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Dancing through the war: Ukrainian music scene thrives

Rahel Schuchardt in Brussels
May 11, 2023

Despite rocket fire and power outages, the music scene in Kyiv remains active. Ukrainian bands are playing across Europe, too, to raise funds for Ukraine.

https://p.dw.com/p/4RBae
 Band Ragapop, musicians on stage, dark scene
Ragapop has been performing across Europe since the start of Russia's full-scale invasion last yearImage: ALINA HARMASH/Ragapop

Ukraine's avant-garde music is alive and thriving

Ganna Nikitina wears her trademark red full-body suit. Her face is covered. It's the singer's first show on a Belgian stage with Ukrainian electro punk band Ragapop. Under other circumstances, the band probably wouldn't have been invited to play in Brussels, but these are unusual times — a war rages in Nikitina's native Ukraine, and Europe is showing solidarity.

Vlad Yaremchuk organized the contact with the Belgian music club. Before February 24, 2022, he organized the largest music festival in Ukraine. Now he plans concerts abroad. The proceeds go to the "Music saves Ukraine" initiative.

The lineup at the Brussels' Ancienne Belgique concert hall would never have come together without Yaremchuk's expertise, said managing director Tom Bonte. "In Belgium, how are we supposed to know what's currently going on in the music scene in Kyiv?"

'People know how to help themselves'

The scene is active abroad as well as in Ukraine, said Yaremchuk, adding that people have adapted to the new reality. "Managing a humanitarian crisis is not so different from taking care of a festival."

 Ragapop, two men on a stage lit with UV blacklights, one with a guitar, one holding a microphone.
Ragapop are popular in their native UkraineImage: ALINA HARMASH/Ragapop

People from the music sector have turned into volunteers, and every concert is a fundraiser. Every now and then, the lights go out in the concert halls because of Russian bombs that damage the country's critical infrastructure — but people know how to help themselves, said Yaremchuk.

"If the power goes out, it takes two minutes for a generator to be plugged in, and the concert goes on," he said. In case of an air raid warning, it's off to the shelter, then back to the dance floor.

From the stage to the front

At the beginning of the war, music was not much of an issue, recalled Ragapop guitarist Anton Ocheretyanyy. Even more than a year after the start of Russia's full-scale invasion and his escape abroad, he said he still lacks artistic inspiration at times. "But you also know that some of your friends are in a much worse situation right now and still make it," said Ocheretyanyy, who regularly returns to Ukraine to perform.

Vlad Yaremchuk
Yaremchuk organizes performances to support Ukraine in different European countriesImage: Vlad Yaremchuk

Ragapop are very popular in Ukraine. Before Russia's attack, they filled concert halls in Mariupol and Kherson.

For the Brussels concert, they make do without their sound engineer, Vlolodymyr Demchencko, who returned to the front after the band's performance at the Centre Pompidou in Paris.

Ukrainians 'stopped writing music in Russian'

Unmistakably punk and pro-European, Ragapop have been reflecting on traditional Ukrainian values more since the attack on Ukraine. They are not the only ones. "Ukrainians stopped writing music in Russian, which was a pretty big thing before the war," said Yaremchuk. That created space and niches for all sorts of styles, he said.

Four women stand beside each other, one holds a mobile.
Kyiv clubs still stage concerts, despite power outages and shelling Image: Oli Zitch

"We stopped collaborating with Russia and started looking more inside ourselves," said Ragapop singer Ruslana Khazipova about the more prominent place Ukrainian culture and language have been claiming in the country's music scene.

"Our music has something special that will touch not only Ukrainians, but the whole world."

Khazipova is back in Ukraine with bandmate Ganna Nikitina for a few weeks of concerts. In Ukraine, they agree, people have moved far away from the Russian way of thinking and living — which annoys the regime in Moscow.

"But we have the right to a good life. And we want to show that with our music," the singer said.

This article was originally written in German.