Oleksandr Polozhynskyi
Oleksandr Yevhenovych Polozhynskyi is a Ukrainian singer and presenter who became the lead singer of the Tartak music band, and the host of Radio NV. He later became a serviceman with the 47th Mechanized Brigade of the Armed Forces of Ukraine.
Early life and education
Born on 28 May 1972, in the Ukrainian city of Lutsk. At an early age, Polozhynskyi started singing and gave performances at festive matinees. After completing his studies at Lutsk School No.15, he proceeded to the Lviv military boarding school upon his eighth-grade graduation. He attended Lutsk National Technical University's Faculty of Economics to further his studies in economics.Music career
Playing with the Lutsk band Flies in Tea, Polozhynskyi began his musical career. Later, he became a showman for the punk group Makarov & Peterson. He founded the band Tartak to take part in the Chervona Ruta festival after learning about it in 1996. He played a number of significant roles in Tartak, including creative director, co-producer, singer, presenter, and songwriter. He worked with the Gulyaihorod folk ensemble to incorporate aspects of Ukrainian traditional music into contemporary music.Polozhynskyi worked as a radio and television presenter part-time in addition to his music career. He was the host of radio shows Sounds about on Radio NV and Chipboard Show on Europa Plus. Beginning on 1 October 2007, he co-hosted the morning DSP Show on Europe Plus alongside Andriy Kuzmenko, and Igor Pelykh. He had the headings Sleep in the Hand, Safe, Morning Star, With His Samovar, Pure Song, Shvyryay-Show, and Call to the Friend in particular, together with Kuzma. He hosted the show Sounds of Pro on Radio NV from 2018 to 27 May 2020.
He started the solo project SP in 2009, producing two songs: Tsytsydup and Choose Me!, which were published on the eve of the presidential election. He started working as a producer in 2011 and chose songs for the contemporary Ukrainian poetic album Po-Vilno, which was released by the studio Coffeine. In the music video for Moral Sex by Tartak, he also made his directing debut. In 2014, he founded the Bouvier project, with which he released two albums in 2015 and 2019. To support the national football team of Ukraine together with TV channels Football 1/2 recorded a video for the song Here's My Hand.
Together with Ivan Marunych in 2019, he formed the duet Ol. Iv.'E and launched the Bouvier project. He also cooperated with other musicians. He also took part in the volunteer camp at Tartakiv & Tartak. He also participated in the establishment of the volunteer camp Tartakiv&Tartak that same year, which aims to restore the Tartakiv Palace, a 19th-century architectural landmark of national significance.
Following a court battle, Polozhynskyi declared his separation from the bands Tartak and Bouvier on 5 February 2020. That same year saw the launch of his new endeavor, Olexander Polozhinsky and the Three Roses, which included a concert program dubbed Lyrics that included reworked versions of the songs Tartak, Bouvier, and Ol. Iv.'E.
Recent accomplishments for him include his participation in the Banderstadt festival in 2021, and the publication of his 12-song solo album Despite Everything in April 2023. He performed duets in an October Palace event on 5 September 2023, with other artists and bands that he has worked with throughout the years.
Military career
Polozhynskyi enlisted in the Ukrainian Armed Forces reserve in February 2022, serving in the 47th Battalion. When he served in the military, he recorded a song honoring volunteers. He said that his eight months in the army had a physical and moral impact on him, and health issues began to come into notice.Polozhynskyi unexpectedly announced his active duty on 6 December 2022, the Day of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. He said that he does not see himself as a hero and that he has not killed a single opponent in over six months of full-scale combat. He has been in Kyiv on business since February 2023, providing remote support to the brigade's soldiers. In November of that year, he eventually transferred to a different military unit.