"Slava Tebye Bozha (Glory to You Lord)" by Valentina Kvasova and the Russian Social Singing Club

Summary: 

"Slava Tebye Bozha (Glory to You Lord)" - a call-and response field song ending in a wedding ceremony. Valentina Kvasova adds to the description in an interview at Brooklyn Arts Council 

Fieldnotes: 

Valentina Kvasova’s father was the Artistic director of the Don Cossack State Ensemble for 37 years, and her mother was the choir director for 40 years. She draws on the large collection of recorded material of traditional Cossack songs that her parents collected and recording in 1967.  They recorded over 1000 songs, and would share some arrangements of these songs on stages with 40 person choirs, all over the world, to build bridges with Russia. These folk songs were songs for war, work, weddings, funerals, harvesting, and fallling in love. They were songs of everyday life.  During that time, her parents preserved these songs because in the Soviet Union, when a folk tradition existed in the villages, it brought the community together and touched their souls. But the communist party used this power of folk music and adapted the songs and changed the lyrics to be about nationalism and Communism. Kvasova recalls watching large ensembles wrapped in traditional folk music, but singing lyrics about never stopping “working for communism” and celebrating “Lenin.” The communist party stole the culture that was 1000 years old and tried to make it artificial. So when the Soviet Union fell apart, people got so tired of these propaganda songs and forgot their original connection to everyday themes and their own heritage. So people avoided the songs and they almost died.  Kvasova continues her parents legacy with the Russian Social Singing Club.

From The Artist/Community : 

Slava Tebye Bozha (Glory to You Lord)" Description , by NYSCA Living Traditions

Location: 
452 Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn, NY
Culture: 
Russia
Tradition: 
Date: 
Sun, Jul 28, 2019
Regions: 
New York City
Contributor: 
Language: 
Russian
Format: