New CD to commemorate composer Jānis Cimze

Latvian composer Jānis Cimze, considered to be the father of Latvian choir music and culture, known for his arrangements of Latvian folk songs such as “Rīga dimd”, “Krauklīt’s sēž ozolā”, and “Teici, teici valodiņa”, staples of Latvian Song Festivals for more than 100 years, celebrates his 200th birthday in 2014.

To commemorate this significant anniversary, the Valka City Council (Cimze worked in Valka from 1849 to his death in 1881) commissioned the mixed choir Sõla, of the Latvian Academy of Culture, to record a CD of his folk song arrangements, simply entitled Jānim Cimzem – 200.

Sõla, conducted by Kaspars Ādamsons, recorded 17 of Cimze’s folk song arrangements, as well as three new works dedicated to Jānis Cimze by Latvian composers Selga Mence, Mārtiņš Brauns, and Raimonds Pauls (the lyrics for all three works are by renowned Latvian poet Jānis Peters). The CD includes both arrangements for mixed choir, as well as for men’s choir.

The CD booklet includes biographical information about Cimze in both Latvian and English.

Details

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Jānis CImze 200

2014

Track listing:

  1. Krauklīt’s sēž ozolā (mixed choir)
  2. Pūt, vējiņi, dzen laiviņu! (mixed choir)
  3. Rīga dimd (men’s choir)
  4. Visi gani mājās dzina (mixed choir)
  5. Teici, teici valodiņa (mixed choir)
  6. Zirgi zviedza, velli brauca (mixed choir)
  7. Saulīt vēlu vakarā (men’s choir)
  8. Tumša, tumša tā eglīte (mixed choir)
  9. Jānīti, mans dēls (men’s choir)
  10. Kur tu iesi, jauns puisīti? (mixed choir)
  11. Tek saulīte tecēdama (mixed choir)
  12. Nu ardievu, Vidzemīte (men’s choir)
  13. Bāleliņa līgaviņa (mixed choir)

Midsummer songs from the Vidzeme region arranged by Jānis Cimze (mixed choir)

  1. Nītaurieši (arī Krustpilī)
  2. Ērglēnieši
  3. Cēsnieki
  4. Jāņa mate sieru sēja

New works dedicated to Cimze, lyrics by Jānis Peters

  1. Pusnaktī kad kalējs kaļ – Selga Mence
  2. Krauklis – Mārtiņš Brauns
  3. Stiprā pils – Raimonds Pauls

For further information, please visit the Valka region website at valka.lv and the choir Sõla’s website at www.sola.lv

Egils Kaljo is an American-born Latvian from the New York area . Kaljo began listening to Latvian music as soon as he was able to put a record on a record player, and still has old Bellacord 78 rpm records lying around somewhere.

Averse of the Ainaži Nautical School Euro coin.

First Latvian Euro collector’s coin released

The Bank of Latvia has released the first Euro denominated Latvian collector’s coin, in honor of the 150th anniversary of the Ainaži Nautical School.

According to the Bank of Latvia website, the Ainaži Nautical School was inspired by Krišjānis Valdemārs and poet Auseklis, who wrote “Latvji, braucat jūriņā ..” (Go to sea, Latvians…). The first Latvian and Estonian nautical school was founded on November 23, 1864. The school was also involved in shipbuilding, as by the end of the 19th century, 50 sailing ships had been built in Ainaži.

The proof quality silver coin has a mintage of 5000, and has a face value of 5 Euro. The coin’s artist is Ivars Drulle.

In 2014, the Bank of Latvia also plans on releasing the following collector’s coins with the following themes:

-“The White Book” by Latvian writer Jānis Jaunsudrabiņš

-The 300th anniversary of Gothard Friedrich Stenders (Old Stenders)

-The Baroque style and art in Courland (Kurzeme)

-The 25th anniversary of the Baltic Way

-Innovative artistic, technological or thematic concepts

For further information, please visit the Bank of Latvia’s website at http://www.bank.lv

Egils Kaljo is an American-born Latvian from the New York area . Kaljo began listening to Latvian music as soon as he was able to put a record on a record player, and still has old Bellacord 78 rpm records lying around somewhere.

