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Transatlantic connections: How a Ukrainian pianist and a St. John's violinist bonded over music

When Ukrainian pianist Alla Melnychuk performs with violinist Maria Cherwickon Sunday, it will be her first full concert performance in Canada and the culmination of a blossoming friendship between the two musicians.

Pianist Alla Melnychuk will perform with violinist Maria Cherwick for war relief

A woman holding a violin stands next to a grand piano, with another woman seated on the bench. A Ukrainian flag is draped on the open lid of the piano.
Maria Cherwick, left, and Alla Melnychuk are preparing a concert of contemporary classical music from Ukrainian composers on Sunday. It will be Melnychuk's first full concert performance in Canada. (Jacob Cherwick/Submitted by Lynette Adams)

When Ukrainian pianist Alla Melnychuk performs with violinist Maria Cherwickon Sunday, it will be her first full concert performance in Canada.

The duo met through a Facebook group connecting Ukrainian newcomers with residents of Newfoundland and Labrador. Now they're preparing an evening of classical music for piano and violin from Ukrainian composers.

Cherwick is a staple in the St. John's music community, playing and recording with multiple local bands and the Newfoundland Symphony Orchestra. Whileher friendship with Melnychuk is quite new, to hear them slip easily into laughter, you'd think they'd been friends for years, rather than mere weeks.

"We have the same feeling in music so it's easy to play together," says Melnychuk. "Before our rehearsal we always have a chat, probably for an hour."

While her first contact with Cherwick was through the Facebook group, Melnychuk says,they met in person at an event that featured the local Ukrainian-Canadian band the Kubasonics, of which Cherwick is a member.

"I went to Maria and said, 'I probably had a chat with you on Facebook.' And after that, we decided to meet for coffee."

"We're not just friends because we both have a Ukrainian connection," says Cherwick, "We talk about music and my cat and everything."

A Ukrainian connection

"Elements of Ukrainian culture and community were really important in our lives growing up," says Cherwick, who grew up in Edmonton. Her cultural connection to Ukraine comes from her great-grandparents, who emigrated from Ukraine in the early 1900s and settled in Saskatchewan.

"With the Soviet Union, there wasn't really a lot of people travelling back and forth for most of the 20th century, and so Ukrainian-Canadian culture kind of evolved in its own way."

The music she plays with her father and brother in theKubasonics is rooted in her family's Ukrainian heritage.

It's not like a temporary place. It really feels like home.- Alla Melnychuk

Melnychuk's family home is Chernihiv, and her more recent home is Kharkiv, where she has studied and worked for most of the past decade. Before her move to Canada, she and her then fianc were living temporarily in Poland and planning to return home to Ukraine in March.

"We were supposed to go home, get married," she said. "But the war began, so we couldn't go home, and his contract [in Poland] was ended."

They flew to Canada in Maywith the first planeload of Ukrainian refugees and settled in St. John's.

Two women smile for a photograph. One has long brown hair, while the other has shorter curly hair and is wearing a blue and white outfit and a floral headdress.
Melnychuk and Cherwick are pictured at a celebration in St. Johns for Ukraine's Independence Day, where Cherwick played with the Kubasonics. (Alla Melnychuk/Submitted by Lynette Adams)

A new home in Newfoundland

If you ask Melnychuk to play you a traditional Newfoundland song, she can give you The St. John's Waltz and The Harbour Grace Excursion because she learned them for a performance in Harbour Grace earlier this year.

But even before the plane landed in St. John's, Melnychukhad chosen to move to Newfoundland and Labrador. She remembers seeing a photo and thinking, "The nature is so, so beautiful, oh my gosh, where is it?" She was also drawn to the province's reputation for safety and had heard that "it's a little bit different than other [parts of] Canada, like people-friendly. And it's true, people are very friendly."

Melnychukhas continue theonline teaching practice she hadbefore coming to Canada, providing lessons to students in several European countries, including Germany, Italyand Luxembourg. She also teaches part timeat Halliday Music Studio in St. John's. In August, she and her fianc got married.

She says they already feel settled in St. John's.

"It's not like a temporary place. It really feels like home."

A Ukrainian repertoire

Cherwick and Melnychuk are preparing a night of classical music for piano and violin that includes compositions by several contemporary Ukrainian composers, including Vitaly Filipenko, Myroslav Skorykand Tatjana Kozlova, a colleague of Melnychuk's based in Kharkiv.

"It's incredible that, because of music, Alla and I can become friends and play this concert," says Cherwick.

The duo will also play work by Vladimir Ptushkin, who diedearlier this year.

To meet someone for the first time and be able to play like that is really special.- Maria Cherwick

"It will be my honour to play his pieces in his memory," says Melnychuk, who studied with Ptushkin at the Kharkiv National University of Arts.

St. John's-based mezzo-soprano Shelley Neville will join the duo as a featured guest. Melnychuk, who performed with Neville earlier this year, is teaching her to sing in the Ukrainian language.

The concert takes place at Bannerman Brewing Co. on Sunday. Proceeds from the ticket sales will be sent to Ukraine, where volunteers will purchase and distribute winter clothing to people in need.

A friendship rooted in music

"I love the opportunity to meet different people and play all different kinds of styles," saidCherwick, whosemusical interests range from classical to bluegrass to Newfoundland traditional. "If I can say yes to something, I always say yes, just because I enjoy it all."

She jumped at the opportunity to meet a new musician and play new music, and the chemistry they share when they play is a bonus.

"When we rehearse we just feel it from each other," said Cherwick, who appreciates thesimpaticorelationshipwith Melnychuk.

"To meet someone for the first time and be able to play like that is really special."

Melnychuk concurs:"It's like it was destiny."

Even without Ukraine as a common ground, Cherwick sees music as the tie that binds her and Melnychuk.

"I think it's incredible that because of music, Alla and I can become friends and play this concert. We talk for hours, but even if we couldn't speak the same language, we could still play these pieces."

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador