As a composer, Turovsky concentrated on the instrumental idiom of the
Baroque lute and the
torban, as well as
viola da gamba and
carillon. He composed over 1100 instrumental and vocal works influenced by his Ukrainian heritage and the baroque. Many of these were premiered by
Luca Pianca at several international festivals (
Salamanca, Lisbon,
Schwetzingen,
Vilnius,
Vicenza,
Urbino,
Metz and Paris),
Roland Ferrandi in
Corte,
Simon Paulus at
Wolfenbüttel and Jindřich Macek in
Přibyslav, Kraty,
Prague and
Hvar. He also collaborated with
Paulo Galvão and
Hans Kockelmans in a series of experimental works which they jointly composed. His works have been performed/recorded by
Robert Barto, Roman Turovsky was a recipient of the 2008
NYSCA grant for the purpose of study of
kobzar art with
Julian Kytasty. Roman Turovsky-Savchuk is a founding member of
Vox Saeculorum and The
Delian Society, two international groups devoted to the preservation and perpetuation of
tonal music. He was described as composer-extraordinaire and in 2013 to the
Marko Robert Stech's
Georgy Narbut episode in the KontaktTV Toronto (
OMNI TV (Canada)) series "Eyes on Culture" No.55.
Discography • Stuart Walsh - "Impiae Stellae" (Polyhymnion CD005, USA 2025) • Alberto Crugnola - "Am I Dreaming" - (Novantica Records, Italy 2024) • Scott Saari - "Fantasma Pacis" (Polyhymnion CD004, USA 2023) • Volodymyr Voyt - "Pulchritudo In Tempore Belli" (Polyhymnion CD003, USA 2023) •
Massimo Marchese - "Dialogues with Time" (daVinci Edition C00028, Japan 2017) •
Christopher Wilke - "De Temporum Fine Postludia II" (Polyhymnion CD002, USA 2019) •
Christopher Wilke - "De Temporum Fine Postludia" (Polyhymnion CD001, USA 2016) • Daniel Shoskes - "Lautenschmaus" CD (USA, 2011) • Angelo Barricelli - "From Borderlands" (Lira Classica, Italy, 2008) • Thomas Schall - "Die Laute im Barock" LCCD 0202 (The Lute Corner, Switzerland, 2002)
Allonyms and pseudonyms Since 1996 Turovsky has signed his musical works as
Sautscheck, a German
transliteration of the second part of his surname as an
allonym. Turovsky used a variety of constructions, such as Johann Joachim and Konradin Aemilius, for first names attached to Sautscheck. He represented the works as newly discovered manuscripts by supposed 17th-, 18th- and 19th-century composers from several generations of the same family. Turovsky published
Mikrokosmos, a collection of nearly 800
Renaissance-style pieces based on Ukrainian folk melodies under the pseudonyms "Ioannes Leopolita" and "Jacobus Olevsiensis". His works for lute achieved wide circulation under the
allonym of Sautscheck and the pseudonyms "Ioannes Leopolita" and "Jacobus Olevsiensis". Musicologist
Douglas Alton Smith perceived these works as malicious
hoaxes and forgeries because of their ostensibly
baroque or earlier styles. The controversy in 2000 over what some considered an outright hoax led to coinage of a new German word,
Sautscheckerei, which denoted a musical or literary hoax. He is currently (as of 2023) published by the Lundgren Edition in Sweden under his real name. ==Literary activities==