DiDuLa

DiDuLa
DiDuLa in 2022
DiDuLa in 2022
Background information
Born
Valery Mikhailovich Didula

(1970-01-24) January 24, 1970 (age 56)
Grodno, Byelorussian SSR, Soviet Union (present-day Belarus)
GenresFlamenco, folk, folk-pop, instrumental, new age, taarab
InstrumentsAcoustic guitar, acoustic-electric guitar, classical guitar, flamenco guitar, Greek bouzouki, Irish bouzouki, steel-string acoustic guitar
Years active1989–present
LabelsNOX, Artur, PMI, Kvadro-Disk, United
Member ofDiDuLa (2002-present)
Formerly ofThe Scarlet Dawns (1989-1991)
The White Dews (1991-????)
Spouse(s)
Leila Khamrabaeva (m. 2004 div. 2006)
EVgenika (m. 2013 div. 2020)
Awards"Grand Prix" (2002)
"White Elephant" (2010)
Websitedidula.com

Valery Mikhailovich Didula (Belarusian: Валерій Міхайловіч ДзідзюляRomanized: Valeriy Mikhaylovich Dzidzyulya), better known by his stage name, DiDuLa, is a Soviet-Belarusian guitarist, composer and producer. He is known as the founder of the Belarusian-Russian instrumental folk band, DiDuLa.[1][2]

Didula grew up in Grodno, Belarus, and was fascinated by music from a young age. He learned how to play the guitar at the age of five,[1] and wrote his first compositions at 16 years old.[3] In 1989, Didula joined the Scarlet Dawns, a dance ensemble. He learned a lot about music production from his mentor Nikolai Khitrik, composer of the Scarlet Dawns.

After the Scarlet Dawns' disbandment in 1991, Didula joined the White Dews, another dance ensemble where mostly Polish, Belarusian, Ukrainian and Gypsy folk dances were performed.[4] As part of this ensemble, Didula first went on tour in Europe, visiting countries such as Spain, Italy, Poland, Switzerland, France, Germany.[1][4] In Spain, he became acquainted with the flamenco genre.[4]

After the disbandment of the White Dews, DiDuLa went on to work on his solo career. Having created instrumental hits such as "Flamenco," "Isadora," "Arabica," "Leila," and "Flight to Mercury," he gained a huge fanbase. In August 2002, DiDuLa formed the band named after his surname, and went on to create hits such as "Legend", "The Path Home", "Cave Town of Inkerman", "Train to Barcelona" and "Colorful Dreams".

Early life (1970-1989)

Childhood

Didula was born on January 24, 1970, in Grodno, Belarus, to Mikhail and Galina Didula, both connoisseurs of music.[5] His father, Mikhail, was a highly skilled mechanic, and his mother, Galina, was an accountant.[6] At the age of five, Galina gifted Didula his first guitar as a birthday present, and he was hooked on it from then on. Like any child, Didula had all sorts of record players as a child, which also had a strong influence on him. His first guitar also marked the beginning of his experiments with sound. He attached a pickup to the guitar, used homemade amplifiers, and devised all sorts of devices.[7]

"When I was five, my mother gave me a guitar. My first impressions, of course, were very memorable: a big, beautiful toy, shiny, with taut strings." Didula states in an interview, "Later, as an adult, I realized it was a wonderful instrument, capable of bringing both joy and sorrow. You need to talk to a guitar, and it will tell you a lot. Today, the guitar is a whole world for me. Music defies words; it's difficult to talk about. It's a way of self-expression, my alter ego, an instrument with its own character, its own surprises, its own pros and cons. Between me and the guitar lies a small, but incredibly interesting life."[8]

Adolescense

Around the age of 14 or 15, his passion for the guitar grew into a conscious need, and the instrument became an integral part of his life. At 16, he wrote his first compositions.[3] Didula began his guitar lessons, the teacher taught him different chords and the various playing styles and techniques. This was the beginning, the first steps in mastering the guitar.[7] Didula and his friends, all guitar enthusiasts, constantly competed with each other, which continually pushed them to improve their skills. Didula and his friends also attended concerts and weddings to see guitarists play. He later got employed for a job at the Radiopribor plant the same year.[9]

