State TV also streams song festival events

Latvian State Television now also will stream a limited number of 2008 Latvian Song and Dance Festival events live over the Internet.

The state-funded broadcaster announced July 3 that 10 events during the July 5-12 celebration will be available on www.ltv1.lv and www.ltvarhivs.lv.

Events to be streamed include:

  • July 5: The sacred music concert beginning at 21:00 hours Latvian time.
  • July 6: The song festival parade starting at 11:00 hours and the opening concert at 21:00 hours.
  • July 7: The dance program “Deju svētkiem – 60” beginning at 21:20 hours.
  • July 8: The dance concert “No sirsniņas sirsniņai” at 22:00 hours.
  • July 9: The symphonic music concert starting at 21:25 hours.
  • July 10: The concert “Veltījums tautasdziesmai” at 20:20 hours.
  • July 11: The grand dance program “Izdejot laiku” starting at 22:00 hours.
  • July 12: The folk music concert “Gaismas istaba” at 10:00 hours and the closing concert at 21:00 hours.

As reported earlier, a number of song festival events will be available to television viewers in Latvia, while Latvian State Radio and the official song festival Web site www.dziesmusvetki2008.lv also will carry some live or recorded broadcasts.

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

Song festival events to air on radio, TV, Web

If you can’t be there in person for the 2008 Latvian Song and Dance Festival in Rīga, you can still be there virtually by listening to or watching some events on radio, television or the Internet.

Organizers of the July 5-12 festival have announced a schedule of live and recorded presentations of events beginning with the July 5 sacred music concert and concluding with the final concert on July 12.

Live and recorded broadcasts on Latvian State Television will only be viewable within in Latvia, but those on Latvian State Radio may be listened to over the Internet at www.latvijasradio.lv. In addition, the official song festival Web site, www.dziesmusvetki2008.lv will provide live and recorded streams of some of state television’s broadcasts.

Song festival events to be offered by the various media include:

  • July 5: The sacred music concert in the Dome Church.
  • July 6: The song festival parade through downtown Rīga, the dance program “Deju svētkiem – 60” in Arēna Rīga and and the opening festival concert “Dziedot dzimu, dziedot augu” at the Mežaparks open-air stage.
  • July 8: The choir competition in the Great Hall of the University of Latvia, the symphonic music concert in the Latvian National Opera and the dance celebration concert in the International Exhibit Center at Ķīpsala.
  • July 9: The vocal ensemble concert “Mīlestības dziesmas” in the Dome Square.
  • July 10: The folk music concert in the Great Hall of the University of Latvia and the concert “Veltījums tautasdziesmai” in the Congress Hall.
  • July 11: The grand dance performance “Izdejot laiku” in the Daugava Stadium.
  • July 12: The kokle concert in the Large Guild and the closing festival concert at the Mežaparks open-air stage.

A full schedule of coverage is available by visiting www.dziesmusvetki2008.lv.

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

TV service tells story of Latvians in Ireland

Latvians in Ireland now have their own television service, Latviešu Televīzija Īrijā, created by a team of former media professionals working under less than ideal conditions.

The television service, available online at lti.ie, began work after a number of Latvian immigrants in Ireland came together to make a fun video for April 1. All of them had worked in various television jobs back in Latvia, LTĪ spokesperson and consultant Sandra Bondarevska said in an interview from her home in Dublin.

From that they got the idea for the Latvian television service, which not only creates news programs but also special videos.

One of the reasons for LTĪ, Bondarevska explained, stems from the desire to tell a story of the immigrants that is different from the one sometimes presented by media in Latvia.

“The whole story of what is happening here is not presented,” Bondarevska said. “That stereotype about the mushroom pickers is deep.”

Visitors to the Web site will not find much material yet—and certainly not the daily news reports once promised by LTĪ. Available are a few short newscasts featuring the often expressionless anchor Andris Pūce and some special reports on recent cultural events, including one of the June 21 celebration of Jāņi near Dublin. For a shoestring operation, the newscasts are impressive. The May 12 program is especially well done, with several solid stories complete with “B-roll.”

But don’t all of you go rushing off at once to view the Web site. Bondarevska warned that one of the concerns the group has is server capacity. Even with just a few people concurrently watching videos, the site can slow down significantly. To get around the problem, LTĪ has started posting its video to the popular YouTube service. Therein lies another problem: YouTube limits videos to 10 minutes, meaning LTĪ cannot post longer reports online.

The LTĪ crew also is limited by technology and time. Although digital technology has improved vastly since some of them were actively working in Latvian television, it still can be expensive to purchase quality recording and editing equipment.

“We film in the most basic of conditions,” said Bondarevska, whose television career included work for Ogres TV and Latvian State Television. “I tell these television guys that it’s a question of a couple of years, and all these technical things that slow us down will be resolved.”

And unlike when their day jobs revolved around a television studio, the Latvian immigrants now have other work that takes priority, making LTĪ more an avocation. Money earned from those jobs helps to fund the television service.

LTĪ also does not have sponsors and is cautious about entering into any such financial relationships, Bondarevska said. While the support would help the service, the LTĪ crew wants to maintain editorial independence.

“Yes, it’s a plaything, it’s a game,” Bondarevska said, “but it’s our game.”

LTĪ is still in its infancy, testing ideas and the means to realize them. Future directions might include offering DVDs of programs, working with a Dublin cable televison outlet to reach a wider audience, taping games of the Latvian Hawks hockey team and creating an “open microphone” program that would allow Latvian immigrants an opportunity to voice their opinions about life in Ireland.

Added Bondarevska: “I think Latvians in Ireland have much to say.”

Latviešu Televīzija Īrijā

Latvians in Ireland now have their own online television service. Newscasts are delivered by anchor Andris Pūce.

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