Dawn Chorus

It took a few days to make posts and get ready for an active summer life. Today I will tell you about a very interesting event that took place on June 5.
This event is called Dawn Chorus.

It was a mysterious, divine, extraordinary, tear-jerking, majestic event.

It took place in the morning, very early, already at 7 am and lasted until 9 am. This time was chosen specifically. At this time during the week, on Wednesday,people are rushing to work. The place of action was also chosen specifically – the busiest subway station Toronto-Union Station. The exit is the busiest – into the premises of an old high-rise building Bay-Adelaide Place,55 Front St.W.

The lively crowd in the building that day in the morning was filled with the magical singing of 6 choirs, which were located on two floors of the house.

Choirs were selected for this event not only from Canada. I had the opportunity to work with a choir from Bulgaria.
So, in the morning, a large crowd rushes to work. And then the music begins to sound. Acapella singing of choirs. The singing of choirs was heard from several sides of the building at once. It was so fantastic that it seemed that some kind of magic was happening.
The thing is that the places where the choirs were located were chosen so as not to interfere with people passing by, but in an acoustic place where the sound was most audible.

Six points of two floors sounded in polyphony.

I can show a rehearsal before the performance of the Bulgarian choir. From the video you will understand how correctly the place for the choir was chosen.


The repertoire of the choirs was composed of songs about the morning, about spring. about Easter, connected with the sun, the arrival of spring. The songs excited and gave energy.

People stopped….
Listened…..
Standed still for a moment…….
Pull out their cell phones, took pictures. Then ran off to do their business…..

The polyphony flowed non-stop. One choir fell silent, while the sounds of singing came from another choir from the upper floor. Then it was heard somewhere to the left.
And it flowed from floor to floor, enveloping the walls and the room.

The most crowded place in Toronto, in the middle of the week, in the morning, sang in many languages, exciting, giving such an energetic flavor that no one was indifferent.

And even though it’s been a week, I can’t forget it.
It intertwines with the morning birdsong when I wake up in the rays of the sun.
It adds enchantment and some magic.

Then these choirs dissolved into the crowd and, without haste, one by one went to gather in a heap under the main dome of the building. Each of the choristers walked, playing a clay pipe.
It was interesting to see this.
They gathered in the central hall and sang their main song.

A fantastic idea. An unsurpassed performance.
How one must love people and enjoy music to give such a wonderful morning song to the residents of Toronto.
This is LUMINATO.

#luminatofestivale

Gregorius-the holy sinner

When I came home after this unique performance and excitedly began to share my impressions with my husband, he listened attentively, did not interrupt and with his characteristic Eastern wisdom at the end of my story answered:,,This is possible only in Toronto”
Well, of course, I fully share his words, but I also have my own additions – such a unique work has survived and today we saw it thanks to The Toronto Consort, people who preserve the oldest works and pass them on to us, revive historical masterpieces, help to see the life of past generations through musical prism.

Thank you Daniel Taylor.

Thank you Emma Kirkby

Thank you for its exellence in the performance of medieval,renaissance and early baroque music.

12th century. Today we will talk about it.
What is wonderful and surprising is that literally my previous post talked about the same period, but in Persia, in the East. And today I am publishing about another place – about Europe in the 12th century.
Yesterday, somehow I came across my thought that in the 12th century the church was strong over society and dictated its own rules. People were looking for a way out of their life’s troubles and where then they covered themselves with it, somewhere in the opposite direction of the church they acted. In Europe, a cleavage was already coming. (Yesterday I said that the cleavage occurred in the 15th century, and we were just talking and my interlocutor decided to watch it later, whether it was so. It turned out that I was right, in the middle of the 15th century a dissent occurred, which changed the traditional framework of rules, the secession of Catholicism, Orthodoxy.)
But let’s still talk about GRIGORIOUS_THE HOLY SINNER himself.

I should retell the plot a little, because no matter how much the woman is the cause of all the misfortunes in this work, Gregorius still remains the main character and the misfortune of the whole story.

A young girl sins with her brother before her wedding. This causes her to become pregnant. She hides the pregnancy and gives birth in complete secrecy in a monastery, after which she goes down the aisle. The child is dressed in silk clothes and sent down the river with God in a small boat with a note. A fisherman finds him, brings him to a church official, who leaves the child, asks the fisherman to raise him and helps raise the child as a servant of God.
The mother gets married, but three days after the coronation, her husband and her brother die. She mourns them and buries them.
After 17 years (I am interested in this chronology, it is different from ours, I guess) the boy grows up and becomes the main priest in this area. He needs to get married and his wife becomes his… mother (he and she feel some kind of love and closeness)

Being intimate, the mother sees the signs of her son and asks about them, she understands that in front of her is her son and tells him about it.
He is confused, depressed and killed. He runs away from her, comes to the fisherman, and decides to go to the hermits, where he spends 17 years in the wild nature (again this date).Gregorius throws the key into the sea and says that when the key is found, he will return (very popular for those times).
According to the rules of the time, Paul takes the place of the missing priest and asks three servants to find out and understand what happened to Gregorius.

