Indianapolis song fest runs July 4-8

Thirty-one choirs totaling about 500 singers and 34 folk dance ensembles with about 720 dancers are expected to perform during the 12th Latvian Song Festival in the United States, held this year from July 4-8 in Indianapolis, Ind.

With a theme of “Dziesma, deja – latvju seja” (Song, dance: The Latvian presence), the festival will mirror Latvians’ strong ties to folk songs and dances, the organizing committee said in a press release.

Among highlights of the festival will be the grand joint choir concert, which will include the cantata “Lielā junda Brāļu kapos,” the performance of which will be directed by its composer, Imants Rāmiņš. Besides choirs from across the United States and Canada, the grand concert will include Kamerkoris Ventspils from Latvia.

Twenty-two folk dances and choreographed works are scheduled for the grand dance performance. Among participating dance ensembles will be Līgo, one of the best from Latvia.

Also planned for the song festival are performances of the Anšlavs Eglītis and Andrejs Jansons musical “Homo novus,” the traditional new choreography show, the cabaret show “Kabaremonts” which will unite some of the best known singers in the United States, and a distinguished artists’ concert featuring performances by Pauls Berkholds, Andrew Martens and Laila Saliņa.

The song festival will take place in various venues in downtown Indianapolis, but will be centered at the Indianapolis Marriott Downtown hotel.

The second-to-last day of the festival, July 7, coincides with Latvia’s national referendum on amendments to two security laws. To accommodate Latvian citizens who wish to vote, a polling station will operate from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. at the Latvian Community Center, 1008 W. 64th St., Indianapolis. The American Latvian Association will operate a shuttle from the song festival to the pollling station throughout the day.

The song festival schedule includes:

  • July 4: Opening program, a concert of spiritual music, a folk costume show, a get-acquainted dance and the “Kabaremonts” cabaret show.
  • July 5: The “Kabaremonts” cabaret show, the new choreography show, a men’s choir concert, a performance of “Homo novus” and a social evening.
  • July 6: A concert by Kamerkoris Ventspils, the grand folk dance perforance, and two balls, one for youth and one for those “who are young at heart.”
  • July 7: A morning presentation by Latvian writers, a performance by the folk dance troupe Līgo, the grand choir concert, a performance of “Homo novus” and the festival ball.
  • July 8: An ecumenical church service, a folk song concert, the song festival lunch and the distinguished artists’ concert.

For further information, visit the official song festival Web site.

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

Out from underground, Daksis reveals his personae

Mežs ieiet sevī

With the release of his sixth or seventh album this spring, prolific Latvian singer-songwriter and philosopher Imants Daksis is finally reaching larger audiences and receiving wider recognition. While the small batches of his previous, more or less self-made, recordings are now hard to come by, Mežs ieiet sevī is a larger undertaking, distributed by Lauska, a relatively new culture management center based in Rīga. This is definitely a good career move for Daksis, but the trade-off is that it might take some of the mystery and underground-ness out of his reputation.

Daksis is younger than you would think—in his mid-20s—and often seems shy in concert. He is serious and concentrates on his music, yet is a master in the art of working an audience. Sometimes he plays softly and gently, but by the very next song he could be shouting in a booming voice.

Needless to say, Mežs ieiet sevī also reflects these two personalities of Imants Daksis. The compact disc begins with “Situ vēju ar koku,” which is less of a song and more of a boastful call or a fragment of spoken word. He continues with the same deep calling voice in “Purvs tevi sauc,” and the listener’s first impression may be of a pretentious singer with an affected voice. But Daksis’ other persona—the gentle folk singer, for lack of a better description—soon takes over. “Es gribu mīlēties ar tevi šonakt” contains touches of the accordion, flutes and kokle. These instruments, accompanied by mandolin and bagpipes in other songs, keep popping up throughout the CD, reminding the listener at times of the folksy side of Jethro Tull (for example, in “Matērijas bilžu grāmata”). Acoustic guitar, though, remains Daksis’ one constant.

Despite flipping back and forth between two voices and two personalities, much of the album sounds moody and intense. One song comments about excessive drinking, another is a call to battle, another an analogy to rape, followed by childhood innocence. The title of the album refers to the thicket of loneliness, trials and rejuvenation that many creative people go through. Heavy stuff, most of it. For example, “Šī deja bij’ smaga, es piekusu drīz, bet kā vienmēr spēks pretstatā nespēkam viz…” {This dance was difficult, I tired soon; but as always, strength glitters in comparison to weakness…), or “Tu esi lidmašīna, es esmu taurenītis; Es tevi ķeru, bet vai tu arī mani redzi?” (You’re an airplane, I’m a butterfly; I catch you, but do you also see me?).

In between the philosophical songs, though, are a few wonderfully absurd gems, with lyrics such as “Pats esi pavārs, pats esi kūka, pats sevi ēd un dod arī citiem – priecājies, ka tu garšo! (You are the baker, you are the cake, you eat yourself and give some to others—be happy that you taste good!).

Although Daksis sometimes performs pretty standard sounding music (for example, “It nekas…”) and even gets air time on Latvian radio, deep down he’s an uninhibited, minor-key, operatic bard who likes holding long notes. The one song in Russian on the CD proves that he also not only feels at home, but really shines in Vladimir Vysotsky’s native language and style.

So Imants Daksis is a bit odd. Maybe too dramatic or “deep” for some, maybe too raw for others. But it seems that most Latvians are proud to call him their own.

Details

Mežs ieiet sevī

Imants Daksis

Lauska,  2007

On the Web

Imants Daksis

The singer’s Web site has news about performances, samples of his music, photographs and philosophical musings. LV

Imants Daksis on MySpace

Imants Daksis’ MySpace site has samples of his music. EN

Where to buy

Purchase Mežs ieiet sevī from BalticMall.

Note: Latvians Online receives a commission on purchases.

Order an iPhone, support a Latvian hacker

Looking for an iPhone, the hot new technological gadget from Apple? Then don’t click on the pop-up ad that appears while visiting Google or Yahoo!, reports SunbeltBLOG. All you will accomplish is to financially support some ne’er-do-well in Latvia.

The pop-up ads direct the computer user to iphone.com—but not the iphone.com run by Apple. The fake Web site provides a three-step process for ordering the mobile telephone: pick the model of your choice, provide your personal information and then send payment via Western Union or Moneygram to someone in Latvia.

According to the British magazine PC Advisor, Latvia is “a hacker hotbed like its Baltic neighbours and former occupier, Russia.”

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