MICREC releases Bonaparti.lv single

The MICREC recording house has released a two-track compact disc single of “Questa notte,” the Italian-language song performed by Bonaparti.lv that is Latvia’s entry in this year’s Eurovision Song Contest. Bonaparti.lv will start in the Eurovision semi-final on May 10 in Helsinki, Finland.

The CD includes the original version of the song and an instrumental version.

The group of six tenors includes Andris Ābelīte, Andris Ērglis, Normunds Jakušonoks, Roberto Meloni, Zigfrīds Muktupāvels and Kaspars Tīmanis. The song was composed by Kjell Jennstig of Sweden. Lyrics are by Jennstig, Torbjörn Wassenius and Francesca Russo.

In advance of the contest, the group has been working on promoting itself and the song. Meloni, for example, was recently interviewed by television station RAI Uno in his native Italy, according to a MICREC press release. Bonaparti.lv also appeared as guest performers in the Lithuanian runup to Eurovision.

Bonaparti.lv will be competing against 27 other countries in the semi-final and must score in the top 10 to advance to the May 12 final.

Bonaparti.lv

A compact disc with two versions of “Questa notte” has been released by MICREC.

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

Web sites help plan summer holiday

notikumi.lv

The online events listing notikumi.lv is a comprehensive guide to what’s on in Latvia.

If your holiday plans this year include a trip to Latvia, then read on. Where is the best place to turn to find out what’s happening when you get there? Sure, there are the pocket tourist guides, the local newspapers and good old-fashioned billboards out on the street. But nothing beats the Internet when it comes to information gathering.

The first port of call should be notikumi.lv, a great site as events searches can be made by subject, date, age (with a separate kids’ category) and other criteria so you’re not left sifting through wads of information that is of no interest to you. You will still get the biggest listing in Latvian, but English and German are the two other languages on offer. The site is sometimes lacking; around Easter time we couldn’t find anything on the folkloric Easter celebrations planned in Rīga.

If you’re more of a classical music buff, then Latvijas Koncerti is your site. Elegant design is jam-packed with content, which is interspersed with some great quotes such as the Zimbabwean proverb, “Ja tu vari paiet, tu vari arī padejot. Ja tu vari parunāt, tu vari arī padziedāt” (If you can walk, you can dance. If you can talk, you can sing). The site is a great all-rounder as it includes the latest not just on strictly classical events but also jazz, contemporary music, kids and youth concerts, and even world music.

The Rīga Convention Bureau’s Inspiration Rīga  can give you ideas for exhibitions, concerts, fairs and festivals, while the Latvian Institute has a good list of all main cultural events planned for 2007.

Many venture to the homeland to experience Latvian folkore in its native setting. Ansis Ataols Bērziņš’ Folklora.lv has much information about folklore, including a list of events, but it is by no means comprehensive. The Latvian Open Air Ethnographic Museum (Latvijas Etnogrāfiskais Brīvdabas muzejs) in Rīga, a favorite tourist spot, offers information about activities through its virtual museum as well as through Latvijas Ceļvedis, an online guide to tourist attractions throughout the country.

Two of the main portals in Latvia, Delfi and Apollo, are good for locating events depending on your interests and tastes. Go to notikumi.delfi.lv or Apollo’s Izklaide section to track what’s happening on the club and pub scene. Opera, concert and theatregoers can turn in here, too, as can those in Rīga with young kids desperately trying to locate a restaurant that can accommodate the brood.

If it’s not just Rīga you are interested in, event listings can also be located on regional Web sites such as www.cesis.lv, www.madona.lv, www.kuldiga.lv and so on.

Every summer in Latvia is filled with activities. You don’t have to wait for a Song Festival to come around to experience and taste Latvia. But if you are planning the big trip for next year then www.dziesmusvetki2008.lv will certainly be worth a visit. At the moment, however, the site is still under construction.

Details

Daina Gross is editor of Latvians Online. An Australian-Latvian she is also a migration researcher at the University of Latvia, PhD from the University of Sussex, formerly a member of the board of the World Federation of Free Latvians, author and translator/ editor/ proofreader from Latvian into English of an eclectic mix of publications of different genres.

Astro’n’out’s launch features distinctive voice

Kuš kuš

The closing months of 2006 brought to the forefront a young group, Astro’n’out, that turned out one of the more exciting Latvian rock albums of the year. The recording, Kuš kuš, even earned the title of best rock album during the Latvian Music Awards last month.

