Kremer dedicates new album to those who would not be silenced

The latest album by Latvia-born violinist Gidon Kremer and his Kremerata Baltica Chamber Orchestra is due out Sept. 14, recording label Nonesuch Records has announced.

Titled De Profundis, the compact disc is to include 12 tracks selected from Kremer’s performing repertoire that “all hold very special meaning to him, and are connected to each other on a deep, intuitive level,” the U.S.-based recording label announced in a press release.

Kremerata Baltica, founded in 1996, is made up of young musicians from Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. The orchestra has performed around the world.

De Profundis will feature works by Jean Sibelius, Estonian composer Arvo Pärt, Lithuanian composer Raminta Šerkšnytė, Robert Schumann, Michael Nyman, Franz Schubert, Stevan Kovacs Tickmayer, Dmitri Shostakovich, Lera Auerbach, Astor Piazzolla, Latvian composer Georgs Pelēcis and Alfred Schnittke.

“The artists featured on this record affirm a deep-rooted personal expression that can resonate within anyone,” Kremer said in the press release. “Their spiritual missive can sustain humans by appealing to their profoundest emotions, by letting them open up, become more conscious, rather than ‘forget themselves.’ Each of the 12 pieces selected for this album sends its own individual message to the listener, one that my colleagues from Kremerata Baltica and I have tried to illuminate.”

Kremer, who is the artistic director for Kremerata Baltica, has dedicated the recording to all those who refuse to be silenced, according to Nonesuch, and especially to Mikhail Khodorkovsky—the Russian businessman and philanthropist convicted of fraud and sentenced to a labor camp in Siberia in a case that critics have said is an attempt by Russian leader Vladimir Putin to silence opponents. The Estonian composer Pärt dedicated his “Symphony no. 4” to Khodorkovsky.

The tracks on the album are to include:

  1. Scene with Cranes (Jean Sibelius)
  2. Passacaglia (Arvo Pärt)
  3. De Profundis (Raminta Šerkšnytė)
  4. Fugue No. 6, from Six Fugues on the Name B.A.C.H., Op. 60 (Robert Schumann)
  5. Trysting Fields (Michael Nyman)
  6. Minuet No. 3 and Trios in D Minor, D. 89 (Franz Schubert)
  7. Lasset Uns den Nicht Zerteilen (Stevan Kovacs Tickmayer / J. S. Bach)
  8. Adagio, from Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District (Dmitri Shostakovich)
  9. Sogno di Stabat Mater bzw. Dialogues on Stabat Mater (alter Titel) (Lera Auerbach)
  10. Melodía en La menor (Canto de Octubre) (Astor Piazzolla)
  11. Flowering Jasmine (Georgs Pelēcis)
  12. Fragment (from an unfinished cantata) (Alfred Schnittke)

For further information on Kremerata Baltica, visit www.kremerata-baltica.com.

De Produndis

De Profundis, the latest album from Gidon Kremer and his Kremerata Baltica, is due out Sept. 14.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.

Public policy center opens website for discussion between voters, candidates

A month before the Oct. 2 Saeima election, a new independent website designed to bring Latvia’s voters and parliamentary candidates together to discuss issues has been opened by the Rīga-based public policy center Providus.

Called gudrasgalvas.lv, the site allows candidates for the 10th Saeima to post profiles and issues statements, while voters can pose questions to the candidates, Providus announced in a press release.

“We want to leave to the past those times when the main election communication was one-way—the candidate communicates through a commercial, the voter watches without a word,” Vita Tērauda, director of Providus, said in the press release. “The thickness of a party’s wallet should not determine the possibility and frequency of communication.”

More than 260 candidate profiles have already been posted to the website, according to the press release. More than 1,200 candidates from 13 parties are running for election.

To encourage participation, Providus is offering diplomas to the most active users of the website.

