Traditional ethnic Ukrainian music in general
The Ukraine originate itself is at the territory of Asia and Europe and this is revealed within the music in a confusing combination of ex...
https://worldhitz4u.blogspot.com/2014/03/traditional-ethnic-ukrainian-music-in.html?m=0
The
Ukraine originate itself is at the territory of Asia and Europe and this is
revealed within the music in a confusing combination of exotic melismatic
singing with choral accord which does
not always easily suit the rules of the folk western European accord. The most
striking usual characteristic of authentic cultural Ukrainian traditional music
is the extent use of minor modes or keys which join augmented 2ns intervals.
This is a sign that the major-minor method established in western European music
did not become as rooted or as cultured in Ukraine.
source of picture: kyivweekly.com.ua
Musically
the music infrequently uses difficulty time-signature, but compound meters are
encountered, and the music can be very difficult harmonically.
Harmonically
there are three or four part accord that has been established and it was
recorded in the central steppe areas of Ukraine, but it was not renowned use in
the mountain areas in the late 19th century.
·
Ritual chants reveal the biggest
tendency to preservation. They are often in recitative pattern, importantly
monadic, based on the notes in the range of the third or the fourth. An
instance of this pattern is the theme for the Schedrivka Schedryk recognized in
the west as the Carol of the Bells.
·
A big orchestra of Ukrainian ritual
songs decline within a perfect fourth with the main central sound as the lowest
note. Many of the ritual Easter songs recognized as Havivky decline into this
group. The tetrachordal method is also seen in the wedding and harvest chants.
The traditional dances frequently have songs based on two tetrachords joined
together.
·
The pentatonic scale in anhemitonic
type is related in spring chant which is known as Vesinanky.
·
The majority of Ukrainian traditional
songs melodies is based on scales alike to medieval modes, but varies in
melodic structure. The Mixolydian and Dorian modes are utilized more often than
Ionian and Aeolian modes. This is involved in the traditional paraliturgical as
Koliadky.
·
The augmented 2nd interval
is originated, as well as the raising of the fourth and seventh degree of the
scale. This is frequently used for musical expression. This melodic manner
gives an influence that is known as adding severe tension o sadness in some
Ukrainian chants. The occurrence is not originated in Russian traditional
chants and it is though have been brought or established during in the 17th
century.
The
Ukrainian traditional chant singing pattern can be split into a number of broad
aesthetic groups.
·
Solo singing, which is mainly ritual
chants which include the following such as the holosinnya sung during in the
wakes.
·
Solo singing with instrumental
supplement by specialized nomadic singers known as the kobzari or lirnyky. The
biggest type of improvement of this pattern of singing can be seen in the word
historical traditional poems known as dumy sung to the supplement of the
bandura, lira or kobza (lirny). Dumy were sung mainly in the dorian mode.
·
The third is an ancient kind of modal
a cappella choral pattern in which a phrase sung by the soloist who answered a
vocal phrases in 2-or-3 voice vertical polyphony/heterophony accord. The choral
inflection here is quite medieval in character and some uniqueness of uniquely
Ukrainian flavour are obvious, such as the parallel fifths and octaves, and several
kinds of plagal tempo. This kind of chant, once leading, after 1650 had ceded
its domination to the latest tonal forms, but can still be found in remote
village. This pattern is proving in the Kolyadka and Schedryk.
·
The other choral patterns are marked
by the effects exerted by the European music, by paraligurgical music of Danylo
Tuptalo and his circle during in the 18th century, and later by the
classical music and urban culture.
Ukrainian
choral music’s display an extent type of forms such as the heterophonic,
monodic, harmonic, homophonic and polyphonic
One
of the very active advocates of these patterns of Ukrainian choral music is
known as Nine Matviyenko. In the present time groups have been created
dedicated to preservation to Ukrainian folk polyphony, popularly as
Hurtopravci, Boyzhchi, Korali, Volodar and Drevo.
Some
of the folk instruments include the bandura, turban (bass lute), basolya
(3-cord cello), kobza (lute), lira or the relya (hurdy-gurdy) and the tsymbaly;
the sopilka (duct flute), flovara (open, end-blown flute), trembita
(alpenhorn), buben (frame drum), fife, tulumbas (kettle drum), volynka
(bagpipes), drymba/varhan (jaw harp), and resheto (tambourine). The traditional
instrumental bands are frequently recognized as the troisti muzyki (literally
means the three artists that usually make up the band, for instance violin,
buben and sopilka). When performing dance song instrumental act generally
includes the improvisation.
The
folk dance in Ukraine include the Tropak, Kozak, Kozachok, Kolomyjka,
Hrechanyky, Hopak and Hutsulka, Metelysia, Arkan, Shumka, chabarashka and
Kateryna (Kadryl). Dances deriving outside the Ukrainian cultural area but
which are also renowned include Krakowiak, Waltz, Polka, Mazurka, Csardas,
Kamarynska and Barynya. Ukrainian instrumental and dance music has also
affected the Jewish (Hava-Nagila Let’s rejoice) and Gypsy music and much of it
was included in the collection of nomadic klemzorim.
The
early 20th century, Pavlo Humeniuk of Philadelphia became popular in
the North America for his fiddle music.
However
most of the instrumental dance music in Ukraine can be sung, the existence of
Ukraine group of professional traditional artists who sing to their own
accompaniment. These nomadic artists were generally known as kobzari (kobzar
singular), and followed their singing with the kobza, bandura and lira. Though
their roots traced back to ancient times, their collection and traditions is
directly traced back to the 17th century in which they describe the
era of the crises between the Kozaks and different foreign oppressors. There
were many cases of those traditional singers’ blind blind which became a
stereotype in the cultural memory.