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⇱ Keri-Lynn Wilson - Ukrainian Freedom Orchestra Conductor


Beethoven 5

“The feverish intensity and commitment of the UFO's playing, on the new recording of Symphony No 5 especially, is the sound of fierce hope, the sound of lives depending on the purpose and possibility of this music as a herald of peace and a call to action.”

- The Guardian



New Ukrainian Freedom Orchestra recording released by Deutsche Grammophon

Deutsche Grammophon (DG) has released the Ukrainian Freedom Orchestra (UFO) and conductor Keri-Lynn Wilson’s emotionally charged performance of Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5 on February 20, 2026, to mark the fourth anniversary of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The recording, captured live in Vilnius, Lithuania, during the UFO’s 2025 Resilience Tour, is dedicated to the Ukrainian people and their struggle. It follows the success of the orchestra’s unique Ukrainian-language version of Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9, which DG released in 2024. Beethoven’s Fifth is accompanied by the premiere of a powerful new work by Ukrainian composer Maxim Kolomiiets, Suite from The Mothers of Kherson. This suite is a moving tribute to the Ukrainian women who made a 3,000-mile journey behind enemy lines to rescue their children forcibly detained by Russian authorities. The suite has been adapted from a new full-scale opera by Kolomiiets and librettist George Brant, which will have its world premiere at the Teatr Wielki–Polish National Opera in Warsaw in October 2026, before its Metropolitan Opera premiere in New York in the 2027–28 season.

Listen to the album here.

Ukrainian Freedom Orchestra

Keri-Lynn Wilson is the founding conductor and music director of the Ukrainian Freedom Orchestra. The ensemble was created in 2022 in the immediate aftermath of Russia’s full-scale invasion as a bold initiative to defend Ukraine’s cultural legacy as the country fights for its freedom. It brings together leading Ukrainian musicians from inside and outside the country and is a collaboration between the Metropolitan Opera, the Polish National Opera and The Ukrainian Ministry of Culture. The orchestra’s honorary patron is Ukraine’s First Lady, Olena Zelenska.

The UFO assembles each summer and its three international tours have so far taken in some of the most prestigious concert halls, as well as some of the great cathedrals, of Europe and the United States. These include the BBC Proms at the Royal Albert Hall, the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, Lincoln Center in New York City, the Kennedy Center in Washington DC, St Paul’s Cathedral in London and Saint Eustache in Paris. The 2024 Beethoven Ninth Freedom Tour celebrated the symphony’s 200th anniversary with a unique version of the work featuring its inspirational choral cry of freedom, “Ode to Joy,” sung in Ukrainian and included a concert, symbolic of the struggle against oppression, in the Gdansk Shipyards in Poland, birthplace of the Solidarity Movement. 

The orchestra has released two live recordings on Deutsche Grammophon, Beethoven’s 5th Symphony and 9th Symphony alongside Kolomiiets’s Suite from The Mothers of Kherson.

The Ukrainian Freedom Orchestra tours each summer. Details for each tour are made available on the Ukrainian Freedom Orchestra’s website here.

News

POLOVYI AND POLOVA

On April 9, a special concert dedicated to the revival of the music of the now almost forgotten Ukrainian composer Valerii Polovyi will take place at the National Philharmonic of Ukraine.

The event is part of the large-scale project “Liberated Music,” aimed at decolonizing the Ukrainian musical space and restoring names that had long been pushed out of historical memory.

Valerii Polovyi’s name has long disappeared from concert programs, and his works remained silent pages of Ukrainian history. On this evening, the composer’s music will once again be heard from the stage, returning to audiences the name of an artist who, having endured the harsh Stalinist repressions, remained true to his creative calling.

The concert is presented with the support of Dom Master Klass.

The Kyiv Camerata will perform under the baton of Canadian-Ukrainian conductor Keri-Lynn Wilson, featuring leading soloists — violinists Bohdana Pivnenko and Kyrylo Bondar, as well as the Shchedryk Children’s Choir (artistic director Marianna Sablina).

The program brings together the work of two generations of Ukrainian artists. It will feature compositions not only by Valerii Polovyi, but also by his daughter — the outstanding contemporary composer Victoria Polova, whose musical imagery continues tradition while opening a new Ukrainian aesthetic.

Valerii Polovyi (1927–1986) was born in Odesa into an artistic family. His father, Petro Mohyla (stage name Petro Polovyi), was a singer with the Hryhorii Veryovka Ukrainian National Choir; his mother, Mariia Mohyla, was an actress and director; his brother, Hennadii Polovyi, became a well-known graphic artist; and his daughter Victoria became a prominent contemporary composer.

