Chamber orchestra Sinfonietta Rīga releases Vivaldi CD

Italian composer Antonio Vivaldi’s Le Quattro Stagioni (or The Four Seasons) is one of the most famous and popular works of the Baroque era, if not of all classical music. The four concertos, each signifying a season of the year, have now been recorded by the chamber orchestra Sinfonietta Rīga and have been released on the album Gadalaiki (Latvijas Koncerti, LK 026, 2016).

In addition to the Seasons concertos, the album also includes three of Vivaldi’s sonatas for violin, cello and harpsichord – the Sonatas in A major (RV 31), C major (RV 1) and C minor (RV 6). The works are performed by Vineta Sareika (violin), Guna Šnē (cello) and Estonian Reinuts Teps (harpsichord).

The CD booklet includes notes on Vivaldi – not just biographical information about the Venetian, but also information about his music’s place in history and how his music had been largely forgotten for years and was rediscovered by scholars in the 20th century. The notes also include commentaries on the works themselves, and also include Vivaldi’s original poetic notes on each of the movements.

Sinfonietta Rīga, led by conductor and artistic director Normunds Šnē, will be participating in many festivals in the summer of 2016, including the Pärnu Music Festival, the Cēsis Art Festival, and the Salacgrīva International Classical Music Festival.

For further information, please visit the Sinfonietta Rīga website and the Latvian Concert Agency website.

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.

Third generation “latvianness” in Australia — what lies beneath?

Latvians Online interviewed Australian-Latvian living in Sydney – Linda Ozers – who is currently undertaking PhD studies at University of Technology Sydney. The topic of Linda’s thesis: Ethnic identity and heritage language in the third generation: the Australian Latvian experience.

Latvians Online: Please tell me a bit about yourself and  your area of study.

Linda: After spending many years working in various roles in secondary education I returned to university to do further study and to work helping students with academic writing. During my Master in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages course, I discovered that most immigrant languages are lost by the third generation. This caught my interest and I started to ponder the fact that there are third generation Latvian speakers here in Australia. I started to wonder what motivates them, how do they identify and how do they use Latvian?

You’ve been an active member of the Sydney Latvian community for many years. Has this contributed to the reason for wanting to tap into the “psyche” of the younger generation in the community?

Growing up as a second generation Australian Latvian there were periods when I questioned my own identity and when I spoke no Latvian. At the time the Latvian community was much bigger and more active. My Latvian upbringing was fairly typical in that I went to Saturday school and participated in folk dancing. I was also in the Latvian girl guides, played kokle and volleyball, belonged to the Latvian Youth Association of Australia, organised meetings, conferences, events etc. From a young age my main interest has always been acting in the Sydney Latvian Theatre ensemble and this has given me many opportunities to use Latvian. Young Australian Latvians today are part of a generation with interests and opportunities that are perhaps different from previous generations. I am interested in how they see their “latvianness” – and what role their identity and Latvian language has in their everyday lives.

The topic for your PhD that was presented to youth at the Summer High School was: Ethnic identity and heritage language in the third generation: the Australian Latvian experience. You conducted individual and focus group interviews. How many youth members of the community have you interviewed so far? Please share some of your preliminary findings.

The study has 2 parts – focus groups and interviews. Focus groups were held at the Summer High School to initially help identify what are the important issues for this adolescent age group. I’m just starting the interviews. They will be used to probe deeper – especially with the older youth (20+) group. I am seeking to gather views from as wide a range of young people as possible – those who do and those who don’t speak Latvian, participate in the community and so on.

52 young people participated in 8 focus groups at the Summer High School. The students were very articulate and willing to share some deep, and at times humorous, observations. As the research is still underway, I can’t reveal too much of what I am finding, as it may influence other participants. As a general observation I can say that 2 very powerful messages that came from these focus groups were the importance of friendships and the role of various community activities in the formation and maintenance of their “latvianness”.

Did you have an initial hypothesis that you wanted to test? Has is been confirmed or refuted?

I deliberately approached this research with no hypothesis. There is little research around topics of adolescent and young adult ethnic identity and heritage language use in the third generation. My study is very much exploratory and follows what is known as a “grounded theory” approach. Data is gathered and analysed revealing theories and findings.

Have your questions proved a challenge to answer for your interviewees? 

The one question that proved to be somewhat challenging for the focus group participants involved their views on what would happen in the fourth generation. They obviously hadn’t considered this scenario, but after some thought many answered that they would try to pass on as much of their heritage and language as they could.

Have your preliminary findings conformed to what happens with other cultures and languages in a similar situation?

There are many variables that influence what happens not just within different ethnic groups, but also with individuals. One important aspect is to do with how a particular ethnic group values their language and culture. There was some research done in the late 1970s in Australia, across a number of ethnic groups, indicating that for Latvians their language was very important – more so than for many other groups. There is some evidence that having refugee origins results in quite different migration, adaptation and assimilation motivations and experiences than for other migrants. For the first generation it was important to maintain and pass on the language and cultural traditions from Latvia’s independence period between the two World Wars. The question is whether this motivation continues into the second and third generation.

