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PHILHARMONICA. International Music Journal
Reference:

"From the Black Box" by Kirill Molchanov: Sergey Yakovenko's artistic reading of the musical and prose text of the vocal cycle

Podguzova Oksana Alekseevna

ORCID: 0000-0001-8856-7308

Postgraduate student; Department of Musicology and Composition; M. M. Ippolitov-Ivanov State Medical University

36 Marxistskaya str., Moscow, 109147, Russia

oksana9.11@yandex.ru

DOI:

10.7256/2453-613X.2024.3.71197

EDN:

RTSZDS

Received:

04-07-2024


Published:

29-07-2024


Abstract: The object of the study is the vocal cycle "From the Black Box" by K. Molchanov – one of the forgotten chamber vocal compositions of the second half of the twentieth century. The subject of the study is the performance interpretation of this work by the famous singer Sergey Yakovenko. Based on the study of the clavier preserved in the musician's home archive and the audio recording of the vocal cycle, the author reveals the important properties of the singer's performing interpretation. A sharp change from reading to singing is noted, which is a distinctive feature of this vocal cycle, in which reader's and singer's words are matched. The researcher focuses on Yakovenko's performing principles, the rich colorful palette of his voice and the actor's approach to interpreting the artwork, thanks to which he was able to create visible theatrical images of various characters appearing in the vocal cycle. The article uses a comprehensive method that has developed both in historical and theoretical musicology, as well as in the field of vocal performance interpretation. As a result of the analysis, the author comes to the conclusion that the vocal cycle "From the Black Box" is of a great interest both from the point of view of figurative, thematic and stylistic development, and from the standpoint of S. Yakovenko's performing interpretation. A special contribution of the author to the research of the topic is a detailed study of the performance of Molchanov's vocal cycle in the context of an intensive search for "new music". The scientific novelty lies in the fact that the cycle "From the Black Box" is for the first time in the field of view of the study, considered in detail and comprehensively with the identification of a special performing interpretation of the outstanding singer S. Yakovenko.


Keywords:

Sergey Yakovenko, vocal cycle, Kirill Molchanov, Ludwik Ashkenazi, Russian music, performing interpretation, reading, singing, vocal skills, singer-actor

This article is automatically translated.

Among the forgotten, little–known, but very bright and interesting works in the repertoire of the singer, People's Artist of Russia Sergei Borisovich Yakovenko (1937-2020) is the vocal cycle "From the Black Box" (1967) by Kirill Vladimirovich Molchanov (1922-1982). The performer and the composer had a creative and personal friendship. The first song with which Yakovenko appeared on stage in his youth, doing amateur art, was "Remember" by K. Molchanov (art. A. Dostal). As a radio soloist, the singer recorded many of the composer's songs to the radio foundation. Among them is the "Oriole" (art. N. Zabolotsky), which the performer loved very much. Especially for the singer, the composer changed Pavel's tenor part in the opera "Romeo, Juliet and Darkness..." (1963) to a baritone one. He also wrote, based on the singer's voice, the vocal cycle "Love" (art. of modern poets from different countries), which he dedicated to Yakovenko.

"From the Black Box" is one of the original compositions by K. Molchanov, created for a male voice accompanied by a piano and a reader. It should be noted that there were three more such works in Yakovenko's repertoire: "Amethyst" by S. Balasanyan (art. E. Mezhelaitis), "Pushkiniana" by M. Koval (art. A. Pushkin), "Northern Poem" by V. Solovyov-Sedoy (art. G. Gorbovsky). Performing the cycle "From the Black Box", the singer performed in different guises (sings and reads poetry), creating an original "philharmonic" theater. He was always in search of new forms of chamber performance, so he was attracted to works in which the authors used a synthesis of various artistic means. Yakovenko believed that poetry should be heard in concert programs, because "the poetic word, contrasting with the music in its texture and at the same time, connected with it by the commonality of content, unity of idea, lifts the emotional sound of the program, facilitates its perception by the audience. <...> Chamber programs should differ not only in the names of the composers put on the poster, but also in the ways of their embodiment: one program requires the performer to be extremely restrained and academic, tailcoat and laconic gesture, the other – acting freedom and scope, some characteristic details of costume, stage decorations and light score" [1, c 97-98].