Career

The Scarlet Dawns and the White Dews

Didyulya's professional guitar career began around 1989, when he played as the third guitarist in the vocal and dance ensemble, the Scarlet Dawns.[10] The Scarlet Dawns performed on state farms, collective farms, and concert halls. Nikolai Khitrik, the composer of the Scarlet Dawns, described by Didula as his "mentor",[11] provided him with much experience with music production. During the process, several people quit, after which the performances continued at a local cooperative restaurant. It was an incredible experience, six hours of playing every evening, seven days a week, and having breaks were rare. A wide variety of music was played throughout the process. Didula also earned his first paychecks, which he was very proud of, as earning money doing what he loves is everyone's dream.[7]

After the disbandment of the Scarlet Dawns in 1991, Didulya joined the White Dews, another dance ensemble in Belarus. The ensemble was large and flexible, and Didula worked as a sound engineer. The composer of the White Dews, Yevgeny Alexandrovich Shtop, taught Didula a lot about how to produce sound, the sound of different instruments, and how the audience perceives a particular number.[7] Didula toured with the White Dews throughout Europe, visiting countries such as Spain, Italy, Poland, Switzerland, France, Germany.[1][4] He was fascinated by the diversity and music of these different European cultures, he especially claims to have been "infected" with flamenco, the traditional Spanish genre of music.[3] "Who knows what style I would be working in now if I hadn't once been fortunate enough to visit Spain. The sound of a classical Spanish nylon-string instrument and the amazing sound of wood was mesmerizing." Didula stated in an interview, "My blood boiled and my pulse quickened when I heard Spanish music. It was this music that opened its passionate embrace to me, captivated me with its freedom-loving nature, and infected me with the rhythm of flamenco. This style is my now calling card today."[12][13]

Solo career

1991-1998

After the disbandment of the White Dews, Didula went on to work on his solo career, working with his former band members Vladimir Zakharov (guitarist) and Dmitry Kurakulov (choreographer). Some time later, Didula heard about a music competition on Belarusian television that invited young musicians. He decided to give it a try. If a musician made it through the qualifying round, a future was in store. Didula, Kurakulov, and Zakharov took their equipment and traveled to Gdańsk, Poland, where the competition was being held. After passing the qualifying round, the trio went on to pass through the next round, eventually performing at the gala concert.[7] This was Didula's first major success, his dream of reaching a large audience came true. There, he met professional directors and editors who assisted him, shared their experiences, and offered advice on his aspirations and direction. It was on this day that Didula met his other mentor, honored Belarusian composer Oleg Eliseenkov, who played a crucial role in his advancement in the competition.[14]

Thanks to his resounding success, Didula became a professional solo guitarist. Didula later moved to Minsk, where he found a job as a sales consultant at entrepreneur and pianist Igor Bruskin's music store. His acquaintance with Bruskin allowed Didula to gain significant experience interacting and collaborating with recording studios, concert halls, and other musical organizations. Later on, a program for the 1998 Slavic Bazaar festival in Vitbesk invited all the musicians who had passed in the competition Didula competed in. The festival performance at the Slavic Bazaar was broadcast on television throughout the CIS, the Baltic countries, Poland, and Bulgaria. The festival inspired Didula to pursue a solo career.[7] After the Slavic Bazaar festival, Didula bid farewell to Igor Bruskin and moved to Moscow, Russia that same year. Didula was intimidated how culturally different Russia was from Belarus. Nevertheless, he believed in success and overcoming difficulties. Didula staged street performances on Arbat Street of his own free will.[8]

1999-2001

Didula met Sergey Kulishenko, who worked a well-paid commercial job. Kulishenko wanted to learn to play the guitar, and Didula taught his first student. Kulishenko also showed interest in Didula's studies, helped with housing and instruments, and booked his first professional recording at guitarist Mei Lian's studio. This high-quality recording studio determined the direction of Didula's future work. Eight compositions were recorded at Mei Lian's studio, all of them were to be included on Didula's new album. Didula clearly remembers working with Mei Lian—a talented guitarist and composer, a good teacher, and a respected friend. Together with Kulishenko, Didula began exploring the possibility of creating his own home recording studio and researched the music equipment market.[15]

Didula's team met Sergey Migachev, a sound producer working for Samara musician and singer, Arkady Motov, who was well-versed in music, analog technology, and modern computers. After a year of intense collaboration, with the support of Kulishenko and Migachev, Didula recorded and released their debut album, Flamenco.[15] When Didula tried to sign with major Russian record labels, they all turned him down, claiming that the instrumental genre was "uninteresting" for Russia. The lack of financial resources to widely distribute Didula's music left Didula's company in a bind and undermined the band's morale. At one of his club concerts, Didula met Sergey Baldin, who suggested that Didula and his team arrange a meeting with representatives working for Monolit Records to discuss collaboration. After listening to the material, Monolit's management, after much deliberation, declined.[16]

In spite of the failure of his collaboration with Monolit, Baldin's faith inspired Didula to continue playing and focus on club performances. By performing and analyzing what the audience liked best, Didula was able to improve his album and create new, interesting sounds on the guitar. At one of his concerts, employees of Global Music met with Didula and invited him to a meeting. Global Music expressed interest in the project and agreed to collaborate. A first contract was signed with Didula, but for unknown reasons, the company remained inactive. The project reached a dead end, and Didula terminated his contract with Global Music.[16]

Despite the failure of his collaboration with Monolit and Global, six months of collaboration bore fruit. Didula met his current concert director, Timur Salikhov, with whom he works with to this day.[15] Some time later, Didula received a call from the Russian Studio, offering to include one of his compositions in a compilation. At the office where the meeting was scheduled, Didula spoke with Iosif Prigozhin, a specialist at the Russian Studio. Prigozhin explained that he was creating a new label, NOX Music, was interested in new projects, and would like to collaborate with Didula. Didula immediately agreed, and a new contract was signed with NOX.[16]

Didula finally re-released Flamenco in July 2000, which was promoted by NOX. A music video for the song "Isadora" was filmed and directed by Guria Atneva,[17] with Ruslana Gerasemenkova[17] serving as the camera operator. Another music video for the song "Flamenco" was filmed with Alla Dukhova, and her ballet group Todes dancing in the video.[16] Didula's music videos began airing on television, and he himself appeared on Dmitry Dibrov's TV show Anthropology, where he performed, chatted, and presented the album to viewers. Afterward, album sales soared. Didula began a joint club concert tour with Migachev's boss, Samara musician and singer Arkady Motov.[15] "Spanish music has had a huge influence on my work," Didula explained, "as I lived in Spain for quite a while and observed firsthand how local musicians worked in pubs, bars, and restaurants. Now I incorporate some of this into my performances."[8]

2002-2006

Didula met film director, Andrei Konchalovsky, and starred in his film House of Fools (2002) as the guitarist and partner of Canadian singer, songwriter, and musician Bryan Adams, who acted as himself in the film. House of Fools won the Grand Prix at the 2002 Venice Film Festival.[7] That same year, Didula released his second studio album, The Road to Baghdad, which was produced by Migachev and promoted by NOX. Two new music videos for "Arabica" and "Leila" were directed and filmed by Alexandra Igudina.[11] Didula worked as a composer, arranger, and producer, recording several songs with renowned Spanish singer Plácido Domingo, Bryan Adams, and Syrian-Russian singer Avraam Russo.[7] On Didula's own album, The Road to Baghdad, Russo provided vocals in "Leila" and appeared in its music video. Didula also helped produce Russo's own songs, "Amor," "Baila que Baila," and "Quiereme." That same year, Didula, along with Sergey Sorokin, assisted Russian-Lithuanian singer Kristina Orbakaitė on recorded her song "Rio de Janeiro".[7] His touring activities expand, reaching new cities and clubs. During the tours, he acquired new instruments, expenses, and ideas, which positively impacted his creativity.

