Trenton City Museum Invites You
Sorrow & Joy: Ukrainian Art Songs
Saturday, May 17; 2 pm
Admission: $5 suggested donation at the door; sign up in advance at link provided
Saturday, May 17; 2 pm
Admission: $5 suggested donation at the door; sign up in advance at link provided
A soulful exploration of Ukrainian classical music with works by Mykola Lysenko, Kyrylo Stetsenko, Vasyl Barvinsky, and Stefania Turkewich
About the performers of “Sorrow & Joy”: Andrew Skitko, tenor, trained at Westminster Choir College, is the cantor at St. Mary Byzantine Catholic Church in Trenton, the director of the Ukrainian Art Song Project, and a chorus member of Opera Philadelphia. Alina Rabchuk, pianist, lives and teaches piano and voice in Bucks County. She is Worship Leader at Grace Ukrainian Baptist Church in Warminster. Ksenia Stetsenko-Skitko, violin, is a Ukrainian composer who merges Western classical music tradition with Eastern-European folk music. She is the granddaughter of Ukrainian composer Kyrylo Hryhorovych Stetsenko, whose work will be performed at the event.
Presented in conjunction with Cultural Connections: Eastern European Artists of Greater Trenton, on view through June 8
Featuring:
Andrew Skitko, tenor, trained at Westminster Choir College, is the cantor at St. Mary Byzantine Catholic Church in Trenton, the director of the Ukrainian Art Song Project, and a chorus member of Opera Philadelphia.
Andrew Skitko, tenor, trained at Westminster Choir College, is the cantor at St. Mary Byzantine Catholic Church in Trenton, the director of the Ukrainian Art Song Project, and a chorus member of Opera Philadelphia.
Alina Rabchuk, pianist, lives and teaches piano and voice in Bucks County. She is Worship Leader at Grace Ukrainian Baptist Church in Warminster.
Ksenia Stetsenko-Skitko, violin, is a Ukrainian composer who merges Western classical music tradition with Eastern-European folk music. She is the granddaughter of Ukrainian composer Kyrylo Hryhorovych Stetsenko.
Trenton City Museum at Ellarslie is located in Trenton's Cadwalader Park, entered by car from Parkside Ave.; plenty of parking is available adjacent to the museum; accessible entrance available