Rīga restores Meierovics name to boulevard

Despite the reluctance of Rīga’s mayor and of a commission that oversees place names, the Rīga City Council has approved restoring a downtown boulevard’s name in honor of Latvia’s first foreign minister, Zigfrīds Anna Meierovics.

Basteja Boulevard, which runs at the edge of the Old Town district, will again become Z.A. Meierovics Boulevard, the council decided July 21. The boulevard was originally named for Meierovics from 1929 to 1940, but before that had been called Basteja Boulevard—a reference to the old city bastion.

The council voted 34-11, with 8 absentions, to restore the Meierovics name.

Current Foreign Minister Māris Riekstiņš, who had suggested restoring the name as a way to honor Meierovics and the work he did to gain international recognition for Latvia, applauded the council’s decision.

“Restoring Zigfrīds Anna Meierovics Boulevard on the eve of Latvia’s 90th anniversary is a great appreciation of Latvia’s first foreign minister and a wonderful gift to all of Latvia’s inhabitants,” Riekstiņš said in a Ministry of Foreign Affairs press release.

Meierovics became foreign minister when Latvia declared its independence in 1918. He was killed in a one-car accident in 1925.

The World Federation of Free Latvians (Pasaules brīvo latviešu apvienība, or PBLA) backed restoring the Meierovics name to the boulevard. Meierovics’ late son, Gunārs, headed the PBLA from 1990-1993.

Rīga Mayor Jānis Birks opposed renaming the boulevard, suggesting instead that Rīga International Airport be retitled to honor Meierovics. However, that idea was strongly criticized by Transport Minister Ainārs Šlesers.

Renaming Basteja Boulevard also was overwhelmingly opposed by respondents to a poll conducted in June for the city council by the SKDS survey firm. The poll found 79.2 percent of respondents were not in favor of renaming the boulevard, according to a city council press release.

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

Latvia fields 50 athletes for Beijing Olympics

Latvia will field at least 50 athletes in 11 different sports during the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, the Latvian Olympic Committee has announced. The number of athletes is the most ever in Latvia’s history of competing in the summer games, topping the previous record of 48 during the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta.

Track and field athletes make up the largest contingent, and Latvia’s women’s basketball squad will be the country’s first team in the Olympics in nearly three quarters of a century. Other sports represented will be judo, the modern pentathlon, swimming, cycling, kayak and canoe rowing, weightlifting, shooting, tennis and beach volleyball.

The number of athletes could increase yet in track and field events, for which qualifying continues through July, Latvian Olympic Committee President Aldons Vrubļevskis said in a July 18 press release.

Latvia’s Olympic delegation will be supported by 46 coaches, technicians, doctors and administrators.

Beijing will be the first Olympic Games in which a Latvian women’s basketball team competes, as well as the first in which Latvian BMX racers and beach volleyball players appear, said Einars Fogelis, chairman of the Latvian Olympic Committee.

Athletes from Latvia heading to the Beijing Olympics include:

  • The women’s basketball team consisting of Elīna Babkina, Gunta Baško, Aija Brumermane, Zane Eglīte, Anda Eibele, Liene Jansone, Anete Jēkabsone-Žogota, Ieva Kubliņa, Dita Krūmberga, Aija Putniņa, Zane Tamane and Ieva Tāre.
  • Judo competitors Jevgeņijs Borodavko and Vsevolods Zeļonijs.
  • Modern pentathlon competitors Deniss Čerkovskis and Jeļena Rubļevska.
  • Swimmers Andrejs Dūda and Romāns Miloslavskis.
  • Track cyclists Raivis Belohvoščiks and Gatis Smukulis, as well as BMX racers Ivo Lakučs, Artūrs Matisons and Māris Štrombergs.
  • Kayak competitors Krists Straume and Kristaps Zaļupe, as well as canoe athlete Miķelis Ežmalis.
  • Weightlifter Viktors Ščerbatihs.
  • Shooting competitor Afanasijs Kuzmins.
  • Tennis player Ernests Gulbis.
  • Track and field athletes Ronalds Arājs (200 meter), Jolanta Dukure (20 kilometer walking), Aiga Grabuste (heptathlon), Ingus Janevics (50 kilometer walking), Jānis Karlivāns (decathlon), Igors Kazakevičs (50 kilometer walking), Ainārs Kovals (javelin), Dmitrijs Miļkevičs (800 meter distance), Staņislavs Olijars (110 meter hurdles), Sinta Ozoliņa (javelin), Inna Poluškina (3,000 meter steeple), Jeļena Prokopčuka (marathon), Ineta Radeviča (long jump), Ēriks Rags (javelin), Igors Sokolovs (hammer throw), Māris Urtāns (shot put), Vadims Vasiļevskis (javelin), Valērijs Žolnerovičs (3,000 meter steeple) and Ieva Zunda (400 meter hurdles).
  • Beach volleyball competitors Mārtiņš Pļaviņš and Aleksandrs Samoilovs.

Three of the athletes earned silver medals in the 2004 Olympics: weightlifter Ščerbatihs, modern pentathalon athlete Rubļevska and javelin thrower Vasiļevskis. Among the better known professionals athletes are tennis player Gulbis and marathon runner Prokopčuka.

The women’s basketball team is the first Latvian squad to qualify for the Olympics since the men’s basketball team competed in the 1936 Olympics in Berlin.

The greatest number of Latvian athletes ever in either the winter or summer Olympics was 58 in the 2006 Turin Olympics.

The Beijing Olympics are scheduled Aug. 8-24.

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

Album reveals beauty of Latvian folk songs

Skaisti dziedi

It goes without saying that Latvians have many beloved folk songs. It also goes without saying that Latvians love singing, especially folk songs. Also well known is the fact that the Latvian Radio Choir, conducted by Sigvards Kļava, is one of the best choirs in Latvia, if not the world. It is appropriate, then, that just in time for the 2008 Latvian Song Festival the record label Upe tuviem un tāliem would release a collection of folk songs, Skaisti dziedi.

When I heard about the compact disc, I picked it up as soon as I could. What surprised me is that only half of the songs are full choir performances. The rest are solo performances.

The choir arrangements are all the “classic” arrangements such as “Pūt, vējiņi” and “Kur tu skriesi vanadziņi” by Andrejs Jurjāns, “Rīga dimd” and “Krauklīt’s sēž ozolā” by Jānis Cimze, and “Cekulaine zīle dzied” and “Tumša nakte, zaļa zāle” by Emilis Melngailis. Though these songs have been recorded many, many times, the presentation by the Latvian Radio Choir and conductor Kļava remains fresh and engaging.

The other half of the disc contains performances by solo artists such as folk singer Zane Šmite (“Vedat mani ciema puiši”) and Kārlis Rūtentāls (“Kur tu teci gailīti mans” and “Skaisti dziedi lakstīgala”), as well as the duo of countertenor Ārijs Šķepasts and bass Gundars Dziļums on the old favorite “Kur tad tu nu biji, āzīti manu.” Most all of these performances feature kokle prodigy Laima Jansone (in fact, she arranged every song she plays on—more than a dozen). Still not quite yet finished at the Latvian Academy of Music, she already is able to make quite a name for herself as a rising star of the kokle, one of the most Latvian of all instruments.

The only spots where the collection stumbles are the performances of “Āvu, āvu baltas kājas” and “Bēdu manu lielu bēdu” by soprano Elīna Libauere. The songs, in my opinion, are sung way too fast! It is for the same reason that I wasn’t too fond of the Liku bēdu zem akmeņa folk song collection released by Upe in 2007. Certainly it is a technical achievement to be able to sing a song at 90 miles per hour with barely a breath, but at that speed much of the joy and fun of these songs is diminished.

All song texts are included, including English translations that perhaps may lead to bewilderment among some who may not understand why a tune about an “alleged” drunk horse runner became such a beloved song.

Honestly, instead of the half CD of choir arrangements and half CD of solo performances, I would have preferred a full CD of each. Conspicuously absent are the Latgallian “Aiz azara augsti kolni” (also by Jurjāns) or any of the many arrangements of “Ziedi, ziedi, rudzu vārpa.” Of course, with literally hundreds of choir arrangements of folk songs, one has to be very selective. Perhaps in the future we could hope for another CD of all modern folk song arrangements, including favorites such as Anita Kuprisa’s arrangmenet of “Ģērbies, saule, sudrabota,” or Imants Ramiņš’ arrangement of “Pūt, vējiņi,” or Selga Mence’s arrangement of “Neba maize pate nāca,” to name just a few.

As a collection of Latvian folk songs, containing old favorites and new arrangements for solo performers, this is one of the best to have ever been released, and well worth picking up. The Latvian Radio Choir and Kļava, not to mention kokle performer Jansone, are to be commended for such great performances, which will remind all listeners of the value and beauty of these timeless songs.

Details

Skaisti dziedi

Latvian Radio Choir

Upe tuviem un tāliem,  2008

UPE TT 038

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.