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Ukraine orchestra throws down beats at Eurovision

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With their infectious musical fusion of roots and rhythm, Ukrainian folk hiphop band Kalush Orchestra is riding a wave of goodwill at the Eurovision Song Contest this year – while eyeing the contest's top prize.

Tapping traditiona­l Ukrainian folk music but mashing up an invigorati­ng hiphop beat with a haunting, lullaby refrain, Stefania was written last year by the band's frontman, 27-year-old rapper Oleh Psiuk, as a tribute to his mother.

But the song selected to represent Ukraine at Eurovision – just days before Russia's attacks –has taken on outsized meaning for a country nearing its third month of war. It contains nostalgic lyrics such as "I'll always find my way home even if all the roads are destroyed" and celebrates cultural identity and the motherland.

Standing out in the competitio­n long cheered for its flamboyanc­e and camp, the band received a standing ovation on Tuesday after passing the semifinals. It is considered by bookmakers a favourite to become Eurovision's outright winner at the finale on Saturday.

"My mum is in Ukraine and many of my relatives are in Ukraine but there is really no safe place in Ukraine at the moment," Psiuk said.

"It's really like a lottery, where you cannot know where exactly you'll get in danger. So we are very worried about everyone and our relatives that are in Ukraine."

Such worries have fuelled the band's drive during Eurovision, he said.

"We feel here as if on a mission because at the moment, as we speak, Ukrainian culture is being destroyed," Psiuk said. "But it is our role to show it is alive and it has a lot to offer. It's unique. It really represents every Ukrainian who is now suffering in the world today."

Although considered nonpolitic­al, the world's biggest song contest, watched by millions of people, inevitably reflects greater geopolitic­al tensions.

This year, the European Broadcasti­ng Union banned Russia from the contest a day after it invaded Ukraine on February 24. Russia had competed in Eurovision since 1994.

Perhaps the most original and energising act at this year's competitio­n, the six-member all-male Kalush Orchestra sprang from Psiuk's original hiphop group Kalush, named for his hometown in western Ukraine.

The band is made up of Psiuk, Ihor Didenchuk, Tymofii Muzychuk, Vitalii Duzhyk, Oleksandr Slobodiany­k and MC Kylymmen (Carpetman).

Its new sound incorporat­es traditiona­l folk instrument­s, including the telenka, which is played with one hand controllin­g the pipe's open end, and another flute-like instrument, the sopilka.

Performing in richly embroidere­d traditiona­l garb, the band is also instantly recognisab­le for Psiuk's bubblegum pink bucket hat and the carpet-like bodysuit worn by the breakdanci­ng MC Carpetman.

But it is Kalush Orchestra's sound that makes the band unique. It "mixes old ancient folk, even forgotten sounds, with super modern and understand­able-for-everyone hiphop rap elements", Psiuk said.

To win Eurovision, Kalush Orchestra will have to be chosen above 24 other finalists competing on Saturday. Votes are cast by a mix of music industry profession­als and the public from each country – who are not allowed to vote for their own nation.

Were Ukraine to win, next year's Eurovision would be held in the country, which Psiuk vowed would be a "new, integrated, well developed, flourishin­g Ukraine".

Although one band member who joined the army three days after the invasion remains in Ukraine defending Kyiv, Ukraine's government gave the group special dispensati­on to travel abroad to compete at Eurovision.

 ?? AFP/VNA Photo ?? PROUD: Ukraine's Kalush Orchestra is riding a wave of goodwill at the Eurovision Song contest
AFP/VNA Photo PROUD: Ukraine's Kalush Orchestra is riding a wave of goodwill at the Eurovision Song contest

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