Chervona Ruta (festival)

Chervona Ruta (Ukrainian: Червона рута) is a permanent biennial all-Ukrainian youth festival of contemporary song and popular music,[1] which has been held every two years since 1989.[2] It was a benchmark where more Ukrainian popular music was presented transitioning away from traditional Ukrainian folk culture associated with "sharovary" genre. Unlike the Soviet festival Song of the Year (Pesnya goda)[1] where only a selected song from Ukraine sometimes was demonstrated, Chervona Ruta allowed more singers and songs.

Chervona Ruta
Genrepop, folk music, art rock & others
Location(s)various cities in Ukraine
Years active1989–present

The festival is dedicated to a Ukrainian songwriter, composer and poet Volodymyr Ivasyuk who is the author and composer of the widely popular song Ukrainian song Chervona Ruta. The name may refer to a mythological or actual species of flowering plants Chervona ruta.

History

The idea and the name of the festival belongs to journalist Ivan Lepsha, which was realized by Taras Melnyk, Kyrylo Stetsenko, Anatoliy Kalenychenko, Oleh Repetskyi and Ivan Malkovych. The festival played an important role in the revival of Ukrainian popular music and contributed to the Ukrainian music boom of the 90s.[3]

Until start of the Soviet reforms such "perestroika" (The Reform) in 1986 along with "Glasnost" and "Uskoreniye", the rock music throughout the Soviet Union was a taboo.[1] But, there were some exclusions such as the 1980 Georgian "Spring Rhythms".[1] There was saying that today you play the jazz (implying any music of the capitalist West created by negroes, according to the Great Soviet Encyclopedia[4]) and tomorrow you will sell your Homeland (Russian: Сегодня ты играешь джаз, а завтра Родину продашь).[5]

The first festival - Chernivtsi 1989

The first Chervona Ruta festival was held on September 17–24, 1989 in Chernivtsi at Bukovyna Stadium. While the festival was conducted under close supervision of the republican KDB (the Ukrainian branch of KGB), militsiya, and Communist Party of Ukraine, at the festival sounded the Ukrainian anthem "Shche ne vmerla" and were unfurled blue and yellow flags.[6] Famous bands «Vopli Vidoplyasova», «Braty Hadyukiny», «Kvartyra № 50», «Zymovyy sad», Vika Vradiy, Marichka Burmaka, Tryzuby Stas, and many others participated in the rock competitions, in total there were over 500 performers including singers from Europe and North America.[6] And the festival organizers and jury members were just overwhelmed by the sheer number of contestants and their high level.[7] There was a song commemorated to Volodymyr Ivasyuk who was murdered 10 before.[6]

The final concert was opened with sounds of trembitas, Ukrainian elongated highland horn.[6] The stadium carried symbols of the Ukrainian SSR such as the state emblem of the Ukrainian SSR and the state flag of the Ukrainian SSR.[6] On the playing field was set up a great bonfire.[6]

The festival's grand prize was received by Vasyl Zhdankin, other laureates included "Sestrychka Vika" (Vika Vradiy), "Komu vnyz", "Braty Hadiukiny", Eduard Drach, Viktor Morozov, Taras Kurchyk, Andriy Mykolaichuk, others.[6] It was the native of Kuban Zhdankin who spontaneously started to sing the Ukrainian anthem at the festival's closing.[6]

At the final concert, which took place at the central stadium of Chernivtsi, local police persecuted any manifestations of "nationalism", detained young girls (many were young people from the popular "Lion Society"), who were dressed in yellow blouses and blue skirts. At the stadium was attacked by militsiya Georgi Gongadze who received a hit to head.[6]

Rosmay Media Center has made a 6-part film about the history of the festival.[8]

Chernivtsi 2019

Chervona Ruta was held on September 17-22 again in Chernivtsi (hometown of Volodymyr Ivasyuk).[9] It was 30th Anniversary of the Festival.[10]

Impact

Ruta Fest has made a real "revolution" in Ukrainian culture, which has had an impact on the entire society. The festival gave birth to new youth music that had not existed before. Previously, Ukrainian youth, without their domestic idols, had to settle for a Moscow variety show or listen to Western pop stars. Many of the songs performed for the first time at the festival immediately became hits, which were sung by millions of people. The winners of "Ruta-89" and their songs were the top performers in all charts and polls. Instantly, yesterday completely unknown musicians turned into general idols of Ukrainian youth of the late 1980s - early 1990s. For the first time, a large part of the population, and especially young people, began to admire Ukrainian music, which became part of their lives.[11]

Chervona Ruta also launched a national show business in Ukraine. It was Ruta who became the first customer for the technical (stage, sound, light, recording studios, music equipment, reproduction of music production) and creative (composers, arrangers, sound producers, poets, etc.) support such events. During the first Ruta Fest the festival records were sold out and did not satisfy even a tenth of the demand. And after the festival was held the first ever Ukrainian concert tour: 87 concerts of the winners of "Ruth-89" all over Ukraine were held with unprecedented success in crowded halls. The music of the festival began to gather huge audiences in the hundreds of thousands of spectators at the stadiums and large squares attracted by the artistic value of the concerts (previously, so many people only gathered for political rallies).[12]

See also

References

  1. Serhiy Kharynovych. The first republican. What was the 1989 festival "Chervona Ruta" (Перший республіканський. Чим був фестиваль «Червона рута» 1989 року?) The Ukrainian Week. 2 January 2017
  2. "Kateryna Yushchenko Attends Chervona Ruta Festival's 20th Anniversary". Ukraine 3000. 2009-09-21. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
  3. "Festival Chervona Ruta Preserves Authentic Ukrainian Music". primetour.ua. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
  4. Excerpt from the Great Soviet Encyclopedia of 1952 (Выдержка из Большой Советской Энциклопедии за 1952 год: ДЖАЗ).
  5. Vladlen Ross. The nets of fate. The first love is as the first pancake (Сети судьбы. Первая любовь – как первый блин...). Chapter 8. Litres Publishing. 2 March 2019
  6. Halyna Tereshchuk. The 1989 singing explosion. The "Chervona Ruta" festival brought closer the Independence of Ukraine (Пісенний вибух 1989 року. Фестиваль «Червона рута» наблизив Незалежність України). Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 17 September 2019
  7. "Пісенний вибух 1989 року. Фестиваль «Червона рута» наблизив Незалежність України". Радіо Свобода (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 2019-09-25.
  8. "Фестиваль «Червона рута–1989» в пісенних фрагментах #RutaFEST - 1989 рік - Відео - Червона рута - Всеукраїнський фестиваль сучасної пісні та популярної музики". rutafest.art. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
  9. "The city of Chernivtsi invites to the anniversary Chervona Ruta Music Festival". EEAS - European External Action Service - European Commission. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
  10. ""CHERVONA RUTA – 2019" TOWARDS THE 30TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE FESTIVAL IN CHERNIVTSI". Retrieved 2019-09-25.
  11. "Червона рута - Всеукраїнський фестиваль сучасної пісні та популярної музики - "ЧЕРВОНА РУТА" - ЯК КУЛЬТУРНИЙ ФЕНОМЕН". rutafest.art. Retrieved 2019-09-25.
  12. "Червона рута - Всеукраїнський фестиваль сучасної пісні та популярної музики - "ЧЕРВОНА РУТА" - ЯК КУЛЬТУРНИЙ ФЕНОМЕН". rutafest.art. Retrieved 2019-09-25.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.