Mykola Dmytrovych Leontovych

Mykola Dmytrovych Leontovych (Ukrainian: Микола Дмитрович Леонтович) (born December 13 [O.S. December 1] 1877; died 23, 1921) was a Ukrainian composer, choral conductor, and teacher of international renown. Leontovych is recognized for composing Shchedryk in 1916, known to the English speaking world as Carol of the Bells. Birth and early life Mykola Leontovych was born on December 13 [O.S. December 1] 1877 in the village of Monastyrok community near the village of Selevyntsi in the Podillya region of Ukraine.[1] His father was a village priest, skilled at playing cello, violin, and guitar, in addition to directing a school choir. Leontovych received his first musical lessons from him. In 1887, Leontovych was admitted to Nemyriv gymnasium. However only a year later, due to financial problems, his father transferred him to the Sharhorod Spiritual Beginners School, where pupils were financially fully supported.[2] At the school, Leontovych mastered singing, and was able to freely read difficult passages from religious choral texts. From 1892 until 1899, Mykola Leontovych attended the theological seminary in Kamianets-Podilskyi, where he sang in choir, began to study Ukrainian music, and began his first attempts at choral arranging.[3] After teaching at schools throughout Ukraine, including in the guberniyas of Kiev, Yekaterinoslav, and Podolia, he moved on to study music. Career in Music In the spring of 1904, he left the Podillya and moved to the Donbas region in eastern Ukraine, where he became a teacher of voice and music in a school for children of railroad workers.[4] During the Russian Revolution of 1905, Leontovych organized a choir of workers that performed in meetings. Leontovych's activity caught the attention of local authorities, and he was forced to move back to the city of Tulchyn, Podillya, where he taught music and voice at the Tulchyn Eparchy Women's college to the daughters of village priests.[4] Leontovych further pursued his musical education in Saint Petersburg, where he earned his credentials as a choirmaster of church choruses.[1] From 1909, he studied under famous musical theoretic Boleslav Yavorsky,[2][4] whom he periodically visited in Moscow and Kiev (Kyiv). During that time, he created numerous choral arrangements, namely Shchedryk, but also «Піють півні», «Мала мати одну дочку», «Дударик», «Ой зійшла зоря» and others. In Tulchyn, he met the composer Kyrylo Stetsenko. In 1916, with the choir of the Kiev University he performed his arrangement of Shchedryk, which brought him great success from the public in Kiev. In 1918, at a period of short-lived Ukrainian independence, Leontovych began teaching at the Kiev Conservatory as well as the Mykola Lysenko Institute of Music and Drama. Death During the night of January 22-23, 1921, Mykola Leontovych was murdered by a Chekist (Soviet state security) agent Victor Grishchenko at the home of his parents.[5] Works Mykola Leontovych's is remembered today mostly because of the body of musical works he left behind, including over 150 choral compositions which range from artistic arrangements of folk songs, religious works (including his liturgy), cantatas, and choral compositions set to the texts of various Ukrainian poets. Leontovych also started work on an Ukrainian opera (Na rusalchyn velykden’ - On the Water Nymph's Easter) based on the writing of Borys Hrinchenko, however, he did not complete it. Composer Myroslav Skoryk completed the opera in 1978. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

Ukrainian Classical folk christmas Post-Romantic



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Carol of the Bells
Carol of the Bells (arr. P.J. Wilhousky)
Carol of the Bells (arr. P. Wilhousky)
Shchedryk (Epiphany Carol), Carol of the Bells (arr. S. Cox for 3 trumpets and valve trombone)
Carol of the Bells (arr. A. Delmoni)
Carol of the Bells / God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen
Carol Of The Bells - Voice
Ring Christmas Bells
Leontovych: Carol of the Bells
Shchedryk
Leontovich / Arr Prizeman: Carol of the Bells
A Song of Good Cheer
Carol of the Bells (arr. piano)
Carols of Christmas: No. 3, Carol of the Bells (Arr. S. Carlson) [Live]
Shchedryk (Epiphany Carol), The Carol of the Bells (Ukraine)
Carol of the Bells (arr. K. Poling)
Carol of the Meal
Carol of the Bells (Arr. Metcalfe for Saxophone)
Leontovych / Arr. Prizeman: Carol of the Bells
Carol of the Bells (Arr. J. Shumway for 5 Pianos)
In Thy Kingdom (Matthew 5:3-12)
Shepherd's Bell Carol
Ukrainian Bell Carol, Carol of the Bells (arr. H. Morris)
Shchedrik
Carol of the Bells (Arr. for Harp by Alexander Boldacev)
Carol Of The Bells - 1996 Digital Remaster
Scedryk
Christmas Medley - Piano
Carol of the Bells/God Rest Ye Merry Gentelmen
Carol of the Bells (arr. J. Oliver)
Schtschedryk Carol Of The Bells
Carol of the Bells (arr. P.J. Wilhousky for choir)
Carol of the Bells (arr. Spina)
Carol of the Bells - 2005 Digital Remaster; arr. Peter Wilhousky
Ukranian Bell Carol
Christmas Medley - String Octet
Carol of the Bells (arr. B. Bradford)
Щедрик
Carol of the Bells - Live
Carol Of Bells
Carol of the Bells (arr. P.J. Wilhousky for choir and wind ensemble)
Shchedryk / Carol of the Bells
Carol Of The Bells (Russian)
Carol of the Bells (arr. J. Willmarth)
Fantasia For Christmas (arr. E. Del Borgo) - Live
Carol of the Bells (arr. P.J. Wilhousky): Carol of the Bells (arr. P. Wilhousky)
Carol of the Bells (arr. B. Scann)
Otche Nach
Carol of the Bells (Arr. L. W. Palmer)
Papa Noel

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