In August 2002, DiDuLa formed his band named after him. Initially composed of Yaroslav Oboldin (bassist), Kirill Rossolimo and Gamlet Farzaliyev (percussionists), Alexander Leonov (keyboardist), and Boris Solodovnikov (sound engineer).[13] In 2003, Didula and renowned pianist, Dmitry Malikov, collaborated and released the composition "Satin Shores", which became the lead single for DiDuLa's first compilation album, The Best: Satin Shores. On September 9, 2003, DiDuLa performed their first concert at the Central House of Artists in Moscow, Russia. The band performed Didula's compositions from Flamenco and The Road to Baghdad, and new compositions that would later be released on their new album, Legend. The concert was directed by Timur Salikhov, managed by Boris Zeitlin, and recorded by Sergey Kulishenko, Sergey Vasilievsky, and Max Mostovik.[18] In 2004, DiDuLa recorded and released their first album together, Legend, which included the fan-favorite composition "The Way Home".[15] That same year, the band performed a major concert at the Oktyarbsky Concert Hall in Saint-Petersburg, with its usual 4,000-capacity overflowing with fans.[7]

DiDuLa later performed their biggest concert yet at the Rossiya State Central Concert Hall in Moscow on April 7, 2005. The band released a live album CD for the concert on May 25, 2006.[7] A DVD for the concert was also released. That same year, the band recorded and released two new studio albums, "Cave Town of Inkerman" and "Colorful Dreams",[15] and a compilation, "Grand Collection" (released before "Colorful Dreams"). Finally, a box set of all DiDuLa's studio albums and live album was released. 2006 turned out to be a very fruitful year for the band.[7] Later on, Russian singer, Zoya Ledava, recorded a higher-pitched version of "Cave Town of Inkerman" with her vocals sang over it.

2007-2014

DiDuLa released another studio album in 2007, Music of the Never-Shot Cinema. He performed "Dolphins" alongside Dmitry Malikov in his program, "Pianomania", that same year.[19] Didula also assisted Belarusian composer and guitarist, Denis Asimovich, in recording his album Hommage to Cheslav Drozdevich, and it was thanks to his participation that the recording of "Dedication to Cheslav Drozdevich" was completed in 2008 shortly before Denis Asimovich's death that same year.[9] Later on, DiDuLa released their documentary-musical film The Road of Six Strings, documenting the history of the band. Sometime in 2009, DiDuLa performed a major concert at the Oktyabrsky Concert Hall,[15] Uzbek rhythmic gymnast, Zarina Mukhitdinova, appeared as a guest dancer for the performance of "Colorful Dreams".

On March 4, 2010, DiDuLa released their seventh studio album, Aroma. On December 2, 2010, DiDuLa performed at a grand concert at the State Kremlin Palace in Moscow. Thirty compositions were performed and it lasted approximately three hours, the concert also featured renowned Siberian composer, Li Otta's OTTA Orchestra.[20] After the concert, DiDuLa and the OTTA Orchestra toured together throughout 2011. On December 8, 2011, DiDuLa performed at another grand concert at the State Kremlin Palace. Unlike the previous Kremlin concert, fewer compositions were performed. The OTTA Orchestra performed alongside the band again. After this performance, a friend of DiDuLa's met a woman named Evgenia Kostennikova, whom he started dating.

