are emerging from as much as a quarter-century of cryogenic sleep. Their renewed relevance sheds light on the breadth of the revolution sweeping Belarus, one that has yet to unseat Lukashenko but is already reshaping society and national identity in what was long Europe’s most tightly controlled authoritarian state.