In the home archive of S. Yakovenko keeps the clavier of the vocal cycle "From the Black Box" (1967) and an audio recording of the composition performed by him together with the artist of the Gorky Moscow Art Academic Theater Zinovy Toboltsev (1911-1986). This manuscript is an album-size keyboard of 260x380 mm, made on thick, matte paper, yellowish tint with dilapidated edges. The text of the numbers intended for the reader is typed on a typewriter, and the vocal episodes are written in a neat, even handwriting. There is an author's pagination in the keyboard (66 pages in total), with the exception of the first two pages (the title page and the "Introduction"), which remained without numbering. Therefore, the total number of pages of the manuscript is 68. In 1970, the vocal cycle "From the Black Box" was published in the publishing house "Soviet Composer". A comparative analysis of these notes with the manuscript revealed minor differences. First of all, we note that in the published clavier, the text No. 12 "Breathe, breathe!" was replaced by "Little David's Obituary" (in the audio recording, "Little David's Obituary" sounds, possibly proposed by Molchanov during rehearsals with the performers). Let's emphasize the differences in the title of the cycle: in the manuscript – "From the black box" and "<...> novels", and in the published notes – "The Black Box" and "<...> romances". The keys also have a different number of pages. There are 60 of them in the published composition, which is due to the fact that in the handwritten version after each vocal number there is a blank page (there are 8 of them), as well as the presence of one page with the contents of the cycle in the published keyboard. It should be noted that the musical text of the eight vocal numbers in the manuscript is set out more broadly and occupies 50 pages, and in the edition of the "Soviet Composer" – 47. All this did not have a significant impact on S. Yakovenko's interpretation, therefore, the manuscript of the vocal cycle is used in this article, since the singer had these notes at his disposal during the preparation of the composition for performance, which contain his remarks.

The composer himself called the vocal cycle "From the Black Box" "melodies, ballads, novels", like the Czech writer and journalist Ludvik Ashkenazi (1921-1986), the author of many children's fairy tales, short stories, short stories. His book "The Black Box" (1964, translated from the Czech by M. Rellib and V. Krivosheev), which the composer addressed, is a sequence of 66 photographs from the time of the Second World War (their authors are not known) with prose and poetic texts (a kind of "comments" on visual images) that were previously presented in a number of photo albums and in the magazine "Czech photo". Molchanov selected 17 Ashkenazi texts for different photographs and arranged them in a certain sequence (Table 1).

Table 1

Title

Executor

1.

"Introduction"

The reader

2.

"The Scream"

The reader

3.

"Who are you?"

singer

4.

"Good morning!"

The reader

5.

"The sun"

singer

6.

"Morning"

The reader

7.

"The Coffee Grounds Blues"

singer

8.

"Women"

The reader

9.

"Cigarette"

singer

10.

"Roman"

The reader

11.

"Marijuana"

singer

12.

"Breathe, breathe!" / "Little David's Obituary"

The reader

13.

"The Wall"

singer

14.

"I'm sorry."

The reader

15.

"Military Band"

singer

16.

"Radio"

The reader

17.

"Dreams"

singer

As can be seen from the table above, reading and singing alternate in the vocal cycle. Yakovenko sometimes acted as a reader himself. According to the singer, he preferred to be on stage alone, alternating between singing and reading the text, although sometimes the text was read by Z. Toboltsev. The episodes that the reader performs are sometimes large numbers, not epigraphs or an introduction, they reveal and continue the line of the plot development. Note that the composer retains the original title of each novella, with the exception of one of them: No. 6 is called "Morning" (L. Ashkenazi – "Dew"). Molchanov, following the text, makes adjustments, makes minor cuts. So, in No. 13 "The Wall" he omits the lines "Look, ladies, you have fresh cabbage in your wallet!", focusing on the names of Jews who died in prisons, that is, he talks about the Holocaust, one of the greatest tragedies in the history of mankind. At the end of No. 5 "The Sun", the composer repeats the first phrase "Children are small creatures", thereby creating a ring composition. In No. 15 "Military Orchestra" the composer places the first line "Who knows: was it or will it just be?" at the end of the issue with the remark "talking", mp, as if leaving hope for the best.

