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List of Ukrainian composers

This is a list of Ukrainian composers of classical music who were either born on the territory of modern-day Ukraine or were ethnically Ukrainian.

List by century of birth edit

15th century edit

Composer Date City of birth Notable works
Sebastian z Felsztyna 1480/1490?–after 1543 Polish Felsztyn (now modern Skelivka in Ukraine) three motets

16th century edit

Composer Date City of birth Notable works
Marcin Leopolita   1537–1584 Lviv Missa paschalis

17th century edit

Composer Date City of birth Notable works
Nikolay Diletsky c.1630 – after 1680 Kyiv Hramatyka muzykal’na (Musical Grammar), a textbook of polyphonic singing[1]
Symeon Pekalytsky c. 1630 Liturgy in 8 voices
Ivan Kolenda active in the 1650s–1960s Sluzhba triumfalna (Triumphal Service)
Ivan Domaratsky after 1650 – before 1750 "Oh you, Father Roman" and No. 10 "Your Spirit is Good", "Concerto of the Apostle Timofey", "The Catcher is Wonderful with His Tongue", concerto "The Virgin Gives Birth to the Pre-existent", "The Deliverer Has Been Sent by the Lord", concerto in 8 voices "Blessed is the Man Who Fears the Lord", All-Night Virgil "Blessed is the Man".

18th century edit

Composer Date City of birth Notable works
Tymofiy Bilohradsky c. 1710 – c. 1782 Cherkasy? Lutenist who worked throughout Europe[2]
Hryhorii Skovoroda   1722–1794 Chornukhy, Kyiv Governorate Liturgical music[3]
Andrii Rachinsky [uk] 1724–1794 Velyki Mosty
Maksym Prokhorovych Kontsevych [uk] active 1773–1780s romances, liturgical music, cantata "He took the thundering harp in his right hand" (1787)
Timofiy Bilohradsky c. 1710 – c. 1782 Minuet with variations for harpsichord
Yelizaveta Belogradskaya 1739 – c. 1764 [?] Imperial Court opera singer and composer for keyboard
syl Fedorovych Trutovsky [uk] c.1740 – c.1810 Belgorod, Slobid Ukraine music-folklore of the collection "Collection of "simple russian" songs with notes" (parts 1–4, 1776–1795) including Ukrainian folk songs, and piano variations on the themes of folk songs
Vasily Pashkevych c. 1742–1797 9 operas, masses and other liturgical works.
Maksym Berezovsky   1745–1777 Hlukhiv? Sacred choral concertos; composed the earliest opera, symphony, and violin sonata by a Ukrainian composer[4]
Ivan Khandoshkin 1747–1804 "Kozachok from the 21 variations for solo piano", "12 variations in D major solo for violin on the theme of the song "Mowers went out to the field" and "12 variations in F major for violin with bass accompaniment on the theme of the dance "Kozachok", other variations on the basis of the Ukrainian folk song "Oh grove, green grove"
Dmytro Bortniansky   1751–1825 Hlukhiv Sacred choral concerti, operas, symphonie concertante, quintet, harpsichord sonata[5]
Artemy Vedel 1767–1808 Kyiv Sacred choral concerti; see List of compositions by Artemy Vedel[6]
Illia Lyzohub   1787–1867 Kulykivka, Chernihiv gubernia cello sonata in G minor[7]
Oleksandr Lyzohub 1790–1839 Sedniv, Chernihiv gubernia two nocturnes dated 1821, mazurkas, art songs ("Death in a Foreign Land"), sets of variations on Ukrainian folk songs ("Oh, There Is a Well in the Field,' "And I Had a Wife," and "Don't Go to the Party, Hryts"[8]

19th century edit

Composer Date City of birth Notable works
Mykola Markevych   1804–1860 Dunaiets [9]
Semen Hulak-Artemovsky   1813–1873 Horodyshche The first Ukrainian-language opera "Zaporozhian Cossack beyond the Danube"[10]
Vasilii Sarenko 1814–1881 Voronezh, Russia Malorossiyska pliaska (Ukrainian dance)
Mykhaylo Verbytsky   1815–1870 Lemkivshchyna Ukraine national anthem[11]
Ivan A. Lavrivsky   1823–1873 Lopinka, Lemko region religious and secular compositions such as "Autumn," "Zaspivai my, soloviiu" (Sing for Me, Nightingale), "Richen'ka" (The Streamlet), as well as the popular operettas Oman ochei (A Wile of the Eyes), Roksoliana, and Pan Dovhonos (Mister Long Nose)[12]
Volodymyr Stepanovych Alexandrov 1825–1894 Bugayivka, Izyum district, Kharkiv gubernia
Petro Nishchynsky   1832–1896 Nemenka, Vinnytska Oblast [13]
Sydir Vorobkevych   1836–1903 Chernivtsi Sacred music[14]
Anatol Vakhnianyn   1841–1908 Siniava, Peremyshl circle, Galicia Kupalo, the first opera in western Ukraine (1870–92); music to plays by Taras Shevchenko, Fedir Zarevych, Omelian Ohonovsky, and Kornylo Ustyianovych; original choral scores to texts by Yurii Fedkovych, Ivan Hushalevych, E. Levytsky, and others; choral arrangements of Ukrainian folk songs[15]
Mykola Lysenko   1842–1912 Poltava oblast overture from Taras Bulba, Prayer for Ukraine

The "Father of Ukrainian music". Founder of Ukrainian nationalist school of music[16]

