Mykola Budnyk
Mykola Petrovych Budnyk was a luthier and traditional performer in the Kobzar tradition. He was active in authentic construction and recreation of historic folk instruments, and involved in the movement for authentic performаnce practice on Ukrainian folk instruments. Budnyk was also known as a painter and poet. He was born in 1954 in Skolobiv, near Khoroshiv, Zhytomyr region, and died January 16, 2001, in Irpin', Kyiv region.
He was a chairman of the Kyiv Kobzar Guild, bandura, known as a master player of folk musical instruments, and as an artist and poet.
Creative legacy
Budnyk recreated 17 types of traditional folk instruments - among them different regional types of the kobza, bandura, lira, husli, hudok, torban, and other traditional Ukrainian musical instruments. Together with Mykhailo Khai, Budnyk formally resurrected the Kobzarskyi Tsekh, uniting like-minded intellectuals interested in the study and revival of authentic traditional music of the kobzars.Budnyk initially studied traditional kobzar performance from Heorhy Tkachenko in 1978, and made himself a traditional bandura. He had a natural aptitude to authentic instrument construction and made banduras for many of Tkachenko's students. He later made a number of other authentic Ukrainian folk instruments and also began to teach others how to make and play these instruments in an authentic manner. The Kobzar guild he co-created revived traditional performance practices such as street-performance . Much of the repertoire, such as the para-religious psalms and kants, which were previously suppressed in Soviet times as well as the epic form known as dumy were also reintroduced.
Budnyk authored a textbook on making old-type banduras.
After his death, his recordings were collected and released in the CDa Mykola Budnyk. Hej, na Chornomu mori... ''Project "My Ukraine. Bervy". '', by Art-Veles