Face Music - tour projects - Khreshchaty Yar - Ukraine




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P & C December 1998
- Face Music / Albi

- last update 02-2012


- Black Sea: Ukraine - Ensemble Khreshchaty Yar
  • on request

Although many different peoples passed through the geographical territory of the Ukraine, settled and even ruled there, the Ukraine maintained its Slavonic traditions. Traditional Ukrainian music is predominantly heterephonic: the same melody is distributed among different voice parts, of which one is always the leading voice. There is a rich repertory of many famous Cossack songs and dance traditions. This music has its roots in a centuries old oral tradition of bylina (epics, heroic narrative poetry) and dumas, that is long lyrical ballads glorifying the exploits of the Cossacks.
Folk music is life and soul for the Ukrainians. Their songs portray this people's history, their characteristics and features as well as the Ukrainian landscape. The songs also speak of ethics and the social rules of living together. This is a real treasure that has been preserved up to date.
The instrumental folk music in the Ukraine reveales itself in various forms. On the one hand, there are solos performed on the bagpipes, the violin, the bandura etc. and, on the other hand, ensemble performances, e.g. by the traditional trio called "troista muzyka", mainly played for dance events and marching parades.
It is a characteristic feature of traditional dance music genres that they belong either to geographical (autochthonous) or to particular ethnic areas. So, the dance kolomiyka is known in the Ukrainian Carpathians and the neigbouring regions, the hopak and the cossachok are known in the entrire Ukrainian ethnic territory, whereas the polka and folk samples of the waltz belong to Slavonic and non-Slavonic traditions of the European area. The interaction with Polish, Czech, Slovak and Hungarian folklore in the western parts (the Carpathians) is revealed in the stabilization of the usual western metrics, whereas in eastern regions asymmetric rhythms and asymmetric lyrical metres are predominant and the harmonic basis of lyric songs is strongli functional. In the south western part of the Carpathians (Bukovina region), there are resemblances to Moldavian and Romanian instrumental music.
Apart from dance music exists the improvised music of the shepherds, which is played on instruments like e.g. the violin, the sopilka (end-blown shepherd's flute), the trembita (the Ukrainian version of the alpine horn, usually some three meters long; it was primarily used by the shepherds in signaling events such as weddings or funerals in the mountain regions of Ukraine and also kolyadky (carols) were played at Christmas) and the drymba (jew's harp). These are usually instrumental versions of song forms.



watch profile in YouTube and YouTube (Cossacks songs)

Contact for Switzerland:
F. & B. Hunziker-Ehrensperger, Richtersmatt 137, 3054 Schüpfen - Fax: 031/879 06 06 - E-Mail:
F u. B. Hunziker

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Heide und Albrecht Weber, Korngasse 7, 69221 Dossenheim (Heidelberg) - Telefon / Fax: 06221-860865

- Download sound example - mp3 mono - 760 Kb / 56 kbps (musicfile 60 sec)
yar 01 - yar 02 - yar 03 - yar 04 - yar 05

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