Arkady Abaza   1843–1915 Sudzhansky District, Kursk Governorate, Russian Empire Piano pieces and romances, including "Foggy Morning" to the words of Ivan Turgenev
Viktor Matiuk   1852–1912 Tudorkovychi, Zhovkva circle, Galicia folk song arrangements, melodramas such as "Kapral Tymko" (Corporal Tymko), "Neshchasna liubov" (Unlucky Love), "Invalid" (The Invalid), and "Nashi poselentsi" (Our Settlers), anthology of the works of Ukrainian composers titled Boian (The Troubadour, 1884; 2nd edn 1886), school and church songbooks[17]
Mykola Arkas   1853–1909 Mykolaiv [18]
Ostap Nyzhankivsky   1862–1919 Drohobych, Galicia works for choir "Hulialy" (They Danced) and "Z Okrushkiv" (From Crumbs, text by Yurii Fedkovych), art songs for solo voice with piano accompaniment, including "Mynuly lita molodii" (The Years of Youth Have Passed By); arrangements of folk songs for solo voice or choir; and Vitrohony, a cycle of kolomyika melodies for piano[19]
Denys Sichynsky   1865–1909 Kliuvyntsi, Husiatyn county, Galicia[20] opera Roksoliana (libretto by V. Lutsyk and Stepan Charnetsky, 1908); works for symphony and chamber orchestras; piano solos; choral music, including the cantata Lichu v nevoli (I Count the Days and Nights in Bondage; text by Taras Shevchenko); a score for a liturgy; approximately 20 art songs for solo voice to texts by T. Shevchenko, L. Ukrainka, I. Franko, B. Lepky, U. Kravchenko, and H. Heine; and arrangements of folk songs[20]
Filaret Kolessa   1871–1947 Lviv oblast Ukrainian ethnographic musicology[21]
Mikhail Bukinik 1872–1947 Dubno
Liudmyla Volodymyrivna Aleksandrova 19th century Izium music for the romances "I'm looking at the sky" (lyrics by Mykhailo Petrenko) and "Blow, wind, to Ukraine" (lyrics by Stepan Rudanskyi)
Reinhold Glière   1875–1956 Kyiv Numerous orchestral works, concertos, ballets, vocal works[22]
Oleksandr Koshyts   1875–1944 Romashky, near Kyiv Sacred music (liturgies, songs), collecting and arrangements of folk songs[23]
Borys Yanovsky 1875–1933 Moscow 10 operas, notably Sorochyntsi Fair (1899) and Black Sea Duma or Samiilo Kishka (1927); two ballets; orchestral pieces; chamber music works; violin and piano music; works for chorus; art songs; and arrangements of Ukrainian folk songs[24]
Fedir Stepanovych Yakymenko [uk] 1876–1945 Pisky [uk]
Serhii Bortkevych   1877–1952 Kharkiv Works by Bortkiewicz include two symphonies, three piano concertos, a violin concerto, and a cello concerto
Davyd Novakivsky 1877–1921 Malyn Synagogue music, choral, organ, and orchestral works
Mykola Leontovych   1877–1921 Selevyntsi (Podilia) Shchedryk which eventually became the "Carol of the Bells"[25]
Stanyslav Lyudkevych   1879–1979 Yaroslav (present-day Poland) cantata The Caucasus (1902–13), inspired by Taras Shevchenko's poem, The Eternal Revolutionary (1898), The Reaper (1901), Khor pidzemnykh kovaliv (The Chorus of Underground Blacksmiths, 1905), Oi, vyhostriu tovarysha (Oh, I'll Hone My Knife, 1917), and The Testament (1934) symphonic compositions The [Sich] Riflemen's Rhapsody, 1920), Kameniari (The Stonecutters, 1926, 1956), and Vesnianky (Spring Songs, 1935), Symfonietta (1943), Koliadnytsia (Christmas Caroller, 1944), Iunats’ke rondo (The Rondo of Youth, 1946), the symphonic poem The Dnieper (1948), Prykarpats’ka symfoniia (The Subcarpathian Symphony, 1952), and the opera Dovbush[26]
Pavlo Senytsia   1879–1960 Maksymivka, Pereiaslav county, Poltava gubernia operas Life Is a Dream (based on Calderón) and The Servant Girl (based on Taras Shevchenko, 1913–16); two symphonies (1905, 1912); an overture (1908); seven string quartets; approximately 50 works of choral music to texts by Shevchenko, Mykola Bazhan, and others; and approximately 100 solo art songs to texts by Shevchenko, Pavlo Tychyna, Maksym Rylsky, and others[27]
Mykola Roslavets   1881–1944 Dushatyn, Chernihiv Orchestral and chamber atonal works, Known as the Ukrainian Schoenberg
Kyrylo Stetsenko   1882–1922 Cherkashchyna Requiem "Zhuravli" (the cranes)[28]
Yakiv Stepovy   1883–1921 Kharkiv [29]
Vasyl Barvinsky   1888–1963 Ternopil [30]
Mykola Vilinsky   1888–1956 Holta, Ananiv povit Symphonic suites, music for piano, and arrangements for choir and solo voices of Ukrainian, Russian, Moldavian folk songs[31]
Levko Revutsky   1889–1977 Irzhavets, Pryluky [32]
Sergei Prokofiev   1891–1953 Sontsivka, Donetsk 5 piano concertos, 9 piano sonatas, 7 symphonies, Suite from Romeo and Juliet, Suite from Lieutenant Kijé[33]
Vsevolod Zaderatsky 1891–1953 Rivne two operas, several symphonic compositions (including Symphony No. 1, 1951), chamber music, choral works (eg, the Suite on Ukrainian Folk Texts [1950] and a choral poem dedicated to Viktor Kosenko [1948]), and art songs, five piano sonatas, a suite, a cycle of 24 preludes and fugues[34]
Mykhailo Haivoronsky   1892–1949 Zalischyky songs of the Ukrainian Sich Riflemen, choral works, church music, and instrumental music for violin, string orchestra, band, and symphony orchestra. He also arranged many folk songs and compiled a number of songbooks[35]
Pavlo Pecheniha-Uhlytsky 1892–1948 Pechenihy, Vovchansk county, Kharkiv gubernia the opera The Witch (after Yevhen Hrebinka, libretto by Stepan Charnetsky, 1936–1940), the ballet Legin' (Young Lad; libretto by Dmytro Chutro, 1938), the tone poem Ukraïna (after Taras Shevchenko's Haidamaky), three string quartets, and the cantata Biut' porohy (The Rapids Roar; text by Shevchenko) for mixed chorus and orchestra[36]
Pylyp Kozytsky   1893–1960 Letychivka, Cherkasy Oblast [37]
Valentyn Kostenko 1895–1960 Urazovo, Valuiki county, Voronezh gubernia the operas Karmeliuk, Nazar Stodolia (based on the play by Taras Shevchenko), and The Carpathians; the ballet Reborn Steppe; the symphony The Year 1917; a suite for symphony orchestra; violin, piano, and choral pieces; and six string quartets.

studies of Pavlo Senytsia (1922), the role of folk songs in Ukrainian music (1928), the influence of German expressionism on Ukrainian music (1929)[38]

Borys Liatoshynskyi   1895–1968 Zhytomyr Operas The Golden Ring (1929) and Shchors (1937), the five symphonies, the Overture on Four Ukrainian Folk Themes (1926), the suites Taras Shevchenko (1952) and Romeo and Juliet (1955), the symphonic poem Grazhyna (1955), his "Slavic" piano concerto (1953), and the completion and orchestration of Reinhold Glière's violin concerto (1956)
Roman Prydatkevych 1895–1980 Żywiec, near Cracow four symphonies, the Ukrainian Suite for chamber orchestra, works for violin and piano such as the Hutsul Suite, two rhapsodies, and a sonata[39]
Viktor Kosenko   1896–1938 St. Petersburg sonata for cello and piano (1923), Classical Trio for piano, violin, and cello (1927), a sonata for violin and piano (1927), Heroic Overture (1932), Moldavian Poem (1937), a piano concerto, three piano sonatas, a trio, a violin concerto, about 100 piano pieces, including 24 pieces for children (1936)[40]
Stefania Turkewich   1898–1977 Lviv Her opera "Mavka" is based on Lesia Ukrainka's Forest Song[41]

20th century edit

Composer Date City of birth Notable works
Roman Simovych 1901–1984 Sniatyn, then in Austrian Galicia Ballet, 7 symphonies, symphonic poems, symphonic overtures, suites, flute concerto, string quartet, two trios, works for violin, cello, piano, and mixed choir, piano concerto
Andriy Shtoharenko 1902–1992 Novi Kaidaky (now part of Dnipro) symphonic cantata Ukraïno moia (My Ukraine, 1943), the Kyiv Symphony (1972), symphonic suites, a violin concerto, chamber and choral pieces, art songs, incidental music, and film scores
Antin Rudnytsky 1902–1975 Luka, Sambir county, Galicia operas Dovbush (1938) and Anna Yaroslavna (1967), three symphonies, a ballet suite and the ballet Burï nad Zakhodom (Storms over the West, 1932), a lyric poem, an overture, a concerto for cello and orchestra, the oratorio Haidamaky (1974), the cantata Moses (to Ivan Franko's poem), Poslaniie (The Epistle, to Taras Shevchenko's poem)
Yuliy Meitus   1903–1997 Elysavet, now modern Kropyvnytskyi Considered the founder of the Ukrainian Soviet opera. Composed 18 operas ,most notably Perekop (1939–40) and Haidamaky (1940–41) (both composed with Vsevolod Rybalchenko and Mykhailo Tits), Abadan (composed with A. Kuliev, 1942–43), Star over the Dvina (1951–1955), Stolen Happiness (1958–59), and Yaroslav the Wise (1973) and about 300 songs.
Kostiantyn Dankevych   1905–1984 Odesa operas Trahediina nich (Tragic Night, 1935), Bohdan Khmelnytsky (1951; new version, 1953), and Nazar Stodolia (1960); the ballet Lileia (Lily, 1939); two symphonies (1937, 1945); the symphonic poems Otello (Othello, 1937) and Taras Shevchenko (1939); a string quartet; a trio; choral works; and film scores and art songs for solo voice
Dmytro Klebanov   1907–1987 Kharkiv
Anatol Kos-Anatolsky 1909–1983 Kolomyia, Galicia the opera To Meet the Sun (1957, revised as The Fiery Sky, 1959); the ballets Dovbush's Kerchief (1951), The Jay's Wing (1956), and Orysia (1964); the operetta Spring Storms (1960); the cantatas It Passed a Long Time Ago (1961) and The Immortal Testament (1963); the oratorio From the Niagara to the Dnieper (1969); two piano concertos and two violin concertos; chamber music; piano pieces; and choral works
Arkady Filippenko [ 1912–1983 Pushcha-Vodycia, Kyiv
Ihor Markevych   1912–1983 Kyiv
Dezső Zádor 1912–1985 Uzhhorod
Heorhiy Maiboroda   1913–1992 Kremenchuk operas Mylana (1957), Arsenal (1960), Taras Shevchenko (1964), and Yaroslav the Wise (1973); three symphonies (1940, 1952, 1976); a concerto for voice and orchestra (1969); the symphonic poems Lily, (text by Taras Shevchenko, 1939) and Kameniari (Stone-cutters, text by Ivan Franko, 1941); the vocal-symphonic poem Zaporozhians (text by Liubov Zabashta, 1954); and the orchestral Hutsul Rhapsody (1949)
Platon Maiboroda   1918–1989 Pelekhivshchyna (Poltava Governorate) the symphonic overture Prometheus, choral works, and the vocal-symphonic poem Poplar, (text by Taras Shevchenko, 1966). He is best known for his popular songs, such as "The Kyiv Waltz," "White Chestnuts," "Song about the Dnieper," and the widely familiar "Rushnychok" (Embroidered Towel, text by Andrii Malyshko), which is commonly known as "Ridna maty moia" (Dear Mother Mine)
George Fiala 1922–2017 Kyiv over 200 works including symphonies, concertos, chamber music, and educational pieces for children
Ihor Shamo   1925–1982 Kyiv Yak tebe ne liubyty, Kyieve mii!
Ihor Sonevytsky 1926–2006 Hadynkivtsi, Kopychyntsi county, Galicia opera Star, the ballet Cinderella, incidental music for numerous theater plays, a Piano Concerto in G Major, variations and miniatures for piano, approximately 60 art songs for voice and piano (including cycles to texts by Taras Shevchenko, Ivan Franko, and Vasyl Symonenko), the cantata Love Ukraine, and church music
Oleksandr Bilash 1931–2003 Hradizhsk, Poltava Oblast Composer of popular songs, operas, ballads, oratorios, and film music
Yuriy Oliynyk 1931–2021 Ternopil Concertos for bandura and orchestra, music for solo bandura, piano, voice
Vitaliy Serhiyovich Hubarenko 1934–2000 Kharkiv
Boris Mykolayovych Buyevsky  [uk] 1935– Kryvyi Rih
Vitaliy Hodziatsky 1936– Kyiv
Oleksandr Krasotov 1936–2007 Odesa Symphony, chamber, vocal music
Valentyn Sylvestrov   1937– Kyiv Seven symphonies, three piano sonatas, piano pieces, chamber music, vocal works
Mykola Hirshevych Kapustin 1937–2020 Horlivka Jazz
Myroslav Skoryk   1938–2020 Lviv Operas, symphony, string quartets, music solo instruments such as piano
Virko Baley   1938– Radekhiv Symphony No. 1: Sacred Monuments, Dreamtime for chamber ensemble, Emily Dickinson Songbooks
Lesia Dychko 1939–1964 Kyiv two operas, two oratorios, four ballets; works for orchestra and chorus, most notably the symphony Pryvitannia zhyttia (Welcoming Life) for soprano, bass, and chamber orchestra, based on the words of the imagist poet Bohdan Ihor Antonych, and Viter revoliutsii (Wind of the Revolution) based on the poems of Maksym Rylsky and Pavlo Tychyna; numerous cantatas to the words of Taras Shevchenko, Mykola Vinhranovsky, and other poets; choir concertos and two choir poems: Holod – 33 (Famine 1933; based on the words of S. Kolomiiets) and Lebedi materynstva (The Swans of Motherhood; based on the poems by Vasyl Symonenko)
Valentin Bibik 1940–2003 Kharkiv
Yevhen Stankovych 1942– Svaliava Orchestral, chamber, film music
Viktor O. Hutsal 1944– Trebuchivtsi, Khmelnytskyi oblast' orchestration of the Zaporozhian march
Ivan Karabyts   1945–2002 Yalta (Donetsk oblast') Concerto for choir and orchestra “Garden of Divine Songs”; Symphony "5 songs about Ukraine", 2nd concert for orchestra, 3rd concert for orchestra; Symphony for strings
Mykola Suk   1945– Kyiv
Volodymyr Ivasyuk 1949–1979 Kitsman Songs: Chervona Ruta, Vodohrai
Hanna Havrylets 1958–2022 Ternopil See: Works
Roman Yakub 1958– Vinnytsia Phonopolis for String Orchestra, Castalian Dances for chamber ensemble
Oleksandr Shchetynsky   1960– Kharkiv Annunciation, chamber opera (1998)
Roman Hurko 1962– Toronto Three Liturgies, Requiem for Victims of Chernobyl, Vespers
Yulia Homelska   1964–2016 Odesa "The Riot" for wind symphony orchestra, "Ukraine Forever" symphony, "Winter pastoral" for choir
Bohdana Frolyak   1968– Vydyniv See: Works
Vlad DeBriansky   1972– Kalush Jazz, blues
Svitlana Azarova   1976– Izmail, Odesa Oblast Chronometer for Piano, Asiope for chamber ensemble
Oleksandr Shymko 1977– Borshchiv Orchestral, chamber, electronic, theater music
Valeriy Antonyuk [uk]   1979– Derencovets, Korsun-Shevchenkovskii District, Cherkassy Region Cantata in five parts on the lyrics by Federico Garsia Lorca for soprano and symphony orchestra (recorded in 2005), piano Concert (rec. in 2007), four songs on the lyrics by Vasyl Stus for soprano and symphony orchestra (rec. in 2008)[42]
Dmitri Tchesnokov 1982– Vokhma, Russia [43]
Evgeny Khmara   1988– Kyiv Piano, orchestral
Bohdan Syroyid   1995– Lviv Syroyid is a Ukrainian-born Spanish composer.[44] Piano, chamber music.

