Yara Arts Group Will Stage Concert-Theater Event KOLIADA AND MUSIC FROM THE CARPATHIANS Ukrainian Museum

By: Nov. 13, 2019
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Yara Arts Group Will Stage Concert-Theater Event KOLIADA AND MUSIC FROM THE CARPATHIANS Ukrainian Museum

 

Yara Arts Group (www.yaraartsgroup.net), under the direction of Virlana Tkacz, will stage a concert-theater event, "Koliada and Music from the Carpathians," December 6 and 7 at 7:00 PM at the Ukrainian Museum, 222 E 6th Street in Manhattan. The Koliadnyky, an ensemble of winter song singers from the Carpathians, will sing traditional winter songs and perform brilliant troista instrumental music from the villages of Kryvorivnia and Verkhovyna. The evening will include projections from the villages and a musical performance by special guest bandurist Julian Kytasty.

This evening, directed by Yara's Artistic Director Virlana Tkacz, celebrates Koliada, a winter ritual that now coincides with Christmas but is much older in origin and symbolism. Its oldest songs are preserved in villages high in the Carpathian Mountains, where the ritual is considered to be the most important event of the year. Some people believe that spring and the harvest will not come to the village unless the songs are sung in every household. Its songs are incantations that assume the magical power of words: "what is said, will be so."

The evening will feature a variety of unique instruments played by musicians of the Koliadnyky who are expert in this genre. Trembita is a Carpathian mountain horn made of a hollowed pine tree that has been struck by lightning and wrapped in birch bark. In the villages they are only used during the Koliada and at funerals. The fiddle is played in the Carpathian style. The musicians also play duda, a bag pipe made from a goat, tsymbaly, a hammer dulcimer, and a variety of hand-made Carpathian flutes including the tylynka.

The Koliadnyky is comprised of both elders and younger musicians from the Carpathians:

Ivan Zelenchuk, is the lead singer or bereza of the Koliadnyky. Now in his sixties, he is the son of the man whose handwritten notebook of winter songs helped to preserve this tradition despite persecution under Soviet rule. Zelenchuk considers the Koliada his personal mission. He met the members of Yara Arts Group when they first visited his village, Kryvorivnia, in 2002 and has worked with them ever since.

Mykola Zelenchuk, the son of Ivan, proudly carries on the tradition of his forefathers, both as a winter song singer and the best trembita (mountain long horn) player in the village. He also makes the traditional costumes for the winter song singers. He has taken part in many Yara productions.

Mykola Ilyuk is a master fiddler and plays most traditional instruments. He has his own museum of musical instruments from the area. He was the master fiddler for Yara's "Winter Sun," "Midwinter Night" and "Winter Light" as well as its Koliada events in 2010-2018.

Vasyl Tymchuk plays the tsymbaly (hammer dulcimer) and teaches children to play Hutsul instruments. He has worked with Yara since 2010.

Ostap Kostyuk plays the duda (bagpipes) and various flutes. He represents the newest generation that has become expert in this ancient tradition and was featured in Yara's shows in New York, Toronto and San Francisco.

Guest performer Julian Kytasty is a third generation bandura player. The bandura is a traditional Ukrainian lute-like instrument. Mr. Kytasty combines a mastery of traditional styles with a distinctly contemporary sensibility. His diverse collaborators have included Chinese pipa virtuoso Wu Man, Mongolian master musician Battuvshin, performance poet Bob Holman, pioneering klezmer revivalist Michael Alpert and composer/saxophonist John Zorn. He has worked with Yara since 1998 performing in many of its productions.

Performances are December 6 and 7, 2019 at 7:00 PM at Ukrainian Museum, 222 E 6th Street, Manhattan.  Tickets are $25 adults, $20 students, seniors and members and $10 children, The box office is www.ukrainianmuseum.org and (212) 228-0110.

 



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