Childhood Veresai was born in 1803 in the village of Kaliuzhentsi,
Pryluky county,
Poltava Governorate into a family of musicians. He was the only child of a
serf family. His father, Mykyta Veresai, was a
congenitally blind violinist. At age 4, Veresai fell ill and
lost his sight. From an early age, Veresai was interested in music and the
bandura. He was quoted later in life: "...when a
kobzar came to my father's house, I would stand near him, and I do not know who was more excited. The kobzar would suggest: 'You Mykyto give this boy to learn, maybe he becomes a kobzar.'" At age 15, Veresai's father apprenticed him to a kobzar in the village of
Berezivka, where Veresai spent only one week. After spending four years at home, Veresai again attempted to undertake studies under a kobzar; he and a neighbor traveled to the market in
Romen, where many kobzars would gather. There, Veresai met the kobzar
Yefym Andriyshevsky and became formally apprenticed to him. For several months, the apprenticeship was successful with Veresai learning much from his mentor. After Andriyshevsky's death, Veresai was apprenticed to
Semen Koshoviy from the nearby village of Holinka. Veresai spent 9 months apprenticed to Koshoviy, who he found to be strict and exploitative. Veresai thus spent a total of nine months in apprenticeship instead of the traditional three years. It was covered by the London magazine
Atheneum, which published both a summary of the conference as well as an article by the folklorist and writer
William Ralston Shedden-Ralston, which compared Veresai to the
rhapsodes of ancient Greece. French conference delegate Alfred Rambaud also wrote of Veresai's performance in an article titled "Ukraine and its historic songs": One wonderful summer evening we gathered in the University garden to listen to the kobzar; he was seated on a stool, and the listeners, whose numbers continued to grow, sat down around him. One lamp, hiding in the greenery, lit up the face of the kobzar, whose voice sounded clearly like the song of a nightingale ... When Ostap performed one of his humorous songs, it is worth while looking at the way he would dance to the accompaniment of the music, while playing difficult notes on the
bandura. The same can be said about the dancing motive, to which he would beat time with his foot; at this time one could take him as a young kozak, watching how he would make knee bends as if doing kozak dances ... His life is different from those Homeric tales. The villager Ostap Veresai is a direct descendant of the ancient Slavonic singers, he is the legal inheritor of the
Boyan and other nightingales of the past... In February 1875, Veresai was invited by the ethnographic sector of the Russian Geographical Society to
Saint Petersburg. There, he performed at meetings of the ethnographic sector and the painters' guild; at a breakfast organized in memory of
Taras Shevchenko; and at the
Winter Palace before Princes
Sergey and
Pavel Alexandrov. Veresai was received by full halls and positive reviews by Saint Petersburg press outlets. The newspaper
Novosti wrote: The singer—a seventy-year-old man, is able to capture the listeners sympathy, and his singing, which is marked by deep artistry and much feeling leaves a deep impression with the listeners. According to the experts, Veresai as a singer, was born with a talent and through his dumas would bring to life ancient Ukraine, with numerous reminiscences of the past Veresai's popular success in Saint Petersburg allowed him to pay for the construction of a larger house for his family of 15 in
Sokyryntsi. Like
Hnat Honcharenko, Veresai was persecuted in Russia as a propagator of Ukrainian interest and historical memory.
Later life and death In the autumn of 1881 and spring of 1882, Veresai traveled to
Kiev, where the folklorist
K. Ukhach-Oxorovych made a complete recording of his repertoire; in comparison with that made by
Pavlo Chubinsky in 1873, it showed that the 70-year-old
kobzar was able to expand his repertoire to include three additional
dumy. At the beginning of the 1880s, Veresai had in his repertoire nine
dumy: • Storm on the Black Sea • The recruitment of the Kozak • The Escape of the three brothers from Oziv • The poor widow and her three sons • The Hawk and the Hawklette • Fedir the one without Kin • The Captive's lament, son of a widow • Ivan Konovchenko Veresai died in April 1890 at the age of 87 in
Sokyryntsi. == Cultural impact ==