Myroslav Mykhailovych Skoryk (Ukrainian: Мирослав Михайлович Скорик; 13 July 1938 – 1 June 2020) was a Ukrainian composer and teacher. His music is contemporary in style and contains stylistic traits from Ukrainian folk music traditions.
Myroslav Mykhailovych Skoryk was born in Lviv, on 13 July 1938.[1][2] His parents were both educated in Austria at the University of Vienna, and subsequently became teachers. His father was a historian and an ethnographer, while his mother was a chemist. Although his parents did not have special musical training, his mother played piano and his father played the violin. Skoryk was exposed to music in the household from an early age, and his great aunt was the Ukrainian sopranoSolomiya Krushelnytska.[1]
Skoryk entered the Lviv Music School in 1945,[2] but two years later his family were deported to Siberia, where he grew up. The family did not return to Lviv until 1955.[1][2]
Student years
Between 1955 and 1960 Skoryk studied at the Lviv Conservatory,[2] There he received training in musical composition and music theory; his teachers included Stanyslav Lyudkevych and Roman Simovych.[2] Skoryk's final exam piece was Vesna ('Spring'), a cantata for soloists, mixed choir and orchestra that was based on verses by the Ukrainian writer Ivan Franko. Other piano pieces written during Skoryk's student years include a piano sonata, and V Karpatakh ('In the Carpathian Mountains'), also for solo piano.[3]
In 1960, Skoryk enrolled in the postgraduate research program at the Moscow Conservatory, where he studied with the composer Dmitry Kabalevsky. He remained there for four years.[2] During this time, Skoryk composed symphonic, chamber, and vocal music . Some works from this period include the Suite in D major for Strings, the Violin Sonata No. 1, and the Partita No. 1 for strings, and the Variations, Blues, and Burlesque.[4][5]
Teaching career
After graduating from the Moscow Conservatory in 1964, Skoryk, then 25, began his first teaching position, becoming Ukraine's youngest composition lecturer at the Lviv Conservatory,[2][6] where he remained until 1966.[2] He then accepted a position at the Kyiv Conservatory[2] where he focused on teaching contemporary harmony techniques. His dissertation, completed in 1964, concentrated on the music of the Russian composer Sergei Prokofiev. Skoryk's book Struktura i vyrazhalna pryroda akordyky v muzitsi XX stolitti (The Structural Aspects of Chords in 20th Century Music) was published in 1983. His students included the composers Osvaldas Balakauskas, Ivan Karabyts and Yevhen Stankovych. Skoryk remained at the Kyiv Conservatory until 1988.[2]
In 1963, Skoryk became the youngest member of the National Union of Composers of Ukraine.[6] During his career, Skoryk was an active member of the union,[2] and was co-chair with Stankovych from 2004 to 2010.[5]
Later years
In 1996, Skoryk moved with his family to Australia, and obtained Australian citizenship, but in 1999 returned to live in Ukraine.[5] In April 2011, Skoryk was appointed as the artistic director of the Kyiv Opera, a position he held until 2016.[7] He died on 1 June 2020.[7][8]
Music
Skoryk was a composer, pianist and conductor. His works have been performed by ensembles and soloists that include the Leontovych Quartet,[9]Oleh Krysa, Volodymyr Vynnytsky, Oleg Chmyr, Mykola Suk, Victor Markiw, and Alexander Slobodyanik.[citation needed] He was one of the recipients of the Ukraine's Shevchenko National Prize in 1987 for his Cello Concerto.[10] In addition to the works listed below, he also wrote a number of smaller ensemble works, songs, and the score for more than 40 films, including Tini zabutykh predkiv (Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors),[4] and Vysokyy pereval [uk] (High Mountain Pass), which included his Melody in A minor.[11]
Skoryk moved towards composing religious music at the end of the 20th century, these compositions include his spiritual concerto Requiem (1999); Psalms for various types of choirs (1999–2005); and the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom (2005). According to the Ukrainian musicologistLiubov Kyianovska [uk], who has written a biography of Skoryk, his spiritual compositions were "not a tribute to fashion", but "a quite natural consequence of long internal work" and the "resolution of the long process of the composer's creative evolution", and that the Liturgy is stylistically sensitive to the traditions of Ukrainian religious music.[12]
Skoryk's religious operaMoses [uk] (2001) was the first Ukrainian opera on a biblical subject to be composed in nearly a century. The opera, which was premiered during the visit by Pope John Paul II to Ukraine in 2001, is based on a 1905 poem by Ivan Franko, which focuses upon Moses's struggles to lead his people into the Promised Land at the very end of his life; the text draws parallels between the sufferings of the Israelites and those of the people of Ukraine under the Soviets.[13]
^ abcdeStech, Marko Robert (2020). "Skoryk, Myroslav". Internet Encyclopaedia of Ukraine. Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies. Retrieved 8 April 2023.
^Pankevich, Halyna (2016). "Духовні композиції Мирослава Скорика" [Spiritual compositions of Myroslav Skoryk] (in Ukrainian). Drohobytskyi Theological Seminary. Archived from the original on 8 November 2016. Retrieved 8 April 2023.
Kostyuk, Natalia (2015). "Скорик, Мирослав Михайлович" [Skoryk, Myroslav Mikhailovich]. In Zhulinsky, M.G. (ed.). Shevchenko's Encyclopedia (in Ukrainian). Vol. 5. Kyiv: Institute of Literature. T.G. Shevchenko National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. pp. 797–798. ISBN978-966-02-6420-5.
Kyyanovsʹka, Lyubov (23 September 2013). "Мирослав Скорик: людина і митець" [Myroslav Skoryk: man and artist]. Music-Review Ukraine (in Ukrainian). Archived from the original on 30 June 2019. Retrieved 30 June 2019.
Voloh, Oksana (2011). "М. Скорик – Мойсей Української Музики" [M. Skoryk: Moses of Ukrainian Music] (PDF). Molodʹ I Rynok (Youth and the Market) (in Ukrainian). 79 (8). Drohobych, Ukraine: Ivan Franko State Pedagogical University of Drohobytsk: 133–136. ISSN2617-0825. (cached version)
Skoryk interviewed by Dmitry Gordon in 2013 on the Ukrainian TV programme Visiting Dmitry Gordon (part 1; part 2 on Gordon's YouTube channel, in Ukrainian)