Olya Fryz: "Echo of the Steppes"
Olya Fryz is a vocalist & bandura player who grew up in New York City and performed for many years in the tri-state area. Olya has been a Connecticut resident for over 20 years, and shares her Ukrainian music and heritage with many different audiences around the world through performances, workshops, and collaborations. In this video, Olya plays “Echo of the Steppes,” by Hryhory Kytasty, and introduces the bandura.
The Connecticut Cultural Heritage Arts Program (CCHAP) is the state’s folk and traditional arts initiative, with the mission of documenting, presenting, and sustaining traditional artists and their communities. Living traditional practices are also known as folklife—the everyday, extraordinary creativity that people share with one another.
Beginning in March 2020, CCHAP reached out to cultural heritage artists around the state to ask if they would be willing to create videos showing their many different art forms to a broader audience—something to connect their homes to ours, something that they wanted to share with their cultural communities, too.
Cultural heritage arts are alive and deeply meaningful. They take skill and dedication. They contribute to the well-being of people and their communities. They create a sense of home. Get to know Connecticut folklife, at home and with you.
Learn more about Olya Fryz and her music:
http://www.olyafryz.com
Learn more about the Women’s Bandura Ensembles of North America http://www.banduristka.org
To learn more about CCHAP, visit: https://chs.org/cchap
Видео Olya Fryz: "Echo of the Steppes" канала Connecticut Museum of Culture and History
The Connecticut Cultural Heritage Arts Program (CCHAP) is the state’s folk and traditional arts initiative, with the mission of documenting, presenting, and sustaining traditional artists and their communities. Living traditional practices are also known as folklife—the everyday, extraordinary creativity that people share with one another.
Beginning in March 2020, CCHAP reached out to cultural heritage artists around the state to ask if they would be willing to create videos showing their many different art forms to a broader audience—something to connect their homes to ours, something that they wanted to share with their cultural communities, too.
Cultural heritage arts are alive and deeply meaningful. They take skill and dedication. They contribute to the well-being of people and their communities. They create a sense of home. Get to know Connecticut folklife, at home and with you.
Learn more about Olya Fryz and her music:
http://www.olyafryz.com
Learn more about the Women’s Bandura Ensembles of North America http://www.banduristka.org
To learn more about CCHAP, visit: https://chs.org/cchap
Видео Olya Fryz: "Echo of the Steppes" канала Connecticut Museum of Culture and History
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17 декабря 2020 г. 10:00:03
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