New Wave
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New Wave is a music festival established on January 1, 2002. It is a music festival.
New Wave
Summary
New Wave is a music festival[1]. It draws 28 Wikipedia views per month (music_festival category, ranking #129 of 910).[2]
Key Facts
- New Wave is the creator of Igor Krutoy[3].
- New Wave is the creator of Raimonds Pauls[4].
- New Wave is in the country of Latvia[5].
- New Wave's instance of is recorded as music festival[6].
- New Wave's instance of is recorded as annual music competition[7].
- New Wave's instance of is recorded as television franchise[8].
- New Wave's founder is recorded as Igor Krutoy[9].
- New Wave's founder is recorded as Raimonds Pauls[10].
- New Wave's location is recorded as Sochi[11].
- New Wave's Commons category is recorded as New Wave (competition)[12].
- New Wave's country of origin is recorded as Russia[13].
- +2002-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of New Wave[14].
- New Wave's start time is recorded as +2002-00-00T00:00:00Z[15].
- New Wave's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02wbxmv[16].
- New Wave's participant is recorded as Latvia[17].
- New Wave's participant is recorded as Russia[18].
- New Wave's participant is recorded as Armenia[19].
- New Wave's participant is recorded as Belarus[20].
- New Wave's participant is recorded as Germany[21].
- New Wave's participant is recorded as Georgia[22].
- New Wave's participant is recorded as Italy[23].
- New Wave's participant is recorded as Kazakhstan[24].
- New Wave's participant is recorded as Canada[25].
- New Wave's participant is recorded as North Macedonia[26].
- New Wave's participant is recorded as Ukraine[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Created works include Igor Krutoy[3], a singer[28], b. 1954[29], of Russia[30], awarded the People's Artist of the Russian Federation[31], specialised in pop music[32] and Raimonds Pauls[4], a politician[33], b. 1936[34], of Soviet Union[35], awarded the Order of Honour[36], specialised in soundtrack[37].
Why It Matters
New Wave draws 28 Wikipedia views per month (music_festival category, ranking #129 of 910).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[38] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[39]