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Tylyk Volodymyr Volodymyrovych

1938-2009

Volodymyr Volodymyrovych Tylyk (21 July 1938, Dnipro - 27 March 2009,[1] Kyiv) was a Ukrainian composer, music editor, and teacher.
Volodymyr Tylyk was born on 21 July 1938 in the city of Dnipro. In 1962, he graduated from the Kyiv Conservatory (a student of A. Shtoharenko). From 1962 to 1967, he worked as a music editor at the State Committee for Radio and Television under the Council of Ministers of the Ukrainian SSR, and from 1967 he was the editor of the music department at the magazine "Art". From 1976 to 1981, he was a teacher at the Kyiv Music School (now the R. M. Gliere Kyiv Municipal Academy of Music).

His son is a Ukrainian choral conductor, composer, and scholar Ihor Tylyk.

Compositions[2]
Stage works
Ballets:

"Red Daisy" (after M. Jalil, 1973),
"Songs from Moabit (1981).
Musical comedy:

"Jason's Good Men" (1985).
Vocal and symphonic works:
"Sorochynski Buvalshchyny" (1980),
"Black Forest (1981),
"The Bastion of Sevastopol" (1983),
2 concertos for soprano and orchestra (1977, 1980).
For symphony orchestra:
Two Suites for Symphony Orchestra (1965, 1967),
"Overture" (1977).
For piano and orchestra:

"Rhapsody Concerto" (1972),
"Slovak Rhapsody" (1967).
for bandura and orchestra:

2 concertos (1976, 1982).
for cymbals and orchestra:

"Rhapsody" (1968)
for accordion and orchestra:

"Concerto" (1987)
For orchestra of folk instruments:
"Poltava Dances" (1971)
fantasy "Folk music" (1987)
For orchestra of Ukrainian folk instruments:
"Thought-Shumka" (1965)
"Memories of the Zaporizhian Sich" (1992)
"Thought about Kobzar" (1992)
Chamber and instrumental works
Suite for four cellos (1965)
String Quartet (1967)
String Trio (1976)
For piano
Two sonatas (1965, 1979)
"Preludes-Songs (1969)
"Kaleidoscope" (1970)
"Cherkasy paintings" (1979)
"Watercolours" (1966)
for 2 pianos:

"Ukrainian Dances" (1977)
Vocal works
solos to the words of Ivan Franko and Taras Shevchenko.
song-cycles "Mother Sowed a Dream", "Sing to Me, Field"

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