Folk club in Vecrīga offers taste of Latvian music, food traditions

It may be surprising that in the “land that sings” there are very few places where a visitor can actually hear traditional Latvian music unless they attend a particular scheduled concert. However, a young foreign-born Latvian and some enterprising locals recently got together to fill the gap by opening a Latvian folk club in downtown Rīga.

Folkklubs Ala, a spacious cavern-like venue at 11 Audēju iela in Vecrīga, is a joint venture between 22-year-old Australia-born Latvian Krišjānis Putniņš and locals Didzis Felsbergs and Baiba Apine.

Putniņš, who had previously worked in hostel management and in catering, was introduced to Felsbergs, who provided the start-up capital, by a mutual friend. Putniņš had prepared the banquet at the friend’s wedding and the latter was so impressed that, knowing that Felsbergs had the idea for the folk club, recommended Putniņš’ catering skills.

Through advertising on a Latvian social networking site Felsbergs found a number of people interested in working on the concept. After a number of planning meetings, it crystallized into a group of three people with Apine joining them. Apine also brought in her experience in the tourism industry.

All three had a keen interest and contacts in Latvian folklore.

Quality service and low pricing for food and drinks—as well as having live music as often as possible—is their secret to bringing in the patrons when the purse strings are tight. The formula should be attractive not only to locals, but to tourists and foreign-born Latvians as well.

Putniņš, who was born and raised in Adelaide and moved to Latvia 10 months ago, said that a lot has been achieved by word-of-mouth recommendations. The spacious venue, which has a large basement, has been used for parties as well and people are pleasantly surprised that there is no charge for having them there. Catering can also be arranged and a bar service is available. 

As well as traditional Latvian music, Latvian dishes using local produce and presented innovatively are on offer and at very reasonable prices (around 1 to 4 lats). The food can be washed down with an assortment of local brews, with Brengulis beer available at 1.20 lats per half litre. Local Latvian wines and teas made from various fruits and berries can also be tried and there is also a range of spirits available.

Traditional Latvian music is played live by local groups on Friday and Saturday nights. Friday is jam session night, when those with musical talent and those who want to try out their hand can join in with the local folk band.

There is also a folk dancing night and an evening for karaoke, with the latter taking place downstairs to spare the sensitive ears of other patrons. Programmes for tourist groups showcasing Latvian culture, music and cuisine are also planned for the future.

Folkklubs Ala is open from 11:30 a.m to 1 a.m. during the week and from 11:30 a.m. till the last patrons call it quits on weekends. The club is planned as a place to drop in during the day, with various board games available for customers.

The club’s Web site is www.folkklubs.lv.

Folkklubs Ala

Patrons take to the dance floor in the cavernous Folkklubs Ala. (Photo by Uldis Brūns)

Folkklubs Ala exterior

Folkklubs Ala is found at Audēju iela 11 in Rīga’s Old Town district. (Photo by Andris Straumanis)

BrainStorm, Instrumenti invited to Austin’s SXSW festival

Two music groups from Latvia—one famous, the other not quite yet—have been invited to participate in this year’s South by Southwest (SXSW) festival in Austin, Texas.

Both BrainStorm (Prāta Vētra) and the little-known Rīga-based duo Instrumenti are expected at the festival, which runs from March 12-21, according to the festival’s Web site.

BrainStorm, of course, is well known in Latvia and has made inroads into the wider European market, as well as into Russia. Formed in 1989 by a group of high school friends from Jelgava, the band has become one of Latvia’s best-known musical symbols. Its most recent album in Latvian is 2008’s Tur kaut kam ir jābūt, while last year the band released the record’s English- and Russian-language version, ШАГ.

Instrumenti, meanwhile, is less known and a bit mysterious. While it claims to be a duo, the act apparently is several people affiliated with the six-member a capella ensemble Cosmos. One report places Cosmos members Reinis Sējāns and Jānis Šipkēvics under the panda masks Instrumenti wears in publicity photos. Listening to some of Instrumenti’s songs, such as “Apēst Tevi,” the vocals sound very familiar.

As some reports have noted, an interesting link exists between BrainStorm and Instrumenti. BrainStorm’s members once upon a time made a splash hidden behind Ronald Reagan masks and performing as the alter-ego band Reigani, even releasing an album (Nospied sarkano podziņu in 2000). Instrumenti, meanwhile, appears to be the hidden-behind-masks alter-ego of some members of Cosmos.

This would be the third time Latvian artists have appeared in SXSW. Singer Goran Gora (Jānis Holšteins) did it in 2006, while Jauns Mēness (New Moon) took the stage in 1992. For a look at Goran Gora’s bittersweet experiences in Austin, see the Baltic Times.

For more on BrainStorm, see the band’s official Web site, brainstorm.lv. For some background on and samples of music by Instrumenti, see the act’s page on the social network draugiem.lv.

SXSW

The South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas, highlights up-and-coming artists in music, film and interactive media.

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

‘Latviešu tautas piedzīvojumi’ now in podcast format

The popular story of the Latvian people’s struggle for freedom, Latviešu tautas piedzīvojumi by historian Uldis Ģērmanis, has seen several editions since first published 40 years ago. Now it is available as an audio podcast, thanks to the Daugavas Vanagi veterans group in Canada.

Ģērmanis, who died in 1997, was born in Latvia during World War I. He completed his education in exile, earning a doctorate in history in 1974 from Stockholm University. For more about Ģērmanis and his role in countering Soviet propaganda about Latvia, see the article Cīnītājs pret latviešu politisko vientiesību.

The podcast, recorded by Ivars Auziņš, is long—more than 10 hours, or just about the time it takes to drive from, say, Minneapolis to the Latvian center Gaŗezers near Three Rivers, Mich.

The Daugavas Vanagi group offers a few other gems on its publications page, including a 1988 lecture by Ģērmanis, “Aktuālais moments ar priekšvēsturi,” about the situation in occupied Latvia.

Latviešu tautas piedzīvojumi was published in English translation in 2007 as The Latvian Saga. For more information, visit publisher Atena’s Web site, www.atena.lv.

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