The messengers come to the fisherman, and the old man treats them to his catch – a big fish. When he cleaned it for them – he found a key in the fish’s belly. It was a sign, and they went to the mountains to look for the hermit. They found him alive, but changed, wild and angry, aggressive. They asked him to come back and showed him the key.
They went to the city, carrying the news of the living Gregorius. Three days later the monk returned to the city, which greeted him with greetings, singing and dancing.
He returned to the rank of Pope.


His mother came to him, having learned that he was alive.
They returned to love, began to live together and even had two heirs.

About the beautiful tales in the form of songs, created in the 12th century.

Sequentia-a series of musical narratives performed by three vocal artists @BenjaminBagby ,@jasminaCrncic and @LucasPapenfusscline

The wonderful trio of vocalists performed the story in German and the originality of the performance is a tribute to the work of Benjamin Bagby, who created this kind of innovative musical storytelling and has been transmitting it for almost 50 years since 1977, nurturing a generation of young performers and touring the world. He created more than 30 recordings spanning the entire Middle Ages(including the complete works of Hildegard von Bingen),film and television productions of medieval music drama.Today I am telling you about a work created in the 12th century.

And this kind of work is called medieval theatre and is a genre of mystery, farces and masks, as well as English cyclical dramas.

Medieval theaters originate from the Roman Empire (again Rome, the Roman Empire. How much the Roman Empire gave us – it left its notes, its traces and affected our lives for a long time, although it itself fell apart and today it is no longer there). From the time of the Roman Empire until the 15th century (when a lot changed in Europe, including what I wrote above) The themes of medieval theaters were always religious themes. Modern interpretation or traditions of medieval performances are plays of mummers, which are staged in the USA and Britain. The parade of mummers takes place every New Year in Philadelphia and is considered a folk parade. But as we can see, it is a continuation of the traditions of medieval performances.

Medieval plays also include mysteries, which are often performed in Britain. Our play is an example of a morality play as a types of drama from Middle Ages.

But how can I tell you now or describe everything that happened on stage yesterday – after all, you have to see it and it is so beautiful and refined that everything that I described to you above is very subtly told to us, the spectators in the hall, with the help of the vocalists playing the harps.

A very beautiful combination of musical harmony, playing instruments and narrative performance.

An hour and a half in one breath. And it seems that we know what will happen now, and again a curl and another story that captivates and makes you listen and follow the story.

I consider myself lucky to have listened and been a spectator of this evening.

Before the performance there was a lecture where we were told about Gregorian chant .This knowledge goes deep into the Roman Catholic origins of the church.Greagorian chant is named after St.Gregory I(590-604) it was collected and codified.

Harmonic monophonic texture makes medival music unique.

Have I filled you with intrigue?
Whenever possible, when you see posters about medieval performances, go without hesitation and enjoy this performance.
I wish you good luck

January 2025

What are you doing and why are you silent?

Thank you for being so worried and bombarding me with questions. I really relaxed a little and have not been active lately on networks and on the blog. There are reasons for this.

Suddenly, two waves of colds put me in bed.


Between these troubles, I managed to give a concert of my choir in a beautiful church on Anglessy Blvd in Toronto.

I will publish photos from this evening on this page and please you with the fact that the concert was a huge success.


I’ll tell you a little about our choir. We consist of two parts – female and male. Ages from 18 to 80+.

As before, the choir is now recruiting members and any person who has a musical education or is full of energy to study choral singing and participate in the choir can become one.
The choir has rehearsals once a week, where we, together with the conductor, learn the parts and rehearse. The choir has an old tradition, founded by the previous generation of Ukrainians in Canada, to spread the culture of Ukraine, its singing traditions around the world and bring Ukrainian music to all peoples.

We sing both church works and songs written by our members.
Today I am very happy with our composition. 90% of the team have a musical education and our conductor Dr.Svitlana Lysogor is one of the best conductors in Canada.

We are glad that she is a student of the well-known Oleksandr Koshyts and went on tour with him.
We updated and started our concerts.
What was in our repertoire?

We performed Ukrainian carols, so the concert fell on Christmas time. Also in the repertoire are works by Koshits, Katsalo, a Christmas prayer, a song by our participant Bogdanka Paguta, a song by Nanke and the famous Shchedryk Leontovich.

We have wonderful soloists – this is the sonorous voice of Anna Tanchuk. This gentle girl grew up before my eyes. She went with her mother to our rehearsals when I first joined the choir. And now she is at the head of the choir and we are proud that we have grown such generation.
There is also a beautiful tenor Sergei Stilmachenko.

I am very confident that we will continue to grow and expand.

In the meantime, before the end of January, I invite you to my Instagram page, where I will be active for the next month.
Have you forgotten what it looks like?


I give you a link to it.
Go and participate in my Insta posts.
The fact is that in recent years I have been reviewing Oscar-nominated films and publishing reviews about them with the probability of their awards. For several years now, my assumptions have coincided with the Oscars, which is very nice. You can read in my Instagram account for previous years. this year I continue this tradition again and if you are a film addict like me, then I invite you to discuss whether the film will receive an Oscar or not.

It’s exciting, it’s exciting and it gives an overview of the directions and trends in the world of film production, which is very important to me as a filmmaker.

In the meantime, I wish you all peace and good. See you later