• Source: Hnat Honcharenko
  • Hnat Tykhonovych Honcharenko (Гнат Тихонович Гончаренко, 1835–c. 1917) was one of the most renowned Ukrainian kobzars (blind itinerant minstrels) of the Kharkiv oblast of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.


    Biography


    Hnat Honcharenko was born into a serf family in the village of Ripky. Tragically, he lost his sight at the tender age of 3 or 4. Despite this adversity, he discovered his passion for music and began studying the bandura at the age of 22 under the guidance of the experienced kobzar Petro Kulibaba. His initial training lasted for four months, and he later continued his musical journey by learning from other kobzars he encountered.
    After he married, he settled not far from Kharkiv on the Hubayenko homestead. When he was widowed, he resettled to Sevastopol with his son, a railway engineer. Honcharenko would spend his winters there and return to Kharkiv for the summer months.
    Honcharenko had in his repertoire four dumy, epic poems set to music:

    Oleksiy Popovych
    The Poor Widow and Her Three Sons
    The Sister and Brother
    About the Escape of the three brothers from Oziv
    He also sang numerous satirical-humorous songs and played instrumental dance melodies.
    Hnat Honcharenko was first mentioned in the press by M. Sumtsov in 1885. In the January edition of "Kievan Antiquities", in the article "About a new variant of Olexiy Popovych", Sumtsov wrote that Honcharenko had visited Kharkiv numerous times and was familiar with various sacred and humorous songs, including the dumy "The Escape of the Three Brothers from Oziv" and "The Poor Widow".
    The first recordings of dumy made from Honcharenko were made by Yu. Tykhovsky in 1899. These recordings were given to the organizers of the XIIth Archeological conference, but unfortunately were not published. Tykhovsky noted that Honcharenko was quiet and unassuming, that he played very well and sang distinctly, and that "it would be very nice to record from him his melodies and the musical accompaniment of the dumy".
    Hnat Khotkevych held Honcharenko's performances in high esteem, praising him as "one of the most educated of all the kobzars". He noted that Honcharenko's presence was mesmerizing leaving a lasting impression akin to a magical Honcharenko, like his colleagues, wandered from village to village, singing at marketplaces and streets, Khotveych observed that he stood out for cleanliness and outward appearance. "One might assulme that he always present lk=at home, that he is always like this, and not just for the observer's eye.... As a virtuoso, with a limited repertoire. He did not have messy parts in his playing. Everything was performed clearly and artistically."
    In 1908 Lesia Ukrainka, with her husband Klyment Kvitka, recorded on phonograph the singing of Hnat Honcharenko and these wax cylinders were sent to Filaret Kolessa in Lviv for transcription.
    Filaret Kolessa stated:

    Honcharenko died sometime around 1917. A more accurate date has not been ascertained.


    Students


    Horobetz
    Petro Drevchenko
    Erast Udiansky
    Hryhory Bajdykov
    Mykola Demchenko
    Pavlo Hashchenko
    Ivan Kuchuhura Kucherenko


    See also


    Ukrainian folk music


    Sources


    Mishalow, V. and M. (1986). Ukrayins’ki kobzari-bandurysty (Ukrainian Kobzars-Bandurists). Sydney, Australia.
    Humeniuk, A. (1967). Ukrayins’ki narodni muzychni instrumenty (Ukrainian folk musical instruments), p 79. Kiev, Ukraine.

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