Ganna Gryniva
Ganna Gryniva | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | Ukrainian |
Education | University of Leipzig and the Franz Liszt University of Music |
Occupation(s) | Jazz singer and composer |
Website | Ganna Gryniva |
Ganna Gryniva (born 4 July 1989) is a Ukrainian jazz singer and composer working in Berlin. She was raised in Ukraine and Germany. Her songs are in English or Ukrainian.
Life
Gryniva was born in Krasnoyarsk, before she was one year old she moved to Ukraine where her paternal grandparents lived. Her mother is a pianist and her father is a German philologist and painter.[1] She was home schooled until she moved to Germany with her family as a 13-year-old. In Germany she attended high school in Bernburg. She graduated with a degree in philosophy from the University of Leipzig before studying singing at the Franz Liszt University of Music in Weimar[1] in Weimar with the German singer Michael Schiefel, trumpeter Jeff Cascaro and Frank Mobus.[2]
She tried working as a journalist but singing had always been an ambition of hers. In 2014 she formed the Ukrainian ethnic jazz quintet GANNA Ensemble. The group's first album has a title “Dykyi Lys” that translates from Ukrainian as "Wild Fox". She wrote and arranged all of their first nine songs for their first album. Her lyrics are in English and Ukrainian and they reference other sources including the poems of Lesya Ukrainka, Nadiia Telenchuk and her father.[3] The band received funding to travel to Ukraine as research. They have performed in Berlin, Odesa, Kyiv and all over Europe: Poland, Sweden, Hungary, Romania, Estonia, Latvia, Greece and others.[4]
In 2017, she was invited to go to Austria to join an international ensemble led by Christopher Cech . The project known as CHAUD toured that year in Austria, Switzerland and Germany.[5]
In 2022, the short film HANDBOOK by Pavel Mozhar was featured at Short Film festival in Glasgow. The film is about the 2020 Presidential election in Belarus and its soundtrack was created by Gryniva.[6]
Gryniva was one of the leading musicians from Ukraine in Germany when Russia invaded the country in 2022.[7] She sang at a concert "Songs of Wounding" with Mariana Sadovska in support of Ukraine on 17 March.[8] Gryniva was one of the entertainers at the 10th Fridays for Future event in Berlin in April 2022 singing draped in a Ukrainian flag.[citation needed] She was one of the Jazz performers named for a "Peace on Earth" concert in Berlin organised by Wolf Kampmann to support Doctors without Borders. She was one of 70 performers who volunteered and she had her own arrangement of a folk song from Ukraine[9] for the concert.[10]
References
- ^ a b Gazeta.ua (2020-10-08). ""Батьки вчили нас удома. До 13 років не ходила до школи"". Gazeta.ua (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 2022-04-03.
- ^ "Ganna Gryniva". www.jazz-fun.de (in German). Retrieved 2022-04-03.
- ^ Verlag Axel Stinshoff, Köln. "Jazz thing & Blue Rhythm: News, Rezensionen, Konzerte, Festivals, Jazz in Fernsehen und Radio". Jazz, Zeitschriften, Rezensionen, Nachrichten, Termine (in German). Retrieved 2022-04-03.
- ^ Greenroom. "EurOpus | G À N N A (UA/FR/DK/DE/AT) | Opus Jazz Club concerts". BMC - Budapest Music Center. Retrieved 2022-04-03.
- ^ "Ganna Gryniva". www.rigajazz.lv. Retrieved 2022-04-03.
- ^ "German Films: News Releases". www.german-films.de. Retrieved 2022-04-03.
- ^ "Wie vier Frauen der Ukraine-Krise mit Musik begegnen". www.zdf.de (in German). Retrieved 2022-04-06.
- ^ "Songs of Wounding: solidarity concert for Ukraine with Mariana Sadovska, Ganna Gryniva, Viktoria Leléka and others". www.adk.de. Retrieved 2022-04-08.
- ^ NDR. ""Peace on Earth!" - jetzt live: Jazzkonzert in Berlin für den Frieden". www.ndr.de (in German). Retrieved 2022-04-07.
- ^ ""Peace on Earth – Jazz für den Frieden"". www.rbb-online.de (in German). Retrieved 2022-04-07.