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YAKIV STEPOVYI


Yakiv Stepovyi (1883 - 1921)

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Yakiv Stepovyi (1883 - 1921)

Yakiv Stepovyi (1883 - 1921)

Meanwhile, Stepovyi began to compose art songs and small piano pieces. The first two sets of art songs Barvinky (Periwinkles, 1905–1907), opus 3–4, were published by Idzikowski in Kyiv under his pseudonym. Mykola Lysenko, the father of Ukrainian musical nationalism, reviewed the first nine and found Stepovyi’s music lacking in traditional folk idioms. However, Kyrylo Stetsenko, a fellow composer, praised Stepovyi, especially his song ‘Zymoiu’ (In Winter) on a text by the as-yet unpublished Oleksander Oles. Encouraged, Stepovyi composed the song cycle Nastroї (Moods, 1907–1908), opus 6, based entirely on the poetry of Oles. Then, in 1911, Stepovyi set to music three poems by the fifteenyear- old Maksym Rylsky, the opus 8 song cycle. Both Oles and Rylsky would become giants of 20th-century Ukrainian literature. Nevertheless, Olena Pchilka, editor of Ridnyi (Native Land) and mother of the poet Lesia Ukrainka, refused to publish the Rylsky song cycle in its entirety because it was too modern, too far removed from the folk idiom and, therefore, un-nationalistic. Stepovyi found a more worldly audience in St. Petersburg and Moscow. As early as 1904 he had met a fellow Kharkivite in the northern capital, the renowned opera singer Ivan Alchevsky. They became lifelong friends and supporters of each other’s endeavours. Alchevsky often performed the composer’s songs, and Stepovyi likely wrote some especially for him. It is surmised that it was the Alchevsky family that introduced Stepovyi to the poetry of Oles. After his father’s death in 1911, Stepovyi embarked on a series of journeys in Ukraine and Europe.  In the summer of 1912 he visited Alchevsky in Paris, where the opera singer was engaged. Upon his return, he also tried his hand at music criticism, writing a number of articles for the Moscow journal Muzyka. 

Stepovyi’s music career was interrupted at the beginning of WWI, when he was conscripted into the army as a secretary on a hospital train. It was only in 1917, when the Russian Revolution broke out, that Stepovyi was able to obtain a discharge. Immediately, he went to Kyiv to start teaching at the newly established Conservatory. There he resumed writing his art songs, which became more and more complex, formalistic.

During the last five years of his life, Stepovyi was caught up in the Ukrainian-Soviet War (1917–1921) and the creation of the new Socialist order. By siding with the Socialists, Stepovyi soon found himself in key bureaucratic positions. He became the music director of the Ukrainian State Theatre of Music and Drama, director of the Folk Conservatory, director of music education in the Ministry of Education, and organizer of the Ukrainian State Symphony Orchestra, the State String Quartet, and the “official” vocal ensemble that toured and performed in factories, refineries, and other industrial complexes. With the demand for proletarian music on the rise, Stepovyi found himself increasingly occupied with writing simple pedagogical pieces for children, working with ensembles of folk instruments, and arranging folk and revolutionary songs for amateur choirs.

Like all revolutions, the new Socialist order also consumed its children. Yakiv Stepovyi died of typhus at the beginning of the first man-made famine in Soviet Ukraine (1921–1923). Within the Soviet paradigm it was impossible to assess Stepovyi’s contribution to the genre of the art song.