“It started out as a regular two-week tour to Italy on 23rd February.” Anatolii Vasylkovskii sounds exhausted when I talk to him. “That's why we already had visas to leave the country.” On 24th February, Russian troops invaded Ukraine and the world forever changed for Anatolii, violist, Artistic Director and manager of the Ukrainian national chamber ensemble known as Kyiv Soloists, and his fellow musicians.
“When we arrived in Italy, many of our members phoned their families and heard that there had been bombings.” In an instant, the focus of their tour changed. “We have to spread the message that Ukrainians are peaceful people,” Anatolii emphasises. For this reason, he and his fifteen colleagues continue to tour and play to this day, relying on the solidarity of many other European ensembles and orchestras that are hosting them in their concert halls and homes, as this unplanned extended tour continues across Europe. “We want to dedicate these concerts to our families, our country, our army, which are now fighting for the democracy of the whole world.”
Theirs is a message of peace and solidarity with the people of Ukraine and of love for the families and friends they have left behind. Overnight, they have decided to make the tour a fundraiser: “Concerts for Ukraine, Concerts for Peace” or “The tour of pain” as an Italian newspaper dubbed it. Originally, their Italian promoter had concerts lined up for them in cities such as Naples, Matera, Sorrento, Torre del Lago, all culminating in Rome at the Accademia di Santa Cecilia. These were all changed into charity concerts, with the entire ticket income – plus many spontaneous donations – going to the Red Cross. The response was heartwarming and the concerts sold out fast. Many local radio stations and newspapers promoted them with this new message. The performances were no longer only aiming to be events of cultural exchange and musical enjoyment: they were a form of activism. “Our music-making is now a prayer for peace” says Anatolii. “If politicians try to promote peace through diplomatic ways, we try to do so in the cultural space”.
Thanks to modern communication, the Ukrainan musicians are in touch with family and friends, and are kept up to date with what is happening back home. But this knowledge does not help to soothe their worries. On the contrary, the feeling of helplessness – and often hopelessness – is overwhelming. “It is very difficult for us to make music on stage in this moment,” Anatolii tells me. “Our hearts are back in our country, with our families.”
It's not a surprise that these heartfelt sentiments translate into very poignant music-making, underscoring their expressive and poetic style and evoking the audience’s collective memories – personal, or heard from family members – of all those conflicts of the not too distant past. This music is drawing tears from both performers and listeners.
The Kyiv Soloists ensemble is the brainchild of preeminent Ukrainian violinist and teacher Bogodar Kotorovych (1941-2009). Its members come from all parts of Ukraine and many have won national and international competitions. Their repertoire covers both classical Ukrainian and international compositions, as well as contemporary works. The ensemble prides itself in having premiered in their home country works by Benjamin Britten, George Palmer, Erkki-Sven Tüür and many others. They have a well-established history of tours to international festivals around the world, including Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Japan, France, Italy and more.
After their latest Italian tour was over, and faced with no option of returning home, all the members of the chamber ensemble agreed that their mission was now to raise awareness – and funds. “We can't play concerts in our country, but here we can still play. Here we can do more,” Anatolii tells me. That meant organising benefit concerts in quick succession, and on the spur of the moment. Not only Anatolii, in his capacity as ensemble manager, but all members were asked to call upon any possible useful contact in the music industry. Thankfully, the response from promoters was very quick and positive. Concerts followed in Switzerland, with the Kammerorchester Basel, then Germany, for concerts in Regensburg and Saarbrücken. Local organisations got in touch with radio and television stations, who set up broadcasts of the concerts and ran fundraising campaigns for either the Red Cross or other reputable charitable organisations with direct contacts to Ukraine.
The programme of the concerts is of course meaningful, as they mainly play works by Ukrainian composers: Valentin Silvestrov's Evening Serenade, Maxim Berezovsky's Symphony in C, Aleksandr Shymko's Dreams of an old forest, and the Ukrainian folk song Plyne Kacha, but their programme also includes Paul Hindemith Trauermusik and Mendelssohn's 10th Symphony.