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Ukrainian folk music group From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
DakhaBrakha are a Ukrainian folk music quartet which combines the musical styles of several ethnic groups.[1][2] They were a winner of the Sergey Kuryokhin Contemporary Art Award in 2009 and the Shevchenko National Prize in 2020.[3]
DakhaBrakha | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Origin | Kyiv, Ukraine |
Genres | Ethno-chaos |
Years active | 2004 | –present
Members | Marko Galanevych, Olena Tsybulska, Iryna Kovalenko, Nina Garenetska |
Website | dakhabrakha |
DakhaBrakha are a project of the Dakh Contemporary Arts Center, led by Vladyslav Troitskyi and born as a live theater music crew. Troitskyi continues to be the band's producer. Members of DakhaBrakha participate in the centre's other projects, notably in the all-female cabaret project Dakh Daughters, as well as in the annual Gogolfest festival.
The group's name derives from Ukrainian verbs Давати, 'Give' and Брати, 'Take', while also playing on the Art Centre's name "Dakh" (literally "roof" in Ukrainian).
All of the members except Marko Halanevych are graduates of the Kyiv National University of Culture and Arts. Nina Garenetska also takes part in the Dakh Daughters project.
DakhaBrakha were originally a daughter project of Ukrainian the avant-garde theater Dakh and its artistic director Vladislav Troitsky.[9]
DakhaBrakha performed in June 2014 at the Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival held in Manchester, Tennessee. DakhaBrakha were invited to participate through the globalFEST showcase. They were proclaimed by Rolling Stone as "Best Breakout" of the festival.[10]
They played at the Glastonbury Festival on the West Holts.[11] They performed in July 2017 and July 2018 at the Finger Lakes GrassRoots Festival of Music and Dance held in Trumansburg, New York. In 2017, they performed at the South by Southwest festival (SXSW) in Austin, Texas.[12] DakhaBrakha performed at the 2017 Sziget Festival in Hungary.[13] In 2018, the group performed with Latvian group Tautumeitas at Latvia's World Music Festival Porta 2018.[14] In 2019, they performed at the Michael Schimmel Center for the Arts in Manhattan.[15]
They performed during the first weekend of the 2022 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival in New Orleans, Louisiana.[16]
DakhaBrakha played a well-received set at the Festival International de Louisiane in Lafayette, Louisiana, on April 30, 2022.
In 2023, when the Ukrainian animation Mavka: The Forest Song (based on the play The Forest Song by Lesya Ukrainka) was released. The audience saw an animated version of the band members as characters of the animation.[17] Soundtracks of the Mavka animated film also belong to DakhaBrakha due to their ethnic motives required by the film's plot.[18]
"The team recreated the ethno dance and other ceremonial elements with the help of experts from the Ivan Honchar Museum National Center for Folk Culture. The music for this episode is an authentic vesnianka performed by the DakhaBrakha band: the musicians not only created the song for Mavka, but also appear in the cartoon as Lukash's friends, village musicians"[19][20]
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