Atomic Hits -hituri Nemuritoare- Vol. 36 -album... May 2026
The first sound was not music. It was a Geiger counter—slow, rhythmic clicks like a dying heart. Then a woman’s voice, thin and young, humming a lullaby in Romanian. The clicks sped up. The humming cracked. And then the drums kicked in.
“And volume thirty-six?”
I found it in the basement of the Ceaușescu-era apartment block where my grandmother still lived, trapped between a rusted can of pork fat and a stack of Scînteia newspapers from 1986. The vinyl inside was heavy, warped like a shallow bowl, and smelled of dust and burnt amber. No tracklist. Just the title in clumsy, optimistic letters: Hituri Nemuritoare —Immortal Hits. Atomic Hits -Hituri Nemuritoare- Vol. 36 -ALBUM...
She sat down slowly, her joints clicking like the Geiger counter. “After the accident—not Chernobyl, the other one, the one they buried in the ’60s—they wanted to warn people. But you couldn’t say it straight. So the state sent musicians into the hot zone with portable recorders. They made one album. Thirty-five copies. Each copy had a different tracklist. Each copy… absorbed something from the place it was pressed.” The first sound was not music