Latvian bassist wins ARD Music Competition

A young Latvian double bass musician has survived two weeks of competition in Munich, Germany, to win this year’s ARD Music Competition. Gunārs Upatnieks also won the audience prize, competition organizers announced.

Upatnieks was one of 94 double bass players who applied to the competition. Only 39 were admitted by contest officials.

Competition began Aug. 31 and advanced to the Sept. 8 finals, when competitors had to perform with the Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks.

Stanislau Anishchanka of Belarus won second prize in double bass, while Olivier Thiery of France and Ivan Zavgorodniy of Ukraine shared third prize.

Musicians also competed in voice, violin and harp.

All winners will now perform in a series of concerts in Munich: Sept. 16 with the Münchner Rundfunkorchester; Sept. 17 with the Munich Chamber Orchestra; and Sept. 18 with Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks.

Upatnieks, who studied at the Jāzeps Vītols Latvian Academy of Music in Rīga, has done well in other international music competitions. He won the solo competition in the 2007 International Society of Bassists competiton and took first prize in the 2008 Sperger International Competition in Ludwigslust, Germany.

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

Čikāgas Piecīši collection spans group’s career with ‘trejdeviņi’ tracks

Čikāgas Piecīšu zelts

With just two years to go before its 50th anniversary, the Latvian-American group Čikāgas Piecīši shows little sign of slowing down. Founded in 1961, the group is still performing, including a long-awaited return to Latvia that took place in 2008 and a concert during the 2009 Latvian Song Festival in Canada. In conjunction with this renewed activity, the group last year released its first career-spanning retrospective compact disc, Čikāgas Piecīšu zelts. Though the group already released a collection of its older songs, 1996’s Agrīnie gadi, this new collection covers the group’s entire recorded history.

The group has been a rather fluid ensemble, with many participants coming and going, but the central member has always been singer and songwriter Alberts Legzdiņš. Penning almost all of the group’s most recognizable hits, he has tirelessly guided the ensemble over its many decades, making the group, as well as himself, one of the most recognizable entities in Latvian music, with many triumphant performances in the United States, Canada, Latvia and many other places.

Distilling the essence of the Čikāgas Piecīši to one single CD is a difficult task, but Zelts, with its collection of trejdeviņi (27) songs, captures almost all of the definitive musical moments in the group’s history.

One can track the growth and evolution of the group throughout the decades. In the 1960s, when its humor was at its sharpest (“Supermarketā”), Čikāgas Piecīši still contained plenty of the good old Latvian melancholy (“Pēc 20 gadiem”).

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Legzdiņš went in a different direction, recording two solo albums with singer and guitarist Janīna Ankipāne. Though not officially Piecīši albums, they are represented here by songs like “Sapnis par Latgali” and “Vecpiebalga”.

With the arrival of singer and guitarist Armands Birkens in the 1970s, the Piecīši reformed. The group recorded some of its most popular songs, including “Pazudušais dēls,” “Līgo dziesma” and a personal favorite of mine, “Kurzemnieki Viskonsīnā.”

The Piecīši continued work into the 1980s, with songs taking a more patriotic feel to them, such as “Made in Latvia” and “Par mani, draudziņ’, nebēdā,” but not losing the humor exhibited since the group’s inception, displayed in songs like “Kurpniekzeļļi.”

A nice surprise in this collection is that there are three songs from the group’s underrated 1994 album Vai debesīs būs Latvija? including “Sprīdītis Rīgā,” “1989. gads” and the title track. Though long a musical voice for diaspora Latvians, many of whom longed to visit a free Latvia, the group was no less relevant after the restoration of independence in 1991. Vai debesīs būs Latvija? included songs about the changing times and moods in Latvia itself, as the euphoria from independence began to diminish and the difficult reality of the situation began to present itself.

Conspicuous by their absence are “Es redzēju bāleliņu” and “Mūsu mīlestība,” two very popular songs. However, the CD does contain “Mister, Kurzemniek!” a previously unreleased (at least not on CD, that is) calypso-style song about the natives of Tobago inviting settlers from the Kurzeme region of Latvia to visit them.

The set could have also used a few more selections from the group’s 1960s incarnation, but that era was reasonably well covered by the Agrīnie gadi set.

Album packaging, which has never been the strong suit of these releases, at least contains a few pictures and the group’s album covers, but no lyrics. It would have been nice to get some sort of commentary from at least Legzdiņš on the songs themselves, but my understanding is that he is preparing another book about the history of the group, so that should certainly provide more information.

The release of Čikāgas Piecīšu zelts and the group’s tour of Latvia at the end of 2008 coincided with one of the sadder moments in the group’s history: the death of founding member and long time skit and joke writer Uldis Ievāns. 