On December 6, 2012, DiDuLa released their eighth album Ornamental, featuring compositions initially performed with the OTTA Orchestra at the Kremlin concerts. That same year, Didula assisted Igor Dedusenko on producing his album Prayer (2012). From 2012 to 2013, Didula toured the United States, performing in cities such as Miami[21] and New York.[22] In 2013, the compilation album Once Day Today was released. Didula and Kostennikova married in 2013,[23] and gave birth to a daughter named Arina around 2015. In 2014, DiDuLa collaborated with Australian pop singer, Max Lawrence, on a song titled "Now You're Gone". They applied the song to for parcipitation in Eurovision, which was supported by the Belarusian public. Although the Belarusian public (including their president) wanted DiDuLa and Lawrence to represent their country at Eurovision, Belarus was ultimately represented by another singer, Teo.[24][25]

2015-2019

Didula's wife, Evgenia Kostennikova, now going by the stage name, EVgenika, began performing with her husband in 2015.[26] Throughout 2016, EVgenika performed with the band in clubs such as Jagger,[27] Red,[28] and Volta.[29] Didula also assisted EVgenika in producing her debut self-titled studio album that same year.

COVID Era

TBA

2023-2026

TBA

Awards

"DiDuLa" lineup

Band

Year Guitarist Bassist Keyboardists Percussionists Woodwinds Brass Strings Dancers
2002 Valery Didula Yaroslav Oboldin Alexander Leonov Kirill Rossolimo, Gamlet Farzaliyev - - - -
2003 Valery Didula Yaroslav Oboldin Alexander Leonov Kirill Rossolimo, Gamlet Farzaliyev - - - Aliyah Kurbanova, Karina Bagmadzhyan
2004 Valery Didula Yaroslav Oboldin Alexander Leonov J. Zair Omer, Andrei Atabekov - - - Aliyah Kurbanova, Karina Bagmadzhyan
2005 Valery Didula Yaroslav Oboldin Alexander Leonov J. Zair Omer, Andrei Atabekov - - - Aliyah Kurbanova, Natalia Riabchenko
2006 Valery Didula Yaroslav Oboldin Alexander Leonov Alexander Sazonov, Andrei Atabekov; Rustem Bari, Andrei Atabekov - - - Natalia Riabchenko; Amira
2007 Valery Didula Yaroslav Oboldin Alex Astero Rustem Bari, Andrei Atabekov - - - Karina Bagmadzhyan
2008 Valery Didula Yaroslav Oboldin Alex Astero Rustem Bari, Andrei Atabekov Valery Skladanny - - Karina Bagmadzhyan
2009 Valery Didula Yaroslav Oboldin Alex Astero Rustem Bari, Andrei Atabekov Valery Skladanny - - Natalia Vorontsova
2010 Valery Didula Yaroslav Oboldin Alex Astero; Khaibula Magomedov Rustem Bari, Andrei Atabekov; Rustem Bari, Alexander Leer Valery Skladanny - - -
2011 Valery Didula Artem Lapin Khaibula Magomedov Rustem Bari, Alexander Leer Valery Skladanny Ramil Mulikov - -
2012 Valery Didula Artem Lapin Khaibula Magomedov Rustem Bari, Alexander Leer Valery Skladanny Ramil Mulikov - -
2013 Valery Didula Artem Lapin Khaibula Magomedov Rustem Bari, Alexander Leer Valery Skladanny Ramil Mulikov - -
2014 Valery Didula Philip Borodin Khaibula Magomedov Rustem Bari, Alexander Leer Valery Skladanny Ramil Mulikov - -
2015 Valery Didula Philip Borodin Khaibula Magomedov Rustem Bari, Alexander Leer Valery Skladanny Ramil Mulikov - -
2016 Valery Didula Philip Borodin Khaibula Magomedov Rustem Bari, Alexander Leer Valery Skladanny Ramil Mulikov - -
2017 Valery Didula Philip Borodin Khaibula Magomedov Rustem Bari, Alexander Leer Valery Skladanny Ramil Mulikov ??? -
2018 Valery Didula Philip Borodin Khaibula Magomedov Rustem Bari, Alexander Leer Valery Skladanny Ramil Mulikov ??? -
2019 Valery Didula Philip Borodin Khaibula Magomedov Rustem Bari, Alexander Leer Valery Skladanny Ramil Mulikov ??? -
2020 Valery Didula Vitaly Barmenkov Khaibula Magomedov Vasily Koloda, Mikhail Drumberg Valery Skladanny - Yekaterina Smirnova, Araksia Kirakosyan, Lidiya Shabalina -
2021 Valery Didula Vitaly Barmenkov Khaibula Magomedov Vasily Koloda, Mikhail Drumberg Valery Skladanny - Yekaterina Smirnova, Araksia Kirakosyan, Lidiya Shabalina -
2022 Valery Didula Vitaly Barmenkov - Vasily Koloda, Mikhail Drumberg Valery Skladanny - Yekaterina Smirnova, Araksia Kirakosyan, Lidiya Shabalina -
2023 Valery Didula Vitaly Barmenkov Ivan Aksenov Vasily Koloda, Mikhail Drumberg Valery Skladanny - Yekaterina Smirnova, Araksia Kirakosyan, Lidiya Shabalina -
2024 Valery Didula Vitaly Barmenkov Ivan Aksenov Vasily Koloda, Mikhail Drumberg Valery Skladanny - Yekaterina Smirnova, Araksia Kirakosyan, Lidiya Shabalina -
2025 Valery Didula Vitaly Barmenkov Ivan Aksenov Vasily Koloda, Mikhail Drumberg Valery Skladanny - Yekaterina Smirnova, Araksia Kirakosyan, Lidiya Shabalina -
2026 Valery Didula Vitaly Barmenkov Ivan Aksenov Vasily Koloda, Mikhail Drumberg Valery Skladanny - Yekaterina Smirnova, Araksia Kirakosyan, Lidiya Shabalina -

