National Union of Composers of Ukraine

The National Union of Composers of Ukraine (ukr: Національна спілка композиторів України) is a public organization that unites Ukrainian composers and musicologists working in academic music.[1] Potential members must have completed a full course of higher education and produced a significant body of work.

Composers Union building in Kyiv

History

The organization's precursor started as the All-Ukrainian Music Society (named after M. Leontovych), established in 1922. In 1928 it was renamed the All-Ukrainian Society of Revolutionary Musicians, and four years later, in November 1932, it was replaced by the Union of Soviet Musicians of Ukraine per a resolution of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the USSR. This is considered the founding date of the modern union.

Regional unions were formed in Kharkiv (1932), Odessa (1937) and Lviv (1940). In 1939, the organization was renamed the Union of Soviet Composers of Ukraine, and then, in 1959, the Union of Composers of Ukraine.

The Union has been chaired by:

Current status

As of 2020, the Union has over four hundred members, among them two Heroes of Ukraine, twenty-one People's Artists of Ukraine, sixty-six Honored Art Workers of Ukraine, sixteen Taras Shevchenko National Prize of Ukraine laureates, five academicians, eight corresponding members of the Academy of Arts of Ukraine, thrity-six doctors of sciences, sixty-three professors, thirty-seven Lysenko Prize laureates, twenty-three Lyatoshynsky Prize laureates, twenty-five Revutsky Prize laureates, and seventeen Kosenko Prize laureates.[2]

Each year the Union and its regional organizations hold festivals of contemporary academic music, such as the Kyiv Music Fest, the Premieres of the Season, the Youth Music Forum (Kyiv), the Two Days and Two Nights of New Music (Odessa), Contrasts (Lviv), and Dnieper Stars (Dnipro).

After the Revolution of Dignity, in contrast to the expectations of the artistic elite, the living conditions of Union members have only become more complicated. Appeals have been made to the government over increasing costs due to utility and land fees which endanger the existence of creative unions.[3] In 2015 the government's budget for national unions was cut in half compared to the previous year. This threatened the Union with the loss of its building.[4]

References

Official cite

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