On April 9, the National Philharmonic of Ukraine hosts a concert pairing rediscovered works by Valerii Polovyi with music by his internationally acclaimed daughter, Victoria Vita Poleva.
Conducted by Keri-Lynn Wilson and performed by the Kyiv Camerata with leading Ukrainian soloists and the Shchedryk Children’s Choir, the concert forms part of the “Liberated Music” initiative, aimed at restoring suppressed Ukrainian composers to public memory.
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“At a time when the inner cities of Ukraine are suffering one genocidal air attack after another, I’m preparing to travel to Kyiv for an important concert on April 9 in Kyiv’s Philharmonic Hall,” Wilson said. “Together with the Kyiv Camerata, my beloved and heroic chamber orchestra dedicated to contemporary Ukrainian composers, we’ll be performing the music of Poleva and that of her heroic father, Valerii Polovyi, a composer the Soviets tried to erase…Although suppressed, [Polovyi’s] indomitable will could not be broken. It will be a revelation to perform his music alongside that of his brilliantly gifted daughter.”
A student of Borys Lyatoshynsky, Polovyi was arrested in 1950 on fabricated charges and sent to forced labor in Kazakhstan. Even in captivity, he continued composing, sketching music on scraps and cement sacks. Works conceived during that time – including his Second String Quartet and Concerto for Two Violins — will be performed.
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