Polovyi’s life path was difficult. In 1950, he graduated from the Kyiv Conservatory, where he studied under Borys Liatoshynsky. This mentorship shaped the composer’s openness to new artistic ideas and experimentation.

In his music, Polovyi continued the traditions of the Ukrainian compositional school while exploring the synthesis of the arts. In particular, he studied the interaction between color and music, effectively creating “color music,” a subject on which he also wrote a book.

Immediately after graduating from the conservatory, the composer was arrested on fabricated charges of anti-Soviet activity. From 1950 to 1954, he and his brother were exiled to the copper mines of Dzhezkazgan in Kazakhstan. Even there, the artist continued to compose, sketching future works with charcoal on rough cement paper. After his rehabilitation, he worked as a teacher in music schools, an editor at music publishing houses, and a consultant for the Union of Composers of Ukraine.

Valerii Polovyi’s oeuvre spans many genres. The concert will feature his String Quartet No. 2 and Concerto for Two Violins and Orchestra.

Both works have a unique history of creation: their ideas originated during his exile. The violin concerto was completed only in 1985–1986, though its first sketches appeared in the camp. String Quartet No. 2 was written entirely there.

“The Second Quartet was written by my father in a concentration camp around 1953–1954, with a second version appearing in 1973. For writing, he used cement sacks, smoothing them out and composing at night. He worked in a copper mine and tried to reflect this in the music. The theme of the second movement is a memory of love. The first, though partial, performance took place in the camp under the direction of Heorhii Kozakov,” recalls the composer’s daughter.

A separate emotional dimension of the program will be formed by the works of Victoria Polova. Her Missa brevis for children’s choir and chamber orchestra was written in 1986 — the year of her father’s death — and dedicated to his memory. In it, the composer combines the sacred tradition of the Latin Mass with a contemporary musical language. The work is perceived as a musical prayer-requiem, where personal memory and spiritual concentration become a shared experience of grief and inner purification.

Another work by Victoria Polova — “Blessing of Sadness” for two violins and strings — was created during wartime. This performance gains particular symbolism, as it unites the personal and the universal — a reflection on the past and an experience of present reality.

In a difficult time for the country, the question of national memory becomes especially acute. The return of Polovyi’s music testifies to the strength of Ukrainian culture — its ability to survive, to be reborn, and to sound again.

This concert will become an act of justice and a meaningful addition to the narrative of Ukrainian music history.

On March 5 and 8, 2026, Keri-Lynn Wilson conducts the Orchestre National Bordeaux Aquitaine in two performances in France: at the Auditorium de Bordeaux (March 5) and at the Théâtre Auditorium de Poitiers (March 8). She is joined by Ukrainian soprano Olga Syniakova.

The programme features Dnipro by Yevhen Stankovych, Songs and Dances of Death by Modest Mussorgsky, and Symphony No. 8, Op. 65 by Dmitri Shostakovich.

Tickets and additional information for the March 5 performance in Bordeaux can be found here.

Tickets and additional information for the March 8 performance in Poitiers can be found .

CONCERT IN STRASBOURG MARKING THE ANNIVERSARY OF RUSSIA’S FULL-SCALE WAR AGAINST UKRAINE

On 24 February 2026, Strasbourg in Palais des Fetes de Strasbourg “Kyiv Camerata” will present a special concert "Lumiere sur l'Ombre" dedicated to the anniversary of russia’s full-scale war against Ukraine.

The event is part of Ukraine’s cultural programme at the Council of Europe and represents an important act of cultural diplomacy. It aims to honour the memory of the victims of the war, to affirm the resilience of the Ukrainian people, and to highlight the role of culture as a language of truth, remembrance, and resistance.

The concert programme features works by prominent Ukrainian composers of the 20th and 21st centuries, including Zoltan Almashi, Oleksandr Kozarenko, Volodymyr Zubytsky, Yevhen Stankovych, Hanna Havrylets, Oleksandr Rodin, and Borys Lyatoshynsky.

The performance will be presented by the “Kyiv Camerata” under the baton of internationally renowned conductor Keri-Lynn Wilson, with leading Ukrainian soloists Bohdana Pivnenko and Dmytro Tavanets.

The programme offers a profound artistic reflection on war, loss, and hope, while affirming the enduring strength and vitality of Ukrainian culture within the European context.

Held on the eve of the anniversary of the full-scale invasion, the concert stands as a gesture of solidarity from the European community with Ukraine and a reminder of shared values — freedom, democracy, the rule of law, and respect for human dignity.

Through the universal language of music, Ukraine continues its dialogue with Europe, reaffirming its place within a shared European cultural and values-based space.

The Russian Forces are no match for the power of Ukraine’s cultural legacy

-The Globe and Mail

Photo: Yurii Gryaznov