Tag: Valentin Silvestrov

  • Valentin Silvestrov at 85 A Ukrainian Life Uprooted

    Valentin Silvestrov at 85 A Ukrainian Life Uprooted

    The grand old man of Ukrainian music is 85 today. Born in Kyiv in 1937, Valentin Silvestrov attended the conservatory there from 1958 to 1964. In fact, he lived most of his life in Kyiv. He was there when the shelling started in March. One of nearly seven-and-a-half million refugees who have fled Ukraine since the beginning of the Russian invasion, he made a harrowing escape to Germany, by way of Poland. He now lives in Berlin. Whether he will ever see his home again is anyone’s guess. It will not be the Kyiv he remembers.


    “Diptych: Testament” (1995), on poetry by Taras Shevchenko

    Taras Shevchenko, MY TESTAMENT

    (“Zapovit” / “Iak umru, to pokhovaite”
    “Заповіт” / “Як умру, то поховайте”)

    Translated by John Weir

    When I am dead, bury me
    In my beloved Ukraine,
    My tomb upon a grave mound high
    Amid the spreading plain,
    So that the fields, the boundless steppes,
    The Dnieper’s plunging shore
    My eyes could see, my ears could hear
    The mighty river roar.

    When from Ukraine the Dnieper bears
    Into the deep blue sea
    The blood of foes… then will I leave
    These hills and fertile fields —
    I’ll leave them all and fly away
    To the abode of God,
    And then I’ll pray…. But till that day
    I nothing know of God.

    Oh bury me, then rise ye up
    And break your heavy chains
    And water with the tyrants’ blood
    The freedom you have gained.
    And in the great new family,
    The family of the free,
    With softly spoken, kindly word
    Remember also me.

    “Prayer for Ukraine” (2014)

    Symphony No. 5 (1980-82)

    Silvestrov at the piano, remembering the victims of the Charlie Hebdo and related attacks in France, January 7-9, 2015

    Trailer for documentary “V. Silvestrov” (2020)

  • Ukrainian Composers on WUSB Radio Today

    Ukrainian Composers on WUSB Radio Today

    Phil Merkel of Captain Phil’s Planet has been very kind in inviting me onto his radio show this afternoon on WUSB – the radio station of Stony Brook University – to talk a bit about composers and musicians of Ukraine.

    So I’ll be dropping by around 3:30/3:40 EST. Maybe we’ll even get to enjoy some music by Valentin Silvestrov and Mikola Lysenko. This is free-form radio, mind you, so if you tune in a little early, you might get an earful of Ukrainian metal! (It’s primarily a prog rock show.)

    Then stick around! At 4:00, Roy Bjellquist will join us to help drum up interest in tomorrow night’s program of classic television themes on our Facebook livestream, Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner.

    Just putting it out there, in case you’re interested. You’ll get to hear us babble about music a bit. Maybe you’ll even have your interest piqued, so that you’ll want to check out some of the composers and performers who have contributed to making Ukraine such a rich cultural resource.

    Follow the link, and click on the little silver button at the upper left-hand side of the screen, beneath the station’s call letters:

    https://www.wusb.fm/

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