Latvian bard Sīmanis’ CD of sacred songs released

The Latvian bard Haralds Sīmanis, long known for his unique, distinctive voice and performance style, has always been an artist who forges his own path, regardless of what musical trends may be popular at the time.

For more than 30 years now, starting with what is likely his best known song – “Ezers” – released in the early 1980s, Sīmanis has been composing and performing, and has developed into a singular Latvian artist. In fact, on the cover of Sīmanis’ latest album Par zāli, par sāli un Tevi, Sīmanis is described as a ‘putns ar paradīzes balsi, dziesminieks un Cēsu čigāns’ (a bird with the voice of Paradise, a songwriter and a Gypsy from Cēsis’.

Perhaps a drawback of being so particularly eclectic is that his music may not reach a very broad audience – though his career spans decades, there are very few CDs available with his music. That is why any Sīmanis’ CD release is something to be heralded, such as 2013’s Par zāli, par sāli un Tevi, a record where Sīmanis, continuing his unpredictable ways, performs songs of a sacred nature.

Though Sīmanis is known mainly as a singer and guitarist, on this album he replaces the guitar for the organ of the Rīga Cathedral.

Sīmanis is also joined on this album by a number of well-known Latvian singers, including Ieva Akurātere and Zane Šmite. In fact, the first song, ‘67 Psalms. Dziesma dziedātāju vadonim ar cītarām’, based on the Biblical 67th Psalm, features Sīmanis only playing the organ, while vocals are handled by Akurātere (who sings over a church choir in the background). The combination of the singing of the church choir, which repeats the same verse over the course of the song, with Akurātere’s soaring vocals, provides for an engrossing, almost polyphonous experience.

Sīmanis returns on vocals on ‘Ienāciet manā dārzā’ (lyrics for this song, as well as for almost all the tracks on the CD, are by long-time lyrical collaborator Arvīds Ulme), and Sīmanis’ expressive, intense voice sounds particularly resplendent in the confines of the Rīga Cathedral, and is enhanced by the solemn organ sound.

Sīmanis’ duet with folklore singer Zane Šmite on ‘Te esmu es’ is one of the highlights of the album, as Sīmanis’ vocals alternate with Šmite’s rich alto voice. While listening, one gets the sense that Šmite’s calmer, soothing vocals are meant to provide solace in response to Sīmanis’ somewhat agitated singing.

The album concludes much as it began, with the church choir returning, and Akurātere providing the lead vocals, on the song, simply entitled ‘Lūgšana’ (Prayer), lyrics by Māra Zviedre, which provides a fitting closing to this spiritual recording.

A drawback of the release is the very limited packaging, no lyrics or photographs. However, the inside cover does have some words from Gundars Ceipe about the Vidzemes Brāļu draudze (otherwise known as the ‘hernhūtieši’, in German “Herrnhuter Brüdergemeine” and in English “Moravian Church”).

Par zāli, par sāli un Tevi, Sīmanis’ collection of modern-day hymns, continues Sīmanis’ idiosyncratic ways, at once unexpected, but, at the same time, a logical extension of his songwriting and performing talents. The presence of the organ, especially, gives Sīmanis’ songs a weightier and more ethereal feel, with the ambience of the Rīga Cathedral adding an additional rarefied dimension to the performances. Sīmanis’ spiritual journey, presented over the course of Par zāli, par sāli un Tevi, provides for an enthralling, as well as uplifting, listening experience.

For more information, please visit Haralds Sīmanis’ Facebook page at https://lv-lv.facebook.com/pages/Haralds-S%C4%ABmanis/102735743110597

Details

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Par zāli, par sāli un Tevi

Haralds Sīmanis
Upe tuviem un tāliem,  2013
UPETT CD076

Track listing:

  1. 67 Psalms. Dziesma dziedātāju vadonim ar cītarām
  2. Ienāciet manā dārzā
  3. Par zāli, par sāli un Tevi
  4. Dziesminieks
  5. Mīlestībai
  6. Te esmu es
  7. Vārds
  8. Vēl tevi pavadu
  9. Zvani pār Raunu
  10. Lūgšāna

Egils Kaljo is an American-born Latvian from the New York area . Kaljo began listening to Latvian music as soon as he was able to put a record on a record player, and still has old Bellacord 78 rpm records lying around somewhere.