Behind-the-scenes

Sound engineers:
2002 Boris Solodovnikov, Sergey Migachev
2003 Boris Solodovnikov, Sergey Migachev
2004 Boris Solodovnikov, Sergey Migachev
2005 Boris Solodovnikov, Sergey Migachev
2006 Raisa Struk, Marina Vydshedko; Sergey Mihachev
2007 Sergey Migachev
2008 Sergey Migachev
2009 Denis Golikov, Sergey Migachev
2010 ???
2011 ???
2012 ???
2013 ???
2014 ???
2015 ???
2016 ???
2017 ???
2018 ???
2019 ???
2020 Alexander Ivankov
2021 Alexander Ivankov
2022 Alexander Ivankov
2023 Alexander Ivankov
2024 Alexander Ivankov
2025 Alexander Ivankov
2026 Alexander Ivankov

Discography

Studio albums

  • Flamenco (2000)
  • The Road to Baghdad (2002)
  • Legend (2004)
  • Cave Town of Inkerman (2006)
  • Colorful Dreams (2006)
  • Music of the Never-Shot Cinema (2007)
  • Aroma (2010)
  • Ornamental (2012)
  • Aquamarine (with Chris Wonderful) (2017)
  • The Seventh Sense (2019)
  • 2021 (2021)
  • Seasons (2025)

Live albums

  • Live in Moscow (2006)
  • Live in St. Petersburg (2009)
  • Live in Kremlin (2013)
  • Live with String Quartet (2022)

Compilations

  • The Best: Satin Shores (2003)
  • Grand Collection (2006)
  • One Day Today (2013)

Production work

  • Hommage to Cheslav Drozdievich by Denis Asimovich (2008)
  • Prayer by Igor Dedusenko (2012)

Movies

Music videos

  • "Flamenco"
  • "Isadora"
  • "Rumba"
  • "Spain"
  • "Arabica"
  • "Leila (feat. Avraam Russo)"
  • "Cave Town of Inkerman"
  • "Train to Barcelona"
  • "On the Threshold"
  • "Cave Town of Inkerman (feat. Zoya Ledava)"
  • "Chapiteau"
  • "In the Reflection"

