On his new album, Ukrainian-born, New York-based pianist and composer Vadim Neselovskyi explores the horror and hope he is felt since Russia’s incursion.
Arkady Mitnik
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Arkady Mitnik
Vadim Neselovskyi is not used to being stumped. Music has flowed out of him since he was 5 years outdated. However the pianist-composer was transfixed and unable to play when he noticed photos of Russia’s all-out air and floor assault on his native Ukraine 4 years in the past.
Three weeks later, when he lastly approached the piano, he performed brutal, repetitive chords at most quantity. They grew to become the idea of “Tanks Near Kyiv,” the second motion of an 11-part suite for piano and string trio he is performing worldwide. The chords develop relentlessly sooner, joined by frenetic strings. Repeated strokes on the violin develop into a determined cry for assist till all of it peters out to a dissonant whisper in his signature mix of classical and jazz.
“I realized this is what I’m going to write about, this is what I feel, this is what I live right now. It’s a war in my country,” Neselovskyi advised Morning Version host Leila Fadel. “I felt that instrumental music maybe could deliver a message that words cannot.”
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He titled the 11-movement suite Perseverantia, after the Latin time period for perseverance — one thing that “is the sound of war, but also is the sound of empathy and hope.” He launched a recording of it on Feb. 24 to mark the fourth anniversary of the full-scale Russian invasion. The album, made in Amsterdam, options the Netherlands-based Ysaÿe String Trio.
Whereas crammed with reflections on loss, the suite is bookended by actions that think about a time and not using a Russian army presence in Ukraine. Known as “Before 24” and “After 24” (referring to the start of the incursion and the eventual finish of the battle), each start with delicate tinkling notes within the higher register of the piano.
“This music is my way to process the situation … But it’s also my way to help and support my home country in any way I can,” stated Neselovskyi, who’s raised greater than $200,000 for Ukraine by profit live shows. “This is not a big amount of money on the political level, but it’s the least I could do.”
Neselovskyi was born within the Ukrainian port metropolis of Odesa, the place, at age 15, he was the youngest pupil to be accepted into its famend conservatory. His household later moved to Germany earlier than he got here to america. Right now, he is primarily based in New York and his work is carried out by jazz and classical musicians alike, together with Randy Brecker, Antonio Sanchez and Daniel Gauthier, in addition to symphony orchestras.
Neselovskyi remembers being shocked by the brutality of the Bucha bloodbath in March 2022, when Russian forces killed greater than 400 Ukrainian civilians in a metropolis close to Kyiv. “For the first time, the images of this unspeakable horror flew around the world,” he stated.
The lifeless are mourned in “March Passacaglia,” the place a single motif repeats dozens of instances. Minimalistic layers of improvisatory strings and piano fill out this meditative motion.
“I wouldn’t write music like this if the situation wasn’t like this,” he stated. “I’m a very optimistic person. I see life on the brighter side. And here, I simply couldn’t use the bright and lyrical colors of my music. I had to find an answer.”
Neselovskyi evaluations the recording of his album, Perseverantia, with engineer Joeri Saal at Studio 150 Bethlehemkerk, in Amsterdam.
Arkady Mitnik
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Arkady Mitnik
In March 2022, Neselovskyi was in Germany, the place he noticed streams of individuals fleeing Ukraine at railway stations. “There was so much empathy in the air and so much suffering,” he recalled. “I just couldn’t help but see the parallels, so reminiscent of the refugee waves during the Second World War.”
He translated these moments into “Refugees,” the place a fleeting melody searches and by no means fairly finds a spot to land. A peaceful chorale of strings accompanies it, quoting the “Lacrimosa” from Mozart‘s Requiem, a solemn mass for the lifeless.
Neselovskyi had hoped that by the point Perseverantia was launched, Ukraine is likely to be residing in a extra peaceable interval. “I know that there is not much I can do as an individual and as an artist,” he stated. “Being honest, sharing empathy and awareness and perhaps care for each other — the basic human values through music, as much as possible. That’s all I can do. And hope and pray for better times.”
Kaity Kline produced the printed model of this story. The digital model was edited by Tom Huizenga.