Revealing the title of the work, the author emphasizes in No. 1 ("Introduction") that the black (symbol of death) casket was "filled to the top with faces" that are "immortalized by light and permeated by darkness" [2, p. 2]. And it becomes a kind of epitaph, a memory of the fate of many innocent people. The plot develops as follows: the birth of a child, the events of his childhood, the bitter memories of a woman, the tragedy of war, death. At the same time, different characters arise (a mother bending over a child, a girl, a woman looking for her name on a tombstone, a corporal) who go through the trials of time. The image of war, as a symbol of suffering and death, constantly reminds of itself, is wedged into childhood paintings (No. 2-6), into the reflections of the author-hero about the difficult fate of women (No. 7-11), about the tragedy of the Holocaust (No. 12-13), about military events (No. 14, No. 15), including mention of the atomic bomb the bomb (No. 5, No. 15). And only once does a bright memory of a happy time arise (No. 6). The cycle (No. 17) ends with the image of sleep as a symbol of "eternal rest". It is characteristic that the composition has an end-to-end form, a single musical and dramatic movement of vocal paintings and scenes, which, as in a mono opera, create a feeling of a reviving story of a witness to the events that took place. The musical plot includes genre episodes, which enhances the role of scenography and sound-imaginative images. And Sergey Yakovenko expressively accurately recreates the imaginative world of the work, reveals its deep psychological character, and creates vivid, memorable paintings. In No. 1, "Who are you?" the singer leads a monologue on behalf of a mother bent over a baby. Softly (mp), softly, in falsetto, with tenor colors in his voice, with a hidden delight in his voice, through a "half-whisper" he addresses the child: "How I want to talk to you, Fish." The character of the vocal part is close to colloquial speech: short durations, repeated repetition of one sound. Before the phrase "I so want to talk to you, Fish", Sergei Borisovich's hand indicates the remark meno. With the words "How I want to hear you say it", mp, the singer gradually increases the sound of his voice over the course of seven bars to mf. From the remark "Are you really going to become an ordinary peasant", Yakovenko's voice is filled with new colors: anxiety and anxiety. He gradually increases the sound and accelerates the tempo, preparing the climax, which he performs chanting, ff, emphasizing each syllable. Suddenly everything calms down, ppp, the tempo slows down (poco meno mosso) and the singer with his mouth closed, p, but still in a restless state, pulls the sound e of the first octave, which lasts a whole note, from glissando down to es of a small octave (Figure 1).

Изображение выглядит как текст, транспорт, кран  Автоматически созданное описание

Figure 1. K. Molchanov. The vocal cycle "From the black box".

No. 3 "Who are you?"

The cycle No. 17 "Dreams" ends, resembling a lullaby. This is the shortest episode of the cycle, it lasts 2 minutes and impresses with its amazing simplicity. It is characterized by a slow tempo (Largo), the quietest dynamics (pp, ppr). Here, the singer's part consists of two phrases: "Do not wake women up too early, they have the sweetest dreams in the morning." Yakovenko's voice sounds quiet (pp), light, while every word is clearly audible.

In the episode "The Wall", the singer emphasizes a strong contrast: an expressive beginning (reminiscent of a scream) and almost crying at a slow pace, with repeated repetition of one sound in the vocal part, descending semitone moves, minor fret (h-moll, c-moll, h-moll).

In accordance with the genre and figurative basis, the performer recreated almost visible theatrical images in all vocal episodes. Yakovenko had the ability "to cover the work as a whole, to understand its dramatic basis, to correctly place semantic accents. <...> he is not only a wonderful actor, but also a sensitive director <…>. He is characterized by open, even journalistic communication with the public, to whom he either "broadcasts" with the oratorical force of conviction, or in a friendly way "tells" about the thought-out, experienced" [3, p. 73]. In the "Military Orchestra" – against the background of marching piano chords, he literally chants every word. The singer seems to transform into a corporal, pronouncing the text on his behalf: "Ah, Maine Goth! Such an orchestra, and not a single boy running after...". And in "Blues about Coffee Grounds" Yakovenko's voice sounds hidden, interspersed with blues motifs in the piano part (Figure 2).

Figure 2. K. Molchanov. The vocal cycle "From the black box".

No. 7 "Blues about coffee grounds"

The implied dialogue that sounds at the end of the episode "Sunshine" is expressive. The singer performs the child's phrase "mom, look, mushroom" in a spoken voice, and the words "mom, look" are anxious, f, and "mushroom" is confused, in a whisper. Yakovenko's voice intonation accurately conveys the condition of a child who saw a nuclear "mushroom" in the sky after the explosion of an atomic bomb (Figure 3).

Figure 3. K. Molchanov. The vocal cycle "From the black box".

No. 5 "The Sun".

The singer has repeatedly written and said that for the interpretation of each vocal composition, "the truth should be sought in the synthesis of verbal expressiveness, which dramatic actors teach us, and impeccable vocal and technical skills..." [3, p. 75]. This manifested itself in the interpretation of intonationally complex vocal compositions, such as "From the Black Box". So, in the number "Who are you?" in almost every bar there are jumps to non, septim, sexta, fifth, quart or tritone, which Yakovenko performs easily and freely. Jump to nono (d of the small octave e of the first octave) on the words "I want to", he sings softly, mp, conveying a tremulous and tender attitude to the child, instantly "taking off" with his voice to the note e of the first octave, which lasts one sixteenth in the sextole. We will also highlight the abundance of moves for a small second when moving eighth and sixteenth on the words "Fish", "joy", "you will become ordinary", "will it really come", "also to someone", "voice", "goldfish".

The vocal cycle "From the Black Box" contains many metrorhythmic difficulties. All eight vocal episodes have a variable size, which is due to the literary basis of the composition, written in verlibra, free verse. So, in the episode "Who are you" there is a frequent change of size (4/4, 2/4, 5/4, 6/4). Similarly, an even more active size change is typical for the episode "Marijuana" (3/4, 5/8, 5/4, 6/4, 7/4, 4/4). Variable size is found in other numbers, among them – "Cigarette" (4/4, 2/4), "Military Band" (4/4, 2/4, 6/4 occurs in only one measure), "Dreams" (4/4, 5/4, 2/4). Yakovenko overcomes these "transitions" from one size to another easily and freely, emphasizing the emotional diversity of the text and music. Almost everywhere there are syncopations, a combination of trioles and duoles, in the episodes "Who are you" and "Sunny" – sextoles and quintoles. Let's emphasize the complex rhythm in the episode "Blues about coffee grounds", where the pattern of the vocal part of each phrase begins with syncopation, intervals are often paired with a dotted rhythm and with trioles.

The composition of the composition is such that it includes abrupt changes not only in moods, but also in poetry – singing. Brief introductions in individual numbers of the cycle require quick fine tuning to the desired key. So, in the episode "Who are You?" the intro is one dissonant chord. At the same time, the first sound of the vocal part is "hidden" in the depths of the piano. Another example, before the episode "Cigarette" in the keyboard, Yakovenko's hand in a simple pencil indicates the remark "a small pause", obviously necessary for understanding the novella "Women" located in front of him, as well as for quickly switching from reading to singing, since the introduction, as is often found, consists of one interval – the octave es- es. A similar decision is made in other episodes, including "The Wall" and "The Sun".

The composition is permeated by the warm intonations of the melodic composer Kirill Molchanov, making the heart tremble. At the same time, the musical language of the composition is complex in a modern way, it includes speech, declamatory phrases, sharp throws of intonation, various types of melody from broad-chanted to recitative-declamatory, which the performer expressively emphasizes. Yakovenko performs individual lines in the vocal numbers of the cycle in a conversational manner ("Who are you?", "Military Orchestra"). The vocal number "Cigarette" is based on a special combination of singing and reading: in the extreme sections of the form, Yakovenko sings softly, softly in the upper register (e and d of the first octave), and in the middle part he reads the text against the background of an almost improvisational piano sound (12 bars). The composer's remark: the piano plays "quietly, very freely, as a pianist improvises in jazz during a break between numbers" (Figure 4).

Figure 4. K. Molchanov. The vocal cycle "From the black box".

No. 9 "Cigarette".

There are also many difficulties in the ratio of the vocal part and the piano accompaniment. Let's give an example: against the intermittent background of the decomposed reduced triad, the performer is entrusted with replicas (legato), which are interspersed with recitation ("Marijuana"). In No. 13 "The Wall", the vocal part is accompanied by a gradual movement of sixteenth durations in a sextole with an abundance of semitone moves (vol. 7-9).

The analysis of the vocal cycle "From the Black Box" and the preserved audio recording of the composition performed by S. Yakovenko Z. Toboltsev showed that the complex figurative world of music and words of the reader, in which heart warmth and pain, death and life, hope and love, surprise and fear are combined, reveals expressively precisely, psychologically subtly and theatrically visibly. The singer called this composition deeply tragic and performed it as a kind of "vocal requiem" with a sense of compassion. The enormous talent, bright personality, and artistry of the outstanding master of the twentieth century, Sergei Borisovich Yakovenko, made it possible to reveal a huge panorama of time in which death, pain, humiliation, and hatred accumulated in the "black box" of the inhuman time of crimes against everything human that is in life. Indeed, it is: Sergey Yakovenko "walked flawlessly in the "psychological fairway" of the musical and poetic text. And in each fragment he achieved such truthful and logical expressiveness that it is difficult to imagine the possibility of any other solution" [3, p. 75].

References
1. Yakovenko, S. (1971). One Singer's Theater? Soviet music, 4, 96–98.
2. Molchanov, K. (1970). The black box : Melodies, ballads, romances for a male voice accompanied by piano and a reader. Sl. L. Ashkenazi; per. M. Relliba. Moscow: Sov. komopzitor.
3. Chalaeva, I. (1968). Propagandist of Soviet music. Soviet music, 12, 72–76.
4. Ashkenazi, L. (1966). From the Black Box. Tunes, ballads, novels. Prague: Artia.
5. Katsis, F. M. (2021). Memories of an opera singer. Moscow: Modest Kolerov.
6. Kristi, G. (1952). Stanislavsky's work at the Opera House. Moscow: The State publishing House "ART", 91-92.
7. Margunova, K. (2022). Nina Dorliak. Human. Singer. Teacher. Moscow: Agraf.
8. Podguzova, O. (2023). Sergey Borisovich Yakovenko Pedagogical School. Creativity and performance: the view of young scientists on the world of art (pp. 40–49). Moscow: Publishing and Trading Corporation Dashkov & Co.
9. Pokrovsky, A.V. (2021). Voice production. St. Petersburg: Strata.
10. Sharova, T. P. (2022). The space of the voice. Pedagogical studies. Moscow: B. i.
11. Yakovenko, S. B. (2017). About friends – composers and conductors. From the storeroom of my memory. Moscow: Composer.
12. Yakovenko, S. (1964). Exciting issues. Soviet music, 10, 73–77.
13. Yakovenko, S. (2007). And it happened and was lucky. Moscow: The Composer Publishing House.
14. Molchanov, K. V. (1968). From the black box [Sound recording]. Kirill Vladimirovich Molchanov; performers: S. Yakovenko, Z. Toboltsev. S. Yakovenko's Home Archive.
15. Molchanov, K. V. (1967). From the black box: Tunes, ballads, novels. For the male voice in the co-production of the piano and the reader. Sl. L. Ashkenazi; per. M. Relliba. S. Yakovenko's Home Archive.

First Peer Review

Peer reviewers' evaluations remain confidential and are not disclosed to the public. Only external reviews, authorized for publication by the article's author(s), are made public. Typically, these final reviews are conducted after the manuscript's revision. Adhering to our double-blind review policy, the reviewer's identity is kept confidential.
The list of publisher reviewers can be found here.

The subject and object of the study presented for publication in "PHILHARMONICA. International Music Journal" article (""From the Black Box" Kirill Molchanov: Sergey Yakovenko's artistic reading of the musical and prose text of the vocal cycle") the author indicated in the title: the object of the study is the musical and poetic text of K. V. Molchanov's vocal cycle "From the Black Box" (1967), and the subject is its artistic reading by S. B. Yakovenko (1937-2020). Accordingly, the empirical material of the study was: the preserved audio recording of the vocal cycle "From the Black Box" performed by S. Yakovenko and Z. Toboltseva [unfortunately, the source is not attributed in the text of the article], publications and memoirs by S. B. Yakovenko, the book by L. Ashkenazi (1921-1986) "The Black Box" (1964), a handwritten keyboard of the vocal cycle "From the Black Box" from the singer's home archive [although there is also an edition of notes: Molchanov K.V. The Black Box : Melodies, ballads, romances for a male voice accompanied by F.-P. and a reader / sl. L. Ashkenazi; per. M. Relliba. M.: Soviet composer, 1970. 60 p.]. The author briefly and consistently reveals the history of the relationship between the singer and the composer, the ratio of the content of L. Ashkenazi's book and K. V. Molchanov's opus, and then draws attention to the intonational originality of the parts of the "Black Box" in the aspect of the most striking moments of their interpretation by S. B. Yakovenko. The author paid special attention to the artistic techniques of interpretation of the musical and poetic text by the performer, including meaningful textual deviations from the original epistolary of the opus. The author managed to substantiate the artistically expressive logic of the performer's direct digressions by a detailed intonation-expressive analysis of the musical content of the composition, which does not go beyond the scope of the composer's intention, but rather emphasizes it more vividly. Separately, the author dwelled on intonation and technical performance difficulties, giving the analysis a didactic value for performing practice. Thus, the subject of the research is disclosed by the author at a high theoretical level, and the presented article deserves publication in a reputable scientific journal. At the same time, the reviewer draws the author's attention to certain omissions, the revision of which will significantly enhance the quality of the planned publication. First of all, you should correctly attribute the audio source: give an exhaustive description of it in the text of the article (since it, along with the manuscript of the keyboard, is the main empirical material of the presented analysis) and in the bibliography. When compiling a bibliography, one should be guided by the GOST standards recommended by the editorial board of the journal (see https://nbpublish.com/e_phil/info_106.html ) and pay attention to the difference between the descriptions of published and unpublished sources, including audio media. The singer's personal archive belongs to unpublished sources, as well as, perhaps, the mentioned preserved audio recording of the performance of the cycle. The reviewer also draws attention to the fact that at least a brief comparison of the manuscript of the clavier and the notes of the published opus will significantly enhance the theoretical and didactic value of the planned publication. The author does not pay special attention to the research methodology, but despite this, the logic of the narrative clearly reveals the relevance of the methodological complex to the tasks being solved, among which there is a desire to combine theoretical, popular science (popularization) and didactic tasks. Not every text, when combining such different tasks, acquires stylistic unity, but the author managed to achieve it, which should be attributed to the strength of the planned publication. The methodological complex of comparative, musical-intonation and semiotic techniques used is quite relevant to the author's idea. The commemorative narrative of the text of the article, built by the author, fully corresponds to the popularization and didactic tasks. The author explains the relevance of the chosen topic by saying that the performance of the "Black Box" by the People's Artist of Russia S. B. Yakovenko belongs to undeservedly forgotten, little-known, but very bright and interesting works in the singer's repertoire, and the arguments presented in the article confirm the indicated thesis. The scientific novelty of the research, expressed in the introduction of unique empirical material into scientific circulation and its analysis by the author, is beyond doubt (only the main sources should be described correctly). The style of the text as a whole is scientific by the author, although attention should be paid to the design details of the use of hyphens and dashes (see https://nbpublish.com/e_phil/info_106.html ). The structure of the article follows the logic of presenting the results of scientific research. The bibliography, as noted above, needs to be improved. The appeal to the opponents is quite correct and sufficient, given the empirical nature of the study. The article is certainly of interest to the readership of "PHILHARMONICA. International Music Journal", but needs a little revision taking into account the comments of the reviewer.

Second Peer Review

Peer reviewers' evaluations remain confidential and are not disclosed to the public. Only external reviews, authorized for publication by the article's author(s), are made public. Typically, these final reviews are conducted after the manuscript's revision. Adhering to our double-blind review policy, the reviewer's identity is kept confidential.
The list of publisher reviewers can be found here.

The subject of the research in the presented article is the vocal cycle "From the Black Box" by Kirill Molchanov through Sergey Yakovenko's artistic reading of a musical and prose text. The descriptive method, the historical method, the method of categorization, and the method of analysis were used as the methodology of the subject area of research in this article. The relevance of the article is beyond doubt, since the vocal cycle "From the Black Box" by Kirill Molchanov is a kind of work in his work, and in the repertoire of Sergei Yakovenko, the performance of this work was very vividly and interestingly presented, but it is little known, therefore it is of research interest at the present time. The scientific novelty of the research lies in the in-depth analysis and detailed description of the vocal cycle "From the Black Box" by Kirill Molchanov through Sergey Yakovenko's artistic reading of the musical and prose text. The article is written in the language of scientific style with the competent use in the text of the study of the presentation of various positions of authoritative scientists to the problem under study and the application of scientific terminology characterizing the subject of research. The structure is designed taking into account the basic requirements for writing scientific articles, in the structure of this study such elements as the introductory part, the main part, the final part and the bibliography can be distinguished. The content of the article reflects its structure. Especially valuable in the content of the study should be noted the author's emphasis on the fact that Sergei Yakovenko, "performing the cycle "From the Black Box", as a singer performed in different guises (sings and reads poetry), creating an original "philharmonic" theater. He was always in search of new forms of chamber performance, so he was attracted to works in which the authors used a synthesis of various artistic means." The bibliography contains 15 sources, including domestic periodicals and non-periodicals, materials from the home archive and sound recordings. The article describes the various positions and points of view of famous scientists on the work of Kirill Molchanov and Sergei Yakovenko, and also contains an appeal to well-known authoritative works and sources devoted to this topic. The presented study contains conclusions concerning the subject area of the study. In particular, it is noted that "the analysis of the vocal cycle "From the Black Box" and the preserved audio recording of the composition performed by S. Yakovenko, Z. Toboltsev showed that the complex figurative world of music and words of the reader, in which heart warmth and pain, death and life, hope and love, surprise and fear are combined expressively accurately, psychologically subtle and theatrically visible. The singer called this composition deeply tragic and performed it as a kind of "vocal requiem" with a sense of compassion. The enormous talent, bright personality, and artistry of the outstanding master of the twentieth century, Sergei Borisovich Yakovenko, made it possible to reveal a huge panorama of time in which death, pain, humiliation, and hatred accumulated in the "black box" of an inhuman time of crimes against everything human that is in life." The materials of this study are intended for a wide range of readers, they can be interesting and used by scientists for scientific purposes, teaching staff in the educational process, workers in the field of art and musical organizations, theatrical figures, musicology experts. As disadvantages of this study, it should be noted that there are minor typos and technical errors in the text of the article. The article did not clearly define and highlight its structural elements with appropriate headings, such as introduction, relevance, research methodology, research results and discussion of results, conclusion, although they are undoubtedly traced in its content, however, they are not separately indicated by headings. When making tables and figures, it is necessary to pay attention to the requirements of the current GOST standards. When writing an article, it might be worth paying attention to foreign sources, refer to them and include them in the bibliographic list. If possible, then do not mention or focus attention in the study on texts with the names "Cigarette" and "Marijuana". These shortcomings do not reduce the high scientific significance of the study itself, but rather relate to the design of the text of the article. It is recommended to publish the article.