Viktor Tsoy
Born
June 21, 1962
Died
August 15, 1990 (28 years old)
Known For
Acting
Place of Birth
Leningrad, RSFSR, USSR [now St. Petersburg, Russia]
Viktor Robertovich Tsoi (Russian: Ви́ктор Ро́бертович Цой; 21 June 1962 – 15 August 1990) was a Soviet and Russian singer and songwriter who co-founded Kino, one of the most popular and musically influential bands in the history of Russian music.
Born and raised in Leningrad, Tsoi started writing songs as a teenager. Throughout his career, Tsoi contributed a plethora of musical and artistic works, including ten albums. After Kino appeared and performed in the 1987 Soviet film Assa, the band's popularity sparked, triggering a period referred to as "Kinomania", and leading to Tsoi's leading role in the 1988 Kazakh new wave art film The Needle. In 1990, after their high-profile concert at the Luzhniki Stadium, Tsoi briefly relocated to Latvia with bandmate Yuri Kasparyan to work on the band's next album. Two months after the concert, Tsoi died in a car collision.
He is regarded as one of the pioneers of Russian rock and is credited with popularizing the genre throughout the Soviet Union. He retains a devoted following in many ex-Soviet countries, such as Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Lithuania, where he is known as one of the most influential and popular people in the history of Russian music. (Wikipedia)

Rock Beyond
self (archive)
2021

Tsoi
(archive footage)
2020

The Needle Remix
Moro (archive footage)
2010

Просто хочешь ты знать
2006

Как уходили кумиры
Himself / archive footage · (1 episode)
2005

Sunny Days
Himself
1996

Last Hero
himself
1992

Sex & Perestroika
Self
1990

Viktor Tsoi and the Kino group - concert at the Olimpiysky Sports Complex
Himself / Vocals
1990

The Needle
Моro
1989

Assa
Музыкант
1987

Виктор Цой - Концерт в Донецке. Фестиваль МузЭко 1990

Rock
himself
1988

Dialogues
himself
1986

The End of a Vacation
1986

Yahha
1986
Rock around the Kremlin
himself
1985