Mykola, the oldest of the Palahniuk brothers, was the reason they became professional wedding musicians. Until the second half of the 20th century almost every Hutsul family owned some musical instruments, and almost every boy who tended the sheep in the mountains played a fiyarka, an open-ended flute with six fingerholes. When Mykola, born in 1944, became proficient on the fiyarka he was invited to play at weddings and dances with adult musicians. That gave him the chance to master on the tsymbaly (cimbalom) and the fiddle. Soon he encouraged his younger brothers to learn to play – he wanted to form his own wedding band. Thus, Yura became a virtuoso fiddler and a good fiyarka player while Mykhailo mastered the tsymbaly and became unbeatable on percussion.
All performers on this CD are genuine folk musicians in the sense that everything they perform was learned by ear from the previous generations. The younger musicians are musically literate; nevertheless, every Hutsul melody they play was learned the traditional way."
(the information is from the booklet to a compact disc)