I am still seeking young people to interview. If you are interested and have at least one Latvian grandparent who came to Australia post World War 2 and at least one Latvian parent who was born in Australia, please contact me to see if we can arrange an interview Linda.Ozers@student.uts.edu.au. Paldies!

 

Daina Gross is editor of Latvians Online. An Australian-Latvian she is also a migration researcher at the University of Latvia, PhD from the University of Sussex, formerly a member of the board of the World Federation of Free Latvians, author and translator/ editor/ proofreader from Latvian into English of an eclectic mix of publications of different genres.

Tribute to Vasks’ 70th birthday with release of 3 of his symphonic works

Latvian composer Pēteris Vasks, who celebrated his 70th birthday in 2016, has long been a significant voice in Latvian classical music, so much so that his music, be it choir songs, chamber music, or large scale orchestral works, resonates with listeners all over the world. From small miniatures to expansive symphonic tapestries, his music is imbued with emotions, at times a great sadness but also with hope.

In 2015, the German music label Wergo released a collection of Vasks’ symphonic works, including three of his most significant and notable pieces – Sala, Musica Appassionata and Credo, performed by the Liepāja Symphony Orchestra and conducted by Atvars Lakstīgala. These three works, in the hands of the musicians of Liepāja, make for a memorable journey in the musical journey through Vasks’ compositional world.

Vasks often has themes of nature and conservation in his works, and elements can be found in the work Sala (Island), a symphonic elegy for orchestra composed in 2006. The musical portrait of the island begins as a lonely journey, with calm, plaintive melodies expressed throughout various wind instruments, such as the English horn, then later taken over by flute and clarinet. The island itself is a place of calm reflection, but is also lonely and abandoned, and one gets the sense that the island is also a place of banishment. Vasks’ music, in the hands of the Liepāja Symphony Orchestra, paints a vivid and dynamic picture, transporting the listener to this imaginary place, full of beauty and solitude.

Musica appassionata per orchestra d’archi , composed in 2002, perhaps slightly unusually for Vasks, opens powerfully and dramatically, with a swell of strings. In many of Vasks’ compositions there often is a slow and gradual buildup of tension, and this work displays such an approach, a sense of growing unease as the melody begins its growing chromatic climb. The louder passages are balanced by quieter moments, but though the volume is lower the sense of anxiety remains palpable, particularly in the plucked strings. The orchestra maintains this dramatic intensity throughout the work, with the only real release at the very end, when a calmer melody prevails, and slowly fades out, punctuated by the rhythmic heartbeat of the double basses, giving the work a sense of mortality.

The spiritual and sacred are frequently the foundations of many of Vasks’ works, and this is particularly true in the final work on the album – Credo per orchestra, composed in 2009. Though instrumental, the work expresses a prayer-like affirmation of belief, particularly in the undulating strings throughout. Like many of Vasks’ works, it balances turbulence and harmony, and has a calm meditative nature. The entrance of the brass instruments gives the work a majestic flair, and then the work becomes meditative, with slow descending melodies in the wind instruments. As the orchestra fades out at the end, the sound of chimes brings the work to a peaceful and solemn conclusion.

According to the booklet notes (in both English and German), the multiple award winning Liepāja Symphony Orchestra is the oldest active orchestra in the Baltic States. The LSO often performs internationally, in many European countries as well as further afield in countries like Malaysia and India. Atvars Lakstīgala has been conductor since 2010, and has also conducted symphony orchestras, including the Lithuanian National Symphony Orchestra and the Rome Symphony Orchestra. The orchestra and conductor have also been actively recording, and have released many praised recordings, including Kurland Sounds (a collection of symphonic works by composers of the Kurzeme area) and Sound of Freedom (works by Imants Kalniņš).

The Wergo label also has a long history of working with Latvian musicians and presenting the best of Latvian compositions, particularly the music of Pēteris Vasks – including Viatore (symphonic works) and Gadalaiki (piano works performed by Vestards Šimkus). This CD is another memorable and significant entry in their catalogue.

Presenting three of Pēteris Vasks’ powerful symphonic works, this collection is a towering achievement, both by the composer and the Liepāja Symphony Orchestra and conductor Atvars Lakstīgala. It is a fitting tribute to the composer for his 70th birthday.

For further information, please visit the Liepāja Symphony Orchestra website and the Wergo website.

 

Sala, Musica Appassionata, Credo

Liepāja Symphony Orchestra, conductor Atvars Lakstīgala
Wergo, WER 7323 2, 2015

Track listing:

  1. Sala – symphonic elegy for orchestra
  2. Musica Appassionata per orchestra d’archi
  3. Credo per orchestra

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.