If you were a Cold War kid, growing in the sunset of the Reagan years, what did you know about Ukraine? Maybe you knew about the reactor in Chernobyl that irradiated half of Europe, and that scene in Seinfeld where the fur-hat-wearing Ukrainian smashes Kramer and Newman’s game of Risk! on the subway (“You not say Ukraine weak!”). Maybe you saw, in the 1994 Olympics, Nancy Kerrigan finish second to Oksana Baiul, a waifish orphan turned figure skater who came from that newly independent ex-Soviet country. If you were born an American millennial, did you hear about the Ukrainian revolutions? There was the Orange Revolution in 2004, and the Maidan Revolution in 2013. Did you know what all those massive crowds of Ukrainian citizens were protesting for, or against?
Now we all know more about Ukraine—but Russia’s brutal full-scale invasion of 2022 has flattened it again, into a site of ongoing tragedy and/or wartime resilience. If you, like me, have been paying close attention to Ukraine for years, you have been sick with worry over the damage and loss of this unjust war, over the existential threat it poses to this place, but also over the ways it has again reduced Ukraine to a collection of stereotypes and catastrophe. All of which is why the new, lovingly curated collection titled Even the Forest Hums: Ukrainian Sonic Archives 1971-1996 arrives as both a sonic balm and a reminder that Ukraine is not merely some liminal backwater. The ambition of this musical anthology is vast: to recuperate, rehabilitate, and celebrate experiments in Ukrainian popular music in their full and wild complexity.
A collaboration between the indispensable crate diggers behind Shukai (meaning “to hunt, or search”), a reissue label founded in Kyiv in 2018, and Seattle’s Light in the Attic, the anthology gathers lesser-known works by Ukrainian musicians who operated in the murky spaces between official and unofficial culture in the last decades of the Soviet Union. The liner notes, written by veteran music journalist and tireless Kyiv-based impresario Vitalii “Bard” Bardetskyi, emphasize the power of music over the vicissitudes of a Ukrainian history marked by Russian imperial repression, Stalinist famine, war, mass population transfers, and the ebb and flow of Kremlin laws restricting or criminalizing expressions of Ukrainian language, faith, and music. Bardetskyi, in addition to co-owning Kyiv’s hip audiophile bar and record store GRAM, wrote the script for the 2020 documentary Mustache Funk, which narrated the history of Ukrainian pop in the ’70s with the sensitivity evident in the liner notes for this anthology. In Bardetskyi’s narrative of late Soviet to post-Soviet Ukraine, no musician is shamed for their participation in the culture of Soviet officialdom. No one is accused of selling out if they played in a VIA (“Vocal Instrumental Ensemble,” the bloodless bureaucratic Soviet term for what we would otherwise recognize as buttoned-up rock’n’roll). Instead, Bardetskyi offers a redemptive storyline for ex-Soviet citizens, pointing out how Ukrainian musicians managed to write catchy and sometimes profound songs even within the restrictions set by the state. And, as Mustache Funk emphasized, they often did it with a lot of luxurious facial hair.