Russian hip-hop artist from Ulan-Ude. Known for his unusual manner of singing songs, gloomy lyrics and complex rhyming using assonance and alliteration.
Russian hip-hop artist from Ulan-Ude. Known for his unusual manner of singing songs, gloomy lyrics and complex rhyming using assonance and alliteration.
On August 30, a video for the song "Poem about the Motherland" was released. The rapper dedicated the lines of the composition to his small homeland - the city of Ulan-Ude, the capital of the Republic of Buryatia. The text describes the hopelessness of the life of Dmitry's countrymen and the severity of his native places. The video was filmed in the vastness of this Siberian republic and in the Vostochny microdistrict itself, where the author grew up. The clip contains references to the work of the punk rock band Orgasm of Nostradamus - inscriptions (“the thoughts of the fire victims have nowhere to spend the night”, “black quarantine in the center of dreams”, “the puppet theater fucked up” and “a sunny bunny on the open belly”), which are lines from their songs. Later, Husky admitted that the late leader of this group, Alexei Fishev, known by the nickname "The Corner", is one of the people who influenced his work. On September 11, the musician's first song in the psychedelic rock genre was released - "Man on the Internet", followed by "Kill the Rapper" and "Life-giving Flow".
On October 7, 2019, the birthday of Vladimir Putin, a new version of the track “Seventh of October” and a video clip for it were released.
On September 11, the musician's first song in the psychedelic rock genre was released - "Man on the Internet", followed by "Kill the Rapper" and "Life-giving Flow".
On October 7, 2019, the birthday of Vladimir Putin, a new version of the track “Seventh of October” and a video clip for it were released.
On August 30, a video for the song "Poem about the Motherland" was released. The rapper dedicated the lines of the composition to his small homeland - the city of Ulan-Ude, the capital of the Republic of Buryatia. The text describes the hopelessness of the life of Dmitry's countrymen and the severity of his native places. The video was filmed in the vastness of this Siberian republic and in the Vostochny microdistrict itself, where the author grew up. The clip contains references to the work of the punk rock band Orgasm of Nostradamus - inscriptions (“the thoughts of the fire victims have nowhere to spend the night”, “black quarantine in the center of dreams”, “the puppet theater fucked up” and “a sunny bunny on the open belly”), which are lines from their songs. Later, Husky admitted that the late leader of this group, Alexei Fishev, known by the nickname "The Corner", is one of the people who influenced his work.
Husky's second full-length studio album, Favorite Songs of (Imaginary) People, was released on April 1, 2017 and debuted at #4 on iTunes and #5 on Google Play. On May 25, 2017, Husky releases a video clip for the song "Ai", and on July 13 of the same year - the video "Pyroman 17" and "Mole 17" already on November 23, 2017.
On April 18, 2018, a video for the song "Judas" was released along with the song[18]. This video was voted the best indie music video of 2018 at the Jager Music Awards.
CAREER
In 2011, he participated in the “9 Official MC Battle of Hip-Hop.Ru”, where he reached the 3rd round, losing to the Next MC.
In the same year, he publishes his debut video clip for the song "Seventh of October" on YouTube. The composition had an acute social connotation and was timed to coincide with the birthday of Vladimir Putin.
In 2013, another video was filmed, "Spaceplane", and the release of Husky's debut album, "Sbch life" took place.
During the development of his career, Kuznetsov met the writer Zakhar Prilepin, who in 2014 took part in the recording of his composition "It's time to bring down".
In 2016, the musician released a video for the song "Chernym-cherno". Then came such video clips as "Panelka" and "Bullet-Fool".
In 2014, Dmitry, as a friend of Zakhar Prilepin, went to the Donbass, where he worked as a personal photographer for the colonel of the armed forces of the DPR, the commander of Sparta Arsen Sergeevich Pavlov (Motorola). In 2017, together with rapper Ptakha, he took part in the Lava Fest festival organized by Zakhar Prilepin at the front line of the DPR.
In 2017, Dmitry made his directorial debut. His short film "Psychotronics" became one of the first five films of the "Media Lab", founded in 2017 by Yandex.Taxi. The film included the premiere of the composition "Watching", which Dmitry wrote specifically for the film.
BIOGRAPHY
Dmitry Nikolaevich Kuznetsov was born on February 10, 1993 in Irkutsk, from where he moved to Buryatia at the age of three months. He spent his early years in the village with his aunt, his mother's sister. When it was time to go to school, he moved to Ulan-Ude, where he was raised by his mother. Dmitry grew up in the Vostochny microdistrict, to which he would later dedicate the song “Poem about the Motherland”.
At the age of 15, Dmitry, inspired by the work of "Casta" and "Dots", made his first attempts to compose a rap.
In 2010, Dmitry passed the Unified State Exam in Russian with 100 points, which allowed him to enter the Faculty of Journalism of Moscow State University.
In his first year, Dmitry began working in his specialty and, as a journalist, collaborated with the NTV, All-Russian State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company and Russia television channels.
Russian hip-hop artist from Ulan-Ude. Known for his unusual manner of singing songs, gloomy lyrics and complex rhyming using assonance and alliteration.
Russian hip-hop artist from Ulan-Ude. Known for his unusual manner of singing songs, gloomy lyrics and complex rhyming using assonance and alliteration.