See also edit

A–D edit

  • Aizberg, Ilya [uk] (1868, Оdesа – 1942, Tbilisi)
  • Bąkowski, Dyonizy [uk] (1816, Voronovytsia – 1881, Boguslav)
  • Barjansky, Alexandre (1883, Odesa–1961, Brussels)
  • Blumenfeld, Felix (19 April 1863 [O.S. 7 April] – 21 January 1931)
  • Blumenfeld, Sigismund Mykhailovych [uk] (1852, Verkhniachka – 1920, Petrograd)
  • Blumenfeld, Stanislav Mykhailovych [uk] (1850, Kyiv province – 1898)
  • Brounoff, Platon Gregoriewitch (1859, Brounoff – 1924, New York)
  • Dyck, Vladimir [fr] (1882, Odesa – 1943, Auschwitz)

E–G edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Dyletsky, Mykola". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  2. ^ "Bilohradsky, Tymofii". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  3. ^ "Skovoroda, Hryhorii". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  4. ^ "Berezovsky, Maksym". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  5. ^ "Bortniansky, Dmytro". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  6. ^ "Vedel, Artem". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  7. ^ "Lyzohub, Illia". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  8. ^ "Lyzohub, Oleksander". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  9. ^ "Markevych, Mykola". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  10. ^ "Hulak-Artemovsky, Semen". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  11. ^ "Verbytsky, Mykhailo". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  12. ^ "Lavrivsky, Ivan A." www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  13. ^ "Nishchynsky, Petro". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  14. ^ "Vorobkevych, Sydir". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  15. ^ "Vakhnianyn, Anatol". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  16. ^ "Lysenko, Mykola". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  17. ^ "Matiuk, Viktor". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  18. ^ "Arkas, Mykola". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  19. ^ "Nyzhankivsky, Ostap". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  20. ^ a b "Sichynsky, Denys". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  21. ^ "Kolessa, Oleksander". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  22. ^ "Glière, Reinhold". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  23. ^ "Koshyts, Oleksander". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  24. ^ "Yanovsky, Borys". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  25. ^ "Leontovych, Mykola". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  26. ^ "Liudkevych, Stanyslav". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  27. ^ "Senytsia, Pavlo". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  28. ^ "Stetsenko, Kyrylo". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  29. ^ "Stepovy, Yakiv". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  30. ^ "Barvinsky, Vasyl". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  31. ^ "Vilinsky, Mykola". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  32. ^ "Revutsky, Lev". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  33. ^ "Prokofiev, Sergei". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  34. ^ "Zaderatsky, Vsevolod". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  35. ^ "Haivoronsky, Mykhailo". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  36. ^ "Pecheniha-Uhlytsky, Pavlo". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  37. ^ "Kozytsky, Pylyp". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  38. ^ "Kostenko, Valentyn". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  39. ^ "Prydatkevych, Roman". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  40. ^ "Kosenko, Viktor". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  41. ^ "Turkevych-Lukiianovych, Stefaniia". www.encyclopediaofukraine.com. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  42. ^ www.soundtracks.strana.de http://www.soundtracks.strana.de/. Retrieved 2023-09-18. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  43. ^ salon.de.musique.free.fr http://salon.de.musique.free.fr/pages/dimitri2dtchesnokov2dinfo.html. Retrieved 2023-09-18. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  44. ^ "Exalumnos | Conservatorio Elemental de Música "Pablo Ruiz Picasso"". blogsaverroes.juntadeandalucia.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 5 December 2022.

Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Dytyniak, Maria (1986). Українські Композитори [Ukrainian Composers] (in Ukrainian). Edmonton, Alberta: Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies.

External links edit

  • Ukraine: Music – Britannica
  • Free scores by Ukrainian composers at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
  • Composers listed in the Нотный архив Бориса Тараканова (Music archive of Boris Tarakanov) (in Russian)
  • Article on the National Union of Composers of Ukraine in Internet Encyclopaedia of Ukraine
  • Explore Music by Ukrainian Composers from the Boosey & Hawkes website

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For an alphabetical list of Ukrainian composers see List of composers by nationality Ukraine This is a list of Ukrainian composers of classical music who were either born on the territory of modern day Ukraine or were ethnically Ukrainian This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources Contents 1 List by century of birth 1 1 15th century 1 2 16th century 1 3 17th century 1 4 18th century 1 5 19th century 1 6 20th century 2 See also 2 1 A D 2 2 E G 3 References 4 Sources 5 Further reading 6 External linksList by century of birth edit15th century edit Composer Date City of birth Notable worksSebastian z Felsztyna 1480 1490 after 1543 Polish Felsztyn now modern Skelivka in Ukraine three motets16th century edit Composer Date City of birth Notable worksMarcin Leopolita nbsp 1537 1584 Lviv Missa paschalis17th century edit Composer Date City of birth Notable worksNikolay Diletsky c 1630 after 1680 Kyiv Hramatyka muzykal na Musical Grammar a textbook of polyphonic singing 1 Symeon Pekalytsky c 1630 Liturgy in 8 voicesIvan Kolenda active in the 1650s 1960s Sluzhba triumfalna Triumphal Service Ivan Domaratsky after 1650 before 1750 Oh you Father Roman and No 10 Your Spirit is Good Concerto of the Apostle Timofey The Catcher is Wonderful with His Tongue concerto The Virgin Gives Birth to the Pre existent The Deliverer Has Been Sent by the Lord concerto in 8 voices Blessed is the Man Who Fears the Lord All Night Virgil Blessed is the Man 18th century edit Composer Date City of birth Notable worksTymofiy Bilohradsky c 1710 c 1782 Cherkasy Lutenist who worked throughout Europe 2 Hryhorii Skovoroda nbsp 1722 1794 Chornukhy Kyiv Governorate Liturgical music 3 Andrii Rachinsky uk 1724 1794 Velyki MostyMaksym Prokhorovych Kontsevych uk active 1773 1780s romances liturgical music cantata He took the thundering harp in his right hand 1787 Timofiy Bilohradsky c 1710 c 1782 Minuet with variations for harpsichordYelizaveta Belogradskaya 1739 c 1764 Imperial Court opera singer and composer for keyboardsyl Fedorovych Trutovsky uk c 1740 c 1810 Belgorod Slobid Ukraine music folklore of the collection Collection of simple russian songs with notes parts 1 4 1776 1795 including Ukrainian folk songs and piano variations on the themes of folk songsVasily Pashkevych c 1742 1797 9 operas masses and other liturgical works Maksym Berezovsky nbsp 1745 1777 Hlukhiv Sacred choral concertos composed the earliest opera symphony and violin sonata by a Ukrainian composer 4 Ivan Khandoshkin 1747 1804 Kozachok from the 21 variations for solo piano 12 variations in D major solo for violin on the theme of the song Mowers went out to the field and 12 variations in F major for violin with bass accompaniment on the theme of the dance Kozachok other variations on the basis of the Ukrainian folk song Oh grove green grove Dmytro Bortniansky nbsp 1751 1825 Hlukhiv Sacred choral concerti operas symphonie concertante quintet harpsichord sonata 5 Artemy Vedel 1767 1808 Kyiv Sacred choral concerti see List of compositions by Artemy Vedel 6 Illia Lyzohub nbsp 1787 1867 Kulykivka Chernihiv gubernia cello sonata in G minor 7 Oleksandr Lyzohub 1790 1839 Sedniv Chernihiv gubernia two nocturnes dated 1821 mazurkas art songs Death in a Foreign Land sets of variations on Ukrainian folk songs Oh There Is a Well in the Field And I Had a Wife and Don t Go to the Party Hryts 8 19th century edit Composer Date City of birth Notable worksMykola Markevych nbsp 1804 1860 Dunaiets 9 Semen Hulak Artemovsky nbsp 1813 1873 Horodyshche The first Ukrainian language opera Zaporozhian Cossack beyond the Danube 10 Vasilii Sarenko 1814 1881 Voronezh Russia Malorossiyska pliaska Ukrainian dance Mykhaylo Verbytsky nbsp 1815 1870 Lemkivshchyna Ukraine national anthem 11 Ivan A Lavrivsky nbsp 1823 1873 Lopinka Lemko region religious and secular compositions such as Autumn Zaspivai my soloviiu Sing for Me Nightingale Richen ka The Streamlet as well as the popular operettas Oman ochei A Wile of the Eyes Roksoliana and Pan Dovhonos Mister Long Nose 12 Volodymyr Stepanovych Alexandrov 1825 1894 Bugayivka Izyum district Kharkiv guberniaPetro Nishchynsky nbsp 1832 1896 Nemenka Vinnytska Oblast 13 Sydir Vorobkevych nbsp 1836 1903 Chernivtsi Sacred music 14 Anatol Vakhnianyn nbsp 1841 1908 Siniava Peremyshl circle Galicia Kupalo the first opera in western Ukraine 1870 92 music to plays by Taras Shevchenko Fedir Zarevych Omelian Ohonovsky and Kornylo Ustyianovych original choral scores to texts by Yurii Fedkovych Ivan Hushalevych E Levytsky and others choral arrangements of Ukrainian folk songs 15 Mykola Lysenko nbsp 1842 1912 Poltava oblast overture from Taras Bulba Prayer for Ukraine The Father of Ukrainian music Founder of Ukrainian nationalist school of music 16 Arkady Abaza nbsp 1843 1915 Sudzhansky District Kursk Governorate Russian Empire Piano pieces and romances including Foggy Morning to the words of Ivan TurgenevViktor Matiuk nbsp 1852 1912 Tudorkovychi Zhovkva circle Galicia folk song arrangements melodramas such as Kapral Tymko Corporal Tymko Neshchasna liubov Unlucky Love Invalid The Invalid and Nashi poselentsi Our Settlers anthology of the works of Ukrainian composers titled Boian The Troubadour 1884 2nd edn 1886 school and church songbooks 17 Mykola Arkas nbsp 1853 1909 Mykolaiv 18 Ostap Nyzhankivsky nbsp 1862 1919 Drohobych Galicia works for choir Hulialy They Danced and Z Okrushkiv From Crumbs text by Yurii Fedkovych art songs for solo voice with piano accompaniment including Mynuly lita molodii The Years of Youth Have Passed By arrangements of folk songs for solo voice or choir and Vitrohony a cycle of kolomyika melodies for piano 19 Denys Sichynsky nbsp 1865 1909 Kliuvyntsi Husiatyn county Galicia 20 opera Roksoliana libretto by V Lutsyk and Stepan Charnetsky 1908 works for symphony and chamber orchestras piano solos choral music including the cantata Lichu v nevoli I Count the Days and Nights in Bondage text by Taras Shevchenko a score for a liturgy approximately 20 art songs for solo voice to texts by T Shevchenko L Ukrainka I Franko B Lepky U Kravchenko and H Heine and arrangements of folk songs 20 Filaret Kolessa nbsp 1871 1947 Lviv oblast Ukrainian ethnographic musicology 21 Mikhail Bukinik 1872 1947 DubnoLiudmyla Volodymyrivna Aleksandrova 19th century Izium music for the romances I m looking at the sky lyrics by Mykhailo Petrenko and Blow wind to Ukraine lyrics by Stepan Rudanskyi Reinhold Gliere nbsp 1875 1956 Kyiv Numerous orchestral works concertos ballets vocal works 22 Oleksandr Koshyts nbsp 1875 1944 Romashky near Kyiv Sacred music liturgies songs collecting and arrangements of folk songs 23 Borys Yanovsky 1875 1933 Moscow 10 operas notably Sorochyntsi Fair 1899 and Black Sea Duma or Samiilo Kishka 1927 two ballets orchestral pieces chamber music works violin and piano music works for chorus art songs and arrangements of Ukrainian folk songs 24 Fedir Stepanovych Yakymenko uk 1876 1945 Pisky uk Serhii Bortkevych nbsp 1877 1952 Kharkiv Works by Bortkiewicz include two symphonies three piano concertos a violin concerto and a cello concertoDavyd Novakivsky 1877 1921 Malyn Synagogue music choral organ and orchestral worksMykola Leontovych nbsp 1877 1921 Selevyntsi Podilia Shchedryk which eventually became the Carol of the Bells 25 Stanyslav Lyudkevych nbsp 1879 1979 Yaroslav present day Poland cantata The Caucasus 1902 13 inspired by Taras Shevchenko s poem The Eternal Revolutionary 1898 The Reaper 1901 Khor pidzemnykh kovaliv The Chorus of Underground Blacksmiths 1905 Oi vyhostriu tovarysha Oh I ll Hone My Knife 1917 and The Testament 1934 symphonic compositions The Sich Riflemen s Rhapsody 1920 Kameniari The Stonecutters 1926 1956 and Vesnianky Spring Songs 1935 Symfonietta 1943 Koliadnytsia Christmas Caroller 1944 Iunats ke rondo The Rondo of Youth 1946 the symphonic poem The Dnieper 1948 Prykarpats ka symfoniia The Subcarpathian Symphony 1952 and the opera Dovbush 26 Pavlo Senytsia nbsp 1879 1960 Maksymivka Pereiaslav county Poltava gubernia operas Life Is a Dream based on Calderon and The Servant Girl based on Taras Shevchenko 1913 16 two symphonies 1905 1912 an overture 1908 seven string quartets approximately 50 works of choral music to texts by Shevchenko Mykola Bazhan and others and approximately 100 solo art songs to texts by Shevchenko Pavlo Tychyna Maksym Rylsky and others 27 Mykola Roslavets nbsp 1881 1944 Dushatyn Chernihiv Orchestral and chamber atonal works Known as the Ukrainian SchoenbergKyrylo Stetsenko nbsp 1882 1922 Cherkashchyna Requiem Zhuravli the cranes 28 Yakiv Stepovy nbsp 1883 1921 Kharkiv 29 Vasyl Barvinsky nbsp 1888 1963 Ternopil 30 Mykola Vilinsky nbsp 1888 1956 Holta Ananiv povit Symphonic suites music for piano and arrangements for choir and solo voices of Ukrainian Russian Moldavian folk songs 31 Levko Revutsky nbsp 1889 1977 Irzhavets Pryluky 32 Sergei Prokofiev nbsp 1891 1953 Sontsivka Donetsk 5 piano concertos 9 piano sonatas 7 symphonies Suite from Romeo and Juliet Suite from Lieutenant Kije 33 Vsevolod Zaderatsky 1891 1953 Rivne two operas several symphonic compositions including Symphony No 1 1951 chamber music choral works eg the Suite on Ukrainian Folk Texts 1950 and a choral poem dedicated to Viktor Kosenko 1948 and art songs five piano sonatas a suite a cycle of 24 preludes and fugues 34 Mykhailo Haivoronsky nbsp 1892 1949 Zalischyky songs of the Ukrainian Sich Riflemen choral works church music and instrumental music for violin string orchestra band and symphony orchestra He also arranged many folk songs and compiled a number of songbooks 35 Pavlo Pecheniha Uhlytsky 1892 1948 Pechenihy Vovchansk county Kharkiv gubernia the opera The Witch after Yevhen Hrebinka libretto by Stepan Charnetsky 1936 1940 the ballet Legin Young Lad libretto by Dmytro Chutro 1938 the tone poem Ukraina after Taras Shevchenko s Haidamaky three string quartets and the cantata Biut porohy The Rapids Roar text by Shevchenko for mixed chorus and orchestra 36 Pylyp Kozytsky nbsp 1893 1960 Letychivka Cherkasy Oblast 37 Valentyn Kostenko 1895 1960 Urazovo Valuiki county Voronezh gubernia the operas Karmeliuk Nazar Stodolia based on the play by Taras Shevchenko and The Carpathians the ballet Reborn Steppe the symphony The Year 1917 a suite for symphony orchestra violin piano and choral pieces and six string quartets studies of Pavlo Senytsia 1922 the role of folk songs in Ukrainian music 1928 the influence of German expressionism on Ukrainian music 1929 38 Borys Liatoshynskyi nbsp 1895 1968 Zhytomyr Operas The Golden Ring 1929 and Shchors 1937 the five symphonies the Overture on Four Ukrainian Folk Themes 1926 the suites Taras Shevchenko 1952 and Romeo and Juliet 1955 the symphonic poem Grazhyna 1955 his Slavic piano concerto 1953 and the completion and orchestration of Reinhold Gliere s violin concerto 1956 Roman Prydatkevych 1895 1980 Zywiec near Cracow four symphonies the Ukrainian Suite for chamber orchestra works for violin and piano such as the Hutsul Suite two rhapsodies and a sonata 39 Viktor Kosenko nbsp 1896 1938 St Petersburg sonata for cello and piano 1923 Classical Trio for piano violin and cello 1927 a sonata for violin and piano 1927 