Some fans, however, may now be wondering if that’s the end of the road. Rapid stardom seemed to be replaced quickly by rumors of Astro’n’out spinning out of orbit. One article in the Latvian press noted the young lead singer Māra Upmane’s turn to photography as a creative outlet, while the band’s MySpace page curiously focuses only on her and none of the original bandmates.

However, the band’s management said in an e-mail that Astro’n’out still exists and that rumors of its demise are just that. Changes have been made to the lineup and a new single, “Apple Green,” can be heard on the MySpace page.

That makes me happy, because Astro’n’out—and especially Upmane—is worth listening to.

The band was founded in January 2003 and saw growing appeal in airplay and concerts. A big boost came when Astro’n’out released the single “Daļa Rīgas” (Part of Rīga). The song, which in 2005 won a contest sponsored by the youth-oriented nongovernmental organization Avantis, speaks about Maskavas forštate, often viewed as a tough neighborhood just south of the Old City district of Rīga.

With dozens of concerts on the band’s résumé, the airplay success of “Daļa Rīgas” and other achievements, the release of Astro’n’out’s debut album was long awaited.

Kuš kuš starts out with one of the group’s hits, “Nē gravitātei” (No to Gravity), a song about flying or reaching for the skies. It is a good piece that showcases Upmane’s songwriting talent and her unusual voice. My daughter compared Upmane’s voice to that of Alanis Morisette’s. A similarity in timbre can be heard, but what matters is that on the Latvian music scene Upmane’s voice is distinctive.

My favorite track on the album is the second, “Ķieģeļi” (Bricks), a metaphorical song about a person in love who is building a wall of bricks that ultimately shuts out everyone dear to them. It is followed by “Monsters,” sung in English, and another radio hit, “Tanki” (Tanks), which may be wrongly perceived as an antiwar song.

“Vien (neguli neguli)” perhaps does the best in characterizing how the band has defined its style—astrorock. But the track so far has done little to move me.

However, the next track, “Baidos,” is my second favorite. In musical style it comes close to a repressed emo. I enjoy both the lyrics as well as how Upmane belts them out. “Baidos” starts out with acoustic guitar, drums and bass join in, and then Upmane’s strong voice arrives to carry the song. Listening to her makes me wonder what she would be like singing in the “white voice” style popular with some Latvian folk ensembles.

The standout hit “Daļa Rīgas” is next. If you have ever heard anything bad about Maskavas forštate—and if you have heard anything, it probably has been bad—listen to Upmane describe her neighborhood. It is a place of hardship, clearly, but Upmane turns an anthropological eye to the district to make the point that it is a rich, complex and wonderful place as well.

Kuš kuš loses some of its strength over the next five tracks. “Mās’” (Sister) is an appeal to a sibling to learn to see the world differently and “Funny How” is about how we often are not true to ourselves. “Tievā diegā” (On a Fine Thread), “Enigmatic” and the oddly titled “La-La-Lauring” are all about relationships.

The album concludes with the title track, “Kuš kuš,” a restrained and unsettling song. It is the best of Upmane’s English-language compositions on the album. Upmane’s vocals and the sparse instrumentation create a soundscape that makes one wonder if the subject of the song, who tells herself “kuš kuš” to calm down, isn’t really about to explode from the “little earthquakes” that bedevil her.

The band’s lineup on the album include Upmane on vocals and guitar, Rihards Streiķis on percussion, Mikus Zaķis on bass and guitar, Uldis Beitiņš on guitar and Rūdolfs Budze on keyboards. The compact disc comes with liner notes that include all lyrics.

I for one will have an eye on Astro’n’out’s MySpace page, waiting for news of the band’s next album.

Details

Kuš kuš

Astro’n’out

Avantis,  2006

On the Web

Astro’n’out

The band’s official Web site. LV

Astro’n’out on draugiem.lv

The band’s page on the Latvian social network draugiem.lv allows fans to comment and provides information on concerts. LV

Astro’n’out on MySpace

Current information on the band, including the song “Apple Green,” are available on Astro’n’out’s MySpace page. EN

Where to buy

Purchase Kuš kuš from BalticShop.

Note: Latvians Online receives a commission on purchases.

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