The Providus-run gudrasgalvas.lv is not the only independent website recently created to foster discussion before the election. Other sites include:

  • desmitnieks.lv, sponsored by the Latvian Aid Committee of Sweden (Zviedrijas Latviešu palīdzības komiteja) and meant for Latvian citizens abroad. The site—and an analagous print version, Desmitnieks, that appears as a supplement to the exile newspaper Brīvā Latvija—poses one question per week to the political parties and provides an expert’s analysis of the responses. The site opened Aug. 16.
  • parunpret.lv, a project of the “Domā, par ko balso!” movement and backed by the Soros Foundation-Latvia, mostly offers links to analytical articles about politics in Latvia. The site includes a study by the Free Trade Union Confederation of Latvia (Latvijas Brīvo arodbiedrību savienība) of whether parties serving in the current Saeima kept their campaign promises.
  • ejambalsot.lv, an effort to foster civic involvement in the political process, began in February. Backed by the World Federation of Free Latvians (Pasaules brīvo latviešu apvienība), the Election Reform Society (Vēlēšanu reformas biedrība) and a number of other organizations of Latvians abroad, the website offers a series of challenges to voters, politicians, the media and other organizations on how to better the political process.
  • kandidatiuzdelnas.lv, created by the Rīga-based anti-corruption watchdog organization Delna, offers a database to examine the reputations of parliamentary candidates. The site also publishes analytical articles about the political process in Latvia.
  • Pirmā reize, a page on the social network draugiem.lv, aims to help young voters evaluate Latvian politicians. The page is backed by the family planning and sexual health association Papardes zieds, the Latvian National Coalition for Tobacco and Alcohol Control (Tabakas un alkohola kontroles Latvijas nacionālā koalīcija) and various youth organizations. The page includes a video gallery of various politicians’ comments on education, health and politics.
Gudras galvas

The public policy center Providus has opened a website devoted to fostering communication between Latvian voters and candidates for the 10th Saeima.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.

Fitch Ratings raises outlook for Latvia

Calling improvements in Latvia’s economy encouraging, the London-based Fitch Ratings has revised its outlook for the country’s creditworthiness to stable from negative.

The ratings service also forecast that Latvia’s medium-term economic recovery will be led by exports, but noted that the country’s gross domestic product will remain “below-trend” until 2012.

Latvian Finance Minister Einars Repše expressed pleasure at the upgrade.

“This rating is very important for our foreign investors and for the international community, because it is a meaningful signal that affirms what Latvia has done to overcome the economic crisis,” Repše said in a press release.

Last year, rating services Fitch, Moody’s Investors Service and Standard & Poor’s all lowered their evaluations of Latvia’s creditworthiness. The country has been among the hardest hit in Europe in the wake of the global economic crisis. High unemployment spurred continued emigration, and the government was forced to drastically slash the national budget and raise taxes to avoid going bankrupt.

“Although Latvia’s fiscal deficit remains high, consolidation measures enacted to date have been substantial,” Douglas Renwick, associate director in Fitch’s sovereign group, said in a press release. “Fitch expects further budget tightening over the coming year, even if a change of government follows October’s elections.”

Latvian voters go to the polls Oct. 2 to elect a new parliament, which will approve a new government. Current Prime Minister Valdis Dombrovskis and his centrist Vienotība (Unity) coalition face strong competition in the election from the center-left and Russian-oriented Saskaņas Centrs (Harmony Centre) and the conservative Par Labu Latviju! (For a Good Latvia!). In all, 13 parties are vying for seats in the parliament.

Fitch noted that “further budget tightening measures will be required by the next government if public debt sustainability is to be restored.” While acknowledging that the Dombrovskis government might be forced out, the ratings service added that “there is a high degree of consensus across the Latvian establishment regarding the need for consolidation to fulfill the long-standing aim of adopting the euro.”

In March, Moody’s revised its rating of Latvia’s creditworthiness to Baa3 stable, up from Baa3 negative. The Baa3 rating overall is the lowest investment grade rating, just above “junk” status. Standard & Poor’s in February raised its rating of Latvia to BB stable from BB negative. A BB rating is still below investment grade in Standard & Poor’s evaluation system.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.