Heroic Overture 1932 Moldavian Poem 1937 a piano concerto three piano sonatas a trio a violin concerto about 100 piano pieces including 24 pieces for children 1936 40 Stefania Turkewich nbsp 1898 1977 Lviv Her opera Mavka is based on Lesia Ukrainka s Forest Song 41 20th century edit Composer Date City of birth Notable worksRoman Simovych 1901 1984 Sniatyn then in Austrian Galicia Ballet 7 symphonies symphonic poems symphonic overtures suites flute concerto string quartet two trios works for violin cello piano and mixed choir piano concertoAndriy Shtoharenko 1902 1992 Novi Kaidaky now part of Dnipro symphonic cantata Ukraino moia My Ukraine 1943 the Kyiv Symphony 1972 symphonic suites a violin concerto chamber and choral pieces art songs incidental music and film scoresAntin Rudnytsky 1902 1975 Luka Sambir county Galicia operas Dovbush 1938 and Anna Yaroslavna 1967 three symphonies a ballet suite and the ballet Buri nad Zakhodom Storms over the West 1932 a lyric poem an overture a concerto for cello and orchestra the oratorio Haidamaky 1974 the cantata Moses to Ivan Franko s poem Poslaniie The Epistle to Taras Shevchenko s poem Yuliy Meitus nbsp 1903 1997 Elysavet now modern Kropyvnytskyi Considered the founder of the Ukrainian Soviet opera Composed 18 operas most notably Perekop 1939 40 and Haidamaky 1940 41 both composed with Vsevolod Rybalchenko and Mykhailo Tits Abadan composed with A Kuliev 1942 43 Star over the Dvina 1951 1955 Stolen Happiness 1958 59 and Yaroslav the Wise 1973 and about 300 songs Kostiantyn Dankevych nbsp 1905 1984 Odesa operas Trahediina nich Tragic Night 1935 Bohdan Khmelnytsky 1951 new version 1953 and Nazar Stodolia 1960 the ballet Lileia Lily 1939 two symphonies 1937 1945 the symphonic poems Otello Othello 1937 and Taras Shevchenko 1939 a string quartet a trio choral works and film scores and art songs for solo voiceDmytro Klebanov nbsp 1907 1987 KharkivAnatol Kos Anatolsky 1909 1983 Kolomyia Galicia the opera To Meet the Sun 1957 revised as The Fiery Sky 1959 the ballets Dovbush s Kerchief 1951 The Jay s Wing 1956 and Orysia 1964 the operetta Spring Storms 1960 the cantatas It Passed a Long Time Ago 1961 and The Immortal Testament 1963 the oratorio From the Niagara to the Dnieper 1969 two piano concertos and two violin concertos chamber music piano pieces and choral worksArkady Filippenko 1912 1983 Pushcha Vodycia KyivIhor Markevych nbsp 1912 1983 KyivDezso Zador 1912 1985 UzhhorodHeorhiy Maiboroda nbsp 1913 1992 Kremenchuk operas Mylana 1957 Arsenal 1960 Taras Shevchenko 1964 and Yaroslav the Wise 1973 three symphonies 1940 1952 1976 a concerto for voice and orchestra 1969 the symphonic poems Lily text by Taras Shevchenko 1939 and Kameniari Stone cutters text by Ivan Franko 1941 the vocal symphonic poem Zaporozhians text by Liubov Zabashta 1954 and the orchestral Hutsul Rhapsody 1949 Platon Maiboroda nbsp 1918 1989 Pelekhivshchyna Poltava Governorate the symphonic overture Prometheus choral works and the vocal symphonic poem Poplar text by Taras Shevchenko 1966 He is best known for his popular songs such as The Kyiv Waltz White Chestnuts Song about the Dnieper and the widely familiar Rushnychok Embroidered Towel text by Andrii Malyshko which is commonly known as Ridna maty moia Dear Mother Mine George Fiala 1922 2017 Kyiv over 200 works including symphonies concertos chamber music and educational pieces for childrenIhor Shamo nbsp 1925 1982 Kyiv Yak tebe ne liubyty Kyieve mii Ihor Sonevytsky 1926 2006 Hadynkivtsi Kopychyntsi county Galicia opera Star the ballet Cinderella incidental music for numerous theater plays a Piano Concerto in G Major variations and miniatures for piano approximately 60 art songs for voice and piano including cycles to texts by Taras Shevchenko Ivan Franko and Vasyl Symonenko the cantata Love Ukraine and church musicOleksandr Bilash 1931 2003 Hradizhsk Poltava Oblast Composer of popular songs operas ballads oratorios and film musicYuriy Oliynyk 1931 2021 Ternopil Concertos for bandura and orchestra music for solo bandura piano voiceVitaliy Serhiyovich Hubarenko 1934 2000 KharkivBoris Mykolayovych Buyevsky uk 1935 Kryvyi RihVitaliy Hodziatsky 1936 KyivOleksandr Krasotov 1936 2007 Odesa Symphony chamber vocal musicValentyn Sylvestrov nbsp 1937 Kyiv Seven symphonies three piano sonatas piano pieces chamber music vocal worksMykola Hirshevych Kapustin 1937 2020 Horlivka JazzMyroslav Skoryk nbsp 1938 2020 Lviv Operas symphony string quartets music solo instruments such as pianoVirko Baley nbsp 1938 Radekhiv Symphony No 1 Sacred Monuments Dreamtime for chamber ensemble Emily Dickinson SongbooksLesia Dychko 1939 1964 Kyiv two operas two oratorios four ballets works for orchestra and chorus most notably the symphony Pryvitannia zhyttia Welcoming Life for soprano bass and chamber orchestra based on the words of the imagist poet Bohdan Ihor Antonych and Viter revoliutsii Wind of the Revolution based on the poems of Maksym Rylsky and Pavlo Tychyna numerous cantatas to the words of Taras Shevchenko Mykola Vinhranovsky and other poets choir concertos and two choir poems Holod 33 Famine 1933 based on the words of S Kolomiiets and Lebedi materynstva The Swans of Motherhood based on the poems by Vasyl Symonenko Valentin Bibik 1940 2003 KharkivYevhen Stankovych 1942 Svaliava Orchestral chamber film musicViktor O Hutsal 1944 Trebuchivtsi Khmelnytskyi oblast orchestration of the Zaporozhian marchIvan Karabyts nbsp 1945 2002 Yalta Donetsk oblast Concerto for choir and orchestra Garden of Divine Songs Symphony 5 songs about Ukraine 2nd concert for orchestra 3rd concert for orchestra Symphony for stringsMykola Suk nbsp 1945 KyivVolodymyr Ivasyuk 1949 1979 Kitsman Songs Chervona Ruta VodohraiHanna Havrylets 1958 2022 Ternopil See WorksRoman Yakub 1958 Vinnytsia Phonopolis for String Orchestra Castalian Dances for chamber ensembleOleksandr Shchetynsky nbsp 1960 Kharkiv Annunciation chamber opera 1998 Roman Hurko 1962 