References

  1. ^ a b c d "– Russian Guitar Virtuoso to Perform in New York". Retrieved 2020-02-13.
  2. ^ Якубовская, Анжела (May 29, 2013). "Интервью с музыкантом, композитором, уникальным гитаристом ДиДюЛей". Правда.Ру.
  3. ^ a b c "Didjulja". abc-guitars.com (in French).
  4. ^ a b c d "Биография Валерий ДиДюЛя". peoples.ru.
  5. ^ "Дидюля". 24SMI.
  6. ^ "Семья Дидюли: жена и дети. Тайны личной жизни музыканта / Представители шоу-бизнеса". izhena.ru. Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Kargin, Alex. "О Валерий ДиДюЛя, Биография". PEOPLES.RU (in Russian). Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  8. ^ a b c https://web.archive.org/web/20080620045512/http://www.mkset.ru/news/culture/5989/
  9. ^ a b "Иллюстрированный биографический энциклопедический словарь". abc-guitars.com. Retrieved 2020-02-20.
  10. ^ "[Flamenco Guitar] DiDuLa (ДиДюЛя) - Discography (2000-2021) (21CD) [FLAC]". Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  11. ^ a b "ДиДюЛя - Благодарности". didula.com (in Russian). Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  12. ^ "Дидюля: Российский зритель широк душой". Российская газета. 3 March 2011.
  13. ^ a b "Иллюстрированный биографический энциклопедический словарь". abc-guitars.com. Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  14. ^ "Oleg Eliseenkov passed away". ncip.by. Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g "ДиДюЛя - История". didula.com (in Russian). Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  16. ^ a b c d Kargin, Alex. "О Валерий ДиДюЛя, Биография". PEOPLES.RU (in Russian). Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  17. ^ a b "ДиДюЛя - Благодарности". didula.com (in Russian). Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  18. ^ ДиДюЛя (2022-07-08). ДиДюЛя - Концерт в ЦДХ 2003г. Retrieved 2026-02-23 – via YouTube.
  19. ^ degensres (2014-01-04). Дмитрий Маликов & Дидюля - Дельфины ( Pianomaniя 2007 ). Retrieved 2026-02-23 – via YouTube.
  20. ^ ДиДюЛя (2023-06-24). ДиДюЛя - Live in Kremlin 2010г. Retrieved 2026-02-24 – via YouTube.
  21. ^ Arsen Uvaydov (2012-12-08). Didula Miami Reklama 01-24-2013. Retrieved 2026-02-24 – via YouTube.
  22. ^ "DiDuLa at The Town Hall". doNYC. Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  23. ^ "Evgenia Didula: Biography of the singer - Salve Music".
  24. ^ "DiDuLa - biography on Kontramarka.de website". kontramarka.de. Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  25. ^ "BELARUS : President Asked to Void the Eurovision 2014 National Final Results". Eurovision Ireland. 2014-01-13. Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  26. ^ ЕВГЕНИКА (2015-07-14). ДиДюЛя - Концерт в Москве 16/04/15 (LIVE IN MOSCOW). Retrieved 2026-02-24 – via YouTube.
  27. ^ jaggerlivemusic (2016-08-09). ДиДюЛя в Джаггере с премьерой 23 06 2016. Retrieved 2026-02-24 – via YouTube.
  28. ^ ЕВГЕНИКА (2017-11-26). ЕВГЕНИКА БОЛЬШОЙ КОНЦЕРТ в клубе RED (Москва 2016). Retrieved 2026-02-24 – via YouTube.
  29. ^ ЕВГЕНИКА (2017-11-26). #ЕВГЕНИКА БОЛЬШОЙ КОНЦЕРТ в клубе VOLTA (Москва 2016). Retrieved 2026-02-24 – via YouTube.
  30. ^ "KINOGLAZ : DIDULA Valery (Person)". kinoglaz.fr. Retrieved 2026-02-24.