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Bohdan Kozak, Honoured Chapel of Ukraine "Trembita". Cantata Symphony by S.Lyudkevych "Kavkaz" and the Literary and Musical Composition "Dumas", lyrics by T.Shevchenko. (2CD). | | Track Reviews (1) |
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"Stanislav Lyudkevych started composing his most prominent work – the cantata symphony "Caucasus" – being twenty-two years old. Having set the high goal of interpreting the then most popular Shevchenko's work in Galychyna, his poem "Caucasus", the essence of which is the national liberation struggle of the people, the young self-taught composer was preparing for this task very fundamentally.. For the cantata symphony, Lyudkevych used approximately a half of the poem's text – four initial fragments creating a one whole and with their contents ideally matching the genre of the four-part sonata symphonic form. The artistic project, its music dramaturgy were carefully thought over by the composer to the minor detail, extraordinarily successfully he picked up ways of expression, contrasting comparisons, etc. S.Lydkevych attributes music characteristics through the genre, uses the genres of Ukrainian folk songs and professional vocal and instrumental music. Thus, the theme of the Caucasian mountains has intonation features of Ukrainian historical songs, heroic images – those of the march, hymn, etc." Z.Shtunder (information from the CD polygraph) On the second disc of this release, you will find the literary and musical composition based on poems by Taras Shevchenko "Dumas" performed by the famous actor of Lviv Maria Zankovetska theater – Bogdan Kozak. Probably, there is no need of introducing this person once again – his voice and his sincere, honest way of reciting poetry. Moreover – for the cycle of compact discs containing recordings of the best Ukrainian poetry, he was nominated for the National Shevchenko Award..
Publisher: Gal Records Year: 2005
See all albums and songs of the musician(s) on our site:
- Bohdan Kozak
- Honoured Chapel of Ukraine "Trembita"
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CD1 |
| | Kantata-symfonija Stanislava Ljudkevycha "Kavkaz" na slova Tarasa Shevchenka (vyk. kapela "Trembita"):
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1. |
| I. Prometey
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2. |
| II. Ne nam na prju!
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3. |
| III. Khortam, honchym slava! / IV. Boritesja!.. |
| Total playing time: 48:28 |
CD2 |
| | Literaturno-muzychna kompozytsija virshiv Tarasa Shevchenka "Dumy" (vyk. B. Kozak):
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1. |
| Taras Shevchenko "Dumy" |
2. |
| Odyn u druhoho pytajem
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3. |
| Jakos‘-to yduchy unochi |
4. |
| Rozryta mohyla / Chyhyryn, Chyhryne
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5. |
| Sontse zakhodyt‘, hory chornijut‘ / Sadok vyshnevyy kolo khaty |
6. |
| V nevoli tjazhko, khocha y voli
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7. |
| Kosar (Ponad polem ide...) |
8. |
| Oy try shljakhy shyrokiji
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9. |
| U tijeji Kateryny |
10. |
| Rusalka |
11. |
| Choho ty khodysh na mohylu? |
12. |
| Khustyna |
13. |
| Za bayrakom bayrak |
14. |
| Irzhavets‘ |
15. |
| Chernets‘ |
16. |
| Stojit‘ v seli Subotovi / I den‘ ide, i nich ide |
| Total playing time: 60:33 |
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Fragments of the compositions marked with mark are available for listening. How to listen?
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See also:
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The concert film "Our Shevchenko" is not a kind of a formal tribute. It looks like the thunderous silence of an inner challenge in the search for truth. The severe, exacting truth, often inconvenient, incompatible with the comfortable habit of ignoring what destroys the calm, makes one realize one's own limits – and, perhaps, go beyond them.
Domestic price: 208.60UAH,
International price: $14.90USD
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The disk "To the Great Kobzar" is small in size but a valuable present for all the fans on the occasion of Taras Shevchenko's 200th anniversary. This is a special and wonderful recording. Special – because especially for this release archive records were restored, and it was done as diligently and well as it is currently possible...
Domestic price: 250.60UAH,
International price: $17.90USD
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..There is space both for an atmospheric ballad, and for the proprietary hard "art-bombardment", and a recitative prophecy/spell that makes you freeze – in other words, listen. A worthy succinct statement.
Domestic price: 502.60UAH,
International price: $35.90USD
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Basically, this CD is a second release of "For the Great Kobzar", copies of which have long been sold out – but. The first – and, perhaps, the most valuable – difference is that the new publication is a collection of restored records.
Domestic price: 250.60UAH,
International price: $17.90USD
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Domestic price: 250.60UAH,
International price: $17.90USD
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Thanh-Tam Le
, Paris, France
12-11-2010 17:02 |
Lyudkevych's "Kavkaz" (1905-13), mentioned in several articles as a bold landmark in Ukrainian late Romantic music, was so far missing from the record catalogue. This CD fills the gap in a highly satisfactory manner, with a technically competent and committed performance by the "Trembita" Chapel and the Lviv Philharmonic conducted by Ivan Yuzyuk. (The other CD in the box will delight lovers of the Ukrainian language and poetry.)
While the piece itself is hardly modernist for its time, its harmonic writing is indeed individual, its rich use of enharmony is penetrating and shows affinities with his contemporaries Hugo Alfven and, more remotely, Aleksandr Scriabin. More importantly perhaps, its dramatic sharpness and urgency are compelling. Orchestral textures are vivid and the handling of Slavic choirs is both fervent and dynamic. The text could have been printed in the notes, but T. Shevchenko's classic poetry is not difficult to find. Understanding the words is not essential to the musical enjoyment, even though it would most probably enhance it.
This is a rhetoric, powerful cantata ambitiously cast in a long tradition (the end of the first part verges on the Neo-Baroque). Its organic, symphonic concentration is strengthened by the return of a motive from Part I in the vast final movement (Parts III and IV linked together). It mostly manages to avoid bombast, not least thanks to a beautiful melodic vein, in turns brooding, melancholy, consoling. The sections around 9:00 in Part I, 6:00 in Part II are particularly endearing.
Amply developed, noble themes act as the pillars of a deeply-felt, well-balanced, memorable work. It would deserve similar exposure to vocal-symphonic frescoes by Rachmaninov or the more advanced Enescu. Within the history of the Ukrainian symphony, it marks a step forward from Volodymyr Sokalsky's beautiful, if still traditional G minor symphony (1892), and directly anticipates on Levko Revutsky's 2nd symphony (1927, rev. 1940). Comparing both pieces, my feeling is that Lyudkevych's profile is rather stronger than Revutsky's, without denying the latter's poetic qualities and refined instrumental command. In some ways, it paves the way to another vocal symphony, the highly original "Simfonija Orijenta" by Josip Stolcer Slavenski. A major rediscovery, in a reference recording.
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