Background
Mikhail Lvovich Matusovsky was born in Luhansk, Yekaterinoslav Governorate, Russian Empire (now in Luhansk Oblast, Ukraine) in the family of a photographer.
Mikhail Lvovich Matusovsky was born in Luhansk, Yekaterinoslav Governorate, Russian Empire (now in Luhansk Oblast, Ukraine) in the family of a photographer.
Graduated from Maxim Gorky Literature Institute (1939). Doctor of Philosophy (1941).
A participant of the Great Patriotic War. He is famous for his lyric poems many of which became lyrics of the popular songs: "School Walz", "In the Damp Earth-Huts", "The Sacred Stone", "The Windows of Moscow", "Don"t Forget" and "Moscow Nights" which was sung at the Moscow Youth Festival in 1957 and was played also by American pianist Van Cliburn in the White House in 1979, on the occasion of a visit by the former president of the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics, Mikhail Gorbachev. This song made an entry into the “Guinness Book of World Records” as the song most frequently sang in the world and in March 1962 made Kenny Ball"s disk reached #2 on the United States. Billboard Hot 100 chart, and the United Kingdom Singles Chart.
Among the books: anthologies of poems "The People of Lugansk: A Book of Poems and Prosa" (1939), "My Genealogy" (1940), "Front: A Book of Poems" (1942), "A Song About Aidogdi Takhirov and Andrey Savushkin" (1943), "When Ilmen Lake Makes a Stir" (1944), "Poems" (1946), "Listening to Moscow: Poems" (1948), "The Street of Peace: Poems" (1951), "Everything That I Value: Poems and Songs" (1957), "The Poems Are Always With Us" (1958), "The Windows of Moscow: Poems and Songs" (1960), "How Are You, Earth: A book of Poems and Songs" (1963), "Don"t Forget: Songs" (1964), "A shadow of a Manitoba: A Book About Hiroshima" (1968), "lieutenant Was Recently, lieutenant Was Long Ago: Poems" (1970),"The Essence: Poetry and Poems" (1979), "Selected Works: in Two Volumes" (1982) and the memoirs "The Family Album" (1979).
Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics Union of Writers]
A member of the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics Union of Writers (1939).