Toronto Three Liturgies Requiem for Victims of Chernobyl VespersYulia Homelska nbsp 1964 2016 Odesa The Riot for wind symphony orchestra Ukraine Forever symphony Winter pastoral for choirBohdana Frolyak nbsp 1968 Vydyniv See WorksVlad DeBriansky nbsp 1972 Kalush Jazz bluesSvitlana Azarova nbsp 1976 Izmail Odesa Oblast Chronometer for Piano Asiope for chamber ensembleOleksandr Shymko 1977 Borshchiv Orchestral chamber electronic theater musicValeriy Antonyuk uk nbsp 1979 Derencovets Korsun Shevchenkovskii District Cherkassy Region Cantata in five parts on the lyrics by Federico Garsia Lorca for soprano and symphony orchestra recorded in 2005 piano Concert rec in 2007 four songs on the lyrics by Vasyl Stus for soprano and symphony orchestra rec in 2008 42 Dmitri Tchesnokov 1982 Vokhma Russia 43 Evgeny Khmara nbsp 1988 Kyiv Piano orchestralBohdan Syroyid nbsp 1995 Lviv Syroyid is a Ukrainian born Spanish composer 44 Piano chamber music See also editA D edit Aizberg Ilya uk 1868 Odesa 1942 Tbilisi Bakowski Dyonizy uk 1816 Voronovytsia 1881 Boguslav Barjansky Alexandre 1883 Odesa 1961 Brussels Blumenfeld Felix 19 April 1863 O S 7 April 21 January 1931 Blumenfeld Sigismund Mykhailovych uk 1852 Verkhniachka 1920 Petrograd Blumenfeld Stanislav Mykhailovych uk 1850 Kyiv province 1898 Brounoff Platon Gregoriewitch 1859 Brounoff 1924 New York Dyck Vladimir fr 1882 Odesa 1943 Auschwitz E G edit Eiges Konstantin 1875 Bogodukhov 1950 Moscow Gauk Alexander 1893 Odesa 1963 Moscow Yefim Golyshev 1897 Kherson 1970 Paris Gozenpud Matvey Akimovich ru 1903 Kyiv 1961 Novosibirsk Russia References edit Dyletsky Mykola www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Bilohradsky Tymofii www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Skovoroda Hryhorii www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Berezovsky Maksym www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Bortniansky Dmytro www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Vedel Artem www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Lyzohub Illia www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Lyzohub Oleksander www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Markevych Mykola www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Hulak Artemovsky Semen www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Verbytsky Mykhailo www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Lavrivsky Ivan A www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Nishchynsky Petro www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Vorobkevych Sydir www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Vakhnianyn Anatol www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Lysenko Mykola www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Matiuk Viktor www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Arkas Mykola www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Nyzhankivsky Ostap www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 a b Sichynsky Denys www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Kolessa Oleksander www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Gliere Reinhold www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Koshyts Oleksander www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Yanovsky Borys www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Leontovych Mykola www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Liudkevych Stanyslav www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Senytsia Pavlo www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Stetsenko Kyrylo www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Stepovy Yakiv www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Barvinsky Vasyl www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Vilinsky Mykola www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Revutsky Lev www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Prokofiev Sergei www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Zaderatsky Vsevolod www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Haivoronsky Mykhailo www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Pecheniha Uhlytsky Pavlo www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Kozytsky Pylyp www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Kostenko Valentyn www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Prydatkevych Roman www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Kosenko Viktor www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 Turkevych Lukiianovych Stefaniia www encyclopediaofukraine com Retrieved 2023 09 18 www soundtracks strana de http www soundtracks strana de Retrieved 2023 09 18 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help salon de musique free fr http salon de musique free fr pages dimitri2dtchesnokov2dinfo html Retrieved 2023 09 18 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Exalumnos Conservatorio Elemental de Musica Pablo Ruiz Picasso blogsaverroes juntadeandalucia es in Spanish Retrieved 5 December 2022 This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2022 Sources editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2022 Further reading editDytyniak Maria 1986 Ukrayinski Kompozitori Ukrainian Composers in Ukrainian Edmonton Alberta Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Composers from Ukraine Ukraine Music Britannica Free scores by Ukrainian composers at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Composers listed in the Notnyj arhiv Borisa Tarakanova Music archive of Boris Tarakanov in Russian Article on the National Union of Composers of Ukraine in Internet Encyclopaedia of Ukraine Explore Music by Ukrainian Composers from the Boosey amp Hawkes website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of Ukrainian composers amp oldid 1188799930, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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