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Харківська бандура
Тhe Kharkiv bandura:
Rediscovering a neglected playing
tradition.
Kobzars Mykhailo Kravchenko (Poltava) and Petro Tkachenko (Chernihiv).
Foundations of the Kyiv style
Danylo Shcherbyna -
• Hetman Pavlo Skoropadsky’s court bandurist
• A representative of the Kyiv/Chernihiv style.
Kobzar Tereshko Parkhomenko from Chernihiv
Kobzars Hnat Honcharenko and Stepan Pasiuha. –Representatives of the style played by the kobzars in Sloboda Ukraina – around
Kharkiv.
•
Kobzar Fedir (Kholodny) Hrytsenko
from Zinkiv
Kobzar Pavlo Hashchenko
Torbanist playing the Torban using the
Kharkiv style
•
Participants of the Ethnographic concert held at the XIIth Archeological Conference, (Kharkiv, 1902)
•
Three kobzars – three playing styles.
Mykhailo Kravchenko (Poltava)
Tereshko Parkhomenko(Chernihiv)
Petro Drevchenko(Kharkiv)
(Kharkiv, 1902)
Kyiv Bandurist Capella (1925)•
Bandurist (Vasyl) POTAPENKO
(I) give lessons on the Bandura
Will teach within one month
Kyiv, Striletsky st, #8 apartment 14
POSTCARD ADVERTISEMENT
Hnat Khotkevych
(1913)
Bandurist Vasyl Yemetz
and
KobzarIvan Kucherenko
(Kuchuhura)
Cover of Hnat Khotkevych’s Handbook for playing the bandura
(Part 1)
Lviv, 1909
Shevchenko Scientific Society
• The Poltava Bandurist Capella (1931)
Hryhory Paliyivetz and the new Kharkiv banduras with retuning and dampening mechanisms made for the Poltava Bandurist Capella in
prepаration for their proposed North American tour. (1931)
Permission for performance on the
territory of the Ukrainian SSR – Storm on the Black
Sea
Secretary of the Higher Repertory Commission of
the People’s Commissar of Education
Official stamp
Last page of Khotkevych’s manuscript
1932
Hnat Khotkevych and graduate students of the first bandura class at the Kharkiv Music-drama Institute (1928).
1) Oleshko, 2) Haydamaka, 3) Khotkevych, 4) Herashchenko, 5) Hayevsky.
•
The Poltava Bandurist Capella (1931)(Notice left hand positions)
The First Orchestra of Ukrainian Folk Instruments at the Kharkiv Metalworker’s Club directed by Leonid Haydamaka.
Kharkiv banduras - prima, basses, tsymbaly, bandura piccolos, and hurdy-gurdies and soplkas.
• Orchestral Kharkiv banduras designed by Leonid Haydamaka. Piccolo, Prima, Bass. (1930)
Workshop set up by Leonid Haydamaka for the manufacture and supply of Ukrainian folk instruments including Kharkiv banduras.
•
The order to execute Hnat Khotkevych for being a German spy
from 1923 and to confiscate all his personal effects.
The printed form stating that the
execution was carried out October 8, 1938
Khotkevych’s name, one of many, on a monument dedicated to the memory of the Ukrainian Intellectuals executed in Kharkiv in 1937-38. Their bodieswere buried in a mass grave site on the grounds of the NKVD pensionat in
Piatykhatky on the outskirts of Kharkiv.
The Piatykhatky monument on the outskirts of Kharkiv.
Extract from Ivan Kucherenko’s execution order.
Post WWII development of the Kharkiv bandura in Ukraine.
•
Bandurist Perekop Ivanov on Kyiv-Kharkiv Bandura #3 designed and made by Ivan
Skliar.
Kharkiv (Perekydka) hand position
•
Kyiv-Kharkiv Bandura #5.Ivan Skliar
and Kyiv-Kharkiv bandura #3.
(1960’s)
Vasyl Herasymenko and his Kharkiv banduras
•
The Kharkiv bandura
outside of Ukraine.
•
The Ukrainian Bandurist Chorus
Honcharenko’s Kharkiv style bandura
• In the workshop in Goslar.
• (P. Honcharenko standing in the centre)
Bandurist
Hryhory Nazarenko
•
The Leontovych Bandurist Capella
• Bandurist –
• Leonid Haydamaka
• Bandurist –
• Dr Zinoviy Shtokalko
Bandurist
Hryhory Bazhul
1948
The Hnat Khotkevych Bandurist Capella Sydney, Australia. (1968)
The Hnat Khotkevych Ensemble in Australia, (1971)
Director P. Deriashnyj
The Canadian Bandurist CapellaToronto, 2008
Kharkiv techniques on an old time bandura
Honcharenko designed bandura made by Canadian luthier Bill Vetzal
Professor Volodymyr Yesypok (Kyiv) playing a fibreglass body bandura made by Bill Vetzal
Converted Chernihiv factory banduraBohdan Shutka on a convertd
Chernihiv instrument
•