By Daniel Jaffé

Published: Thursday, 09 June 2022 at 12:00 am


Musical tributes have been played and sung at concerts around the world in solidarity with Ukraine as it battles for its very existence against the on-going Russian invasion. Most appropriately, several of those works are close to the heart of the Ukrainian people. Here is a list of the top half dozen such works which you may expect to hear being performed, some perhaps rather more familiar than you might have expected…

 

Ukrainian National Anthem, ‘Shche ne vmerla Ukrayiny, nis lava, ni volya’ (1863)

Composer: Mykhailo Verbytsky (1815-70)

The Ukrainian national anthem as sung these days is based on a hymn composed by the otherwise little-known composer Mykhailo Verbytsky, the original text, taken from a patriotic poem written by Pavlo Chubynsky (1839-84), replaced by a modern adaptation of the opening stanza.

Chubynsky was apparently inspired by Serbian students singing a rousing anthem at a political gathering at an apartment in Kyiv – probably ‘Hey Slavs!’, a nationalist hymn inspired by the Polish National Anthem ‘Poland is not yet lost’; this would explain the similarities between the text of that earlier song and Chubynsky’a nationalist anthem, which he wrote in 1862. Not long afterwards, Chubynsky was arrested and sent by the Russian authorities into exile to the Arkhangelsk province, having been deemed ‘a dangerous influence on the minds of commoners’. In Chubynsky’s absence, the poem was published the following year, mistakenly (or perhaps deliberately) attributed to the celebrated Ukrainian poet and folklorist who had recently died, Taras Shevchenko (1814-61). This misattribution only added to the poem’s rapid popularity among Ukrainian nationalists.

Chubynsky’s poem caught the attention of the Ukrainian priest and composer Mykhailo Verbytsky, who first set it for solo voice, then made a choral version first performed in 1864 at the Ukraine Theatre in Lviv. In 1917, Verbytsky’s setting was adopted as a state anthem, Ukraine having suddenly gained independence following Russia’s February Revolution (though after the October Revolution then followed the brutal Civil War, largely fought within Ukraine). The Ukrainian Republic existed until 1922, when the new nation became part of the USSR and the anthem banned from performance. When Ukraine regained its independence in 1991, the anthem was revived by the following year, though initially only Verbytsky’s music was performed; Chubynsky’s lyrics – thought to be outdated – were not sung until 2003, when Ukraine’s parliament, the Verkhovna Rada, officially adopted by vote a modified version, based on the opening stanza and refrain of Chubynsky’s poem, but suitably updated to reflect Ukraine’s now established independence.