Cântă cucu-n Bucovina

Map of the region of Bukovina, divided between Romania and Ukraine

"Cântă cucu-n Bucovina" or "Cântă cucu în Bucovina" (transl. "Sings the Cuckoo in Bukovina") is a Romanian folk song, more precisely a doină, composed in 1904 by Constantin Mandicevschi [de; ru; uk]. The lyrics are original, while the melody is a modified Bukovinian mourning song. Mandicevschi composed it at the request of Spiru Haret for the 400th anniversary of the death of Prince of Moldavia Stephen the Great, which was commemorated in Putna (then in Austria-Hungary and now in Romania) in the same year.[1][2] The song is also known as "Cântă cucul, bată-l vina" (transl. "Sings the Cuckoo, Blame It"), "Bucovină, plai cu flori" (transl. "Bukovina, Field with Flowers"), "Cântec pentru Bucovina" (transl. "Song for Bukovina")[1] and "Cântec despre Bucovina" (transl. "Song About Bukovina").[3]

Famous singers of the song include ADDA [ro],[4] Grigore Leșe[3] and Valentina Nafornița.[5] The song was sung in 2022 by a children's choir at the Antim Monastery during a meeting between the Georgian ambassador to Romania Nikoloz Nikolozishvili [ka] and the Romanian Orthodox bishop Varlaam Merticariu [de; pl; ro; ru] in which the latter gave the former the Order of St. Anthim the Iberian.[6]

The lyrics of the song, on the version sung by Leșe, are the following:[7]

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