A single CD of music is hardly enough to convey the importance of the group and its songs to diaspora Latvians. After all, the songs here are rather simplistic, and the lyrics themselves display a slight, though perhaps intentional, naïveté. But that is one of the main reasons these songs have become so beloved and still today are sung when Latvians get together. Alternatively light hearted, sentimental, patriotic and even poignant, the songs of Legzdiņš and the Čikāgas Piecīši have endured the test of time. Čikāgas Piecīsu zelts is yet another reminder of the group’s contribution to Latvian life.

Details

Čikāgas Piecīšu zelts

Čikāgas Piecīši

Balss,  2008

BA CD 082

Track listing:

Made In Latvia

Mēs puisēni jaun’ būdami

Kurzemnieki Viskonsīnā

Sapnis par Latgali

Ciema meita

Tautas skaitīšana

Sekss ir labs

Pēc 20 gadiem

Vecpiebalga

Turaidas Roze

No Lielupes tilta

Sanfrancisko-Rīga

Ziedojiet, ziedojiet!

Piektdienas vakars

Šūpuļdziesma

Man garšo alus

Līgo dziesma

Supermārketā

Kurpniekzeļļi

Sprīdītis Rīgā

Mister, Kurzemniek!

Ziemeļamerikas polka

Pazudušais dēls

Lai visa pasaule to redz

1989. gads

Par mani, draudziņ, nebēdā!

Vai debesīs būs Latvija?

On the Web

Čikāgas Piecīši

The group’s page on the social networking site draugiem.lv includes samples of songs and a short biography. LV

Čikāgas Piecīši

The group’s site on the Web site of Rīga-based recording company Platforma Music, from which digital downloads of all Čikāgas Piecīši albums may be purchased. LV

Where to buy

Purchase Čikāgas Piecīšu zelts from BalticShop.

Note: Latvians Online receives a commission on purchases.

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.

Migration to U.K. rising, data show

The number of Latvian inhabitants who left for the United Kingdom in the first quarter of this year is the highest since 2002, British government data show, and a University of Latvia professor predicts even more will have emigrated in the second quarter.

Mihails Hazans, who studies labor markets, made his prediction Sept. 11 during a presentation in Rīga of a soon-to-be-published book, EU Labor Markets after Post-Enlargement Migration, the daily newspaper Dienas Bizness reported.

In the first three months of this year, a total of 4,360 persons from Latvia registered for U.K. National Insurance Numbers (NINo). That is the highest tally of new registrations in a single quarter since 2002, according to data compiled by the Department of Work and Pensions.

The NINo is used in dealings with the British government and to track certain benefits, such as social security contributions. Persons living in the U.K. may apply for a number once they are 16 years old.

The data suggest the number of migrants from Latvia will continue to rise this year. In just the first three months of this year, the number of migrants had already reached nearly 55 percent of last year’s tally. During all of 2008, a total of 7,970 persons from Latvia registered for a NINo.

Since 2002, more than 51,000 persons from Latvia have registered for National Insurance Numbers. Migration to the U.K. exploded after Latvia joined the European Union in 2004. That year, 3,700 persons from Latvia registered for a NINo, but in 2005, the total shot to 13,500—a 264 percent increase. Although the pace of migration declined in the following years, thousands of Latvian inhabitants continued to leave for Britain: 11,420 in 2006 and 9,320 in 2007.

The British data do not necessarily track permanent immigrants, just people who are living in the U.K. According to Latvia’s Central Statistical Bureau, the number of permanent emigrants from the country last year totaled 6,007, less than the total who in 2008 registered for a NINo in Britain.

Since 2002, more than 4 million immigrants to the U.K. from around the world have registered for the insurance numbers, according to the Department of Work and Pensions. They include 10,280 from Estonia and nearly 113,000 from Lithuania.

The book, EU Labor Markets after Post-Enlargement Migration, suggests that workers from foreign countries have not in general displaced native workers or lowered their wages. Hazans is co-author of a chapter on the Baltic labor markets.

During his presentation in Rīga, Dienas Bizness reported, Hazans noted that the most recent emigrants from Latvia tend to have higher education and are heading abroad for good. Of those who emigrated in previous years, more than half have returned to Latvia after one year.

Hazans said the same trend might take place with current emigrants, but that state policies will have to be changed to foster return migration, Dienas Bizness reported.

The book, EU Labor Markets after Post-Enlargement Migration, is edited by Martin Kahanec and Klaus F. Zimmermann. It is being pubished by the Germany-based Springer.

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