With help from Swedes, solo debut is a hit

Lights On

The Latvian popular music scene never fails to amaze with its good supply of new and up-and-coming talent. To this list we can add the singer Dons, who recently released his debut solo album, Lights On.

The 22-year-old singer, whose real name is Artūrs Šingirejs, recorded the album with the help of Swedish producers and musicians in Stockholm. There are basically two producer teams on the album. Brothers Andreas and Martin Karlegård co-wrote, produced, performed and recorded five of the songs at K*Bros Studio, while Peter Månsson teamed up with James Cartiers on four songs and with Patric Sarin for one song at MIR Studios.

All the songs are sung in English and Dons does a great job with them. Actually, Dons is one of the few singers from Latvia who can sing in English with nearly no accent. His voice sometime sounds similar to that of Huey Lewis and at other times that of Red Hot Chilli Peppers singer (and Lithuanian-American) Anthony Kiedis.

Dons first gained wide notice in Latvia as one half of the duo Dons & Lily, paired with Linda Kalniņa. They met on the Latvian television reality show “Talantu fabrika.” The duo released one album, Viens otram, in 2004, but went their separate ways in 2005.

Lights On kicks off with opening track, “Take Me Alive,” a fast paced number that has a fabulous, screeching guitar solo. Dons really belts out the chorus line on this song. Next is the first single from the album, a ballad called “Light Out,” which has been getting good airplay on Latvian radio stations. There’s a videoclip to the song as well. This is the showcase for songwriters Dons and the Karlegård brothers.

“Jaded,” s song about the new generation taking over, has a little quote from The Doors’ song “When The Music’s Over.” This is not by coincidence, as one of Dons’ favorite groups is The Doors. “American Lovebite” is a Beatles-sounding song complete with a horn section. It’s one of four songs where Dons is not inolved as a songwriter, this being left to his Swedish counterparts.

Really grooving is “When Love Turns to Pain.” All the instruments are played by Månsson, while backing vocals are sung by Sarin. The song also has a catchy chorus.

The next three tracks on the album are produced by the Karlegård brothers, starting with “You Should Know Better,” a powerpop song that goes well together with the previous track. “Best Kept Secret” is a more poppy song, but again with a strong chorus. “Nothing’s Really There” is a song about childhood memories and shadows in the room that are just imagined.

The last two songs are produced by Månsson and Cartiers. “Mr. Greene” is the current single from the album, a steady-paced storytelling track that showcases Dons’ singing abilities. “Just Save Me” rounds out the album and is a rocking walking beat song where Dons goes looking for missing pieces, but I believe he has found them by creating this album.

All in all, the album has 10 good, strong songs, professionally performed, produced and recorded.

Details

Lights On

Dons

Platforma Records,  2006

PRCD 151

Where to buy

Purchase Lights On from BalticShop.

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Raitis Freimanis lives in Stockholm, Sweden, and is a founding member of the Latvian-Canadian band Skandāls.

Wedding album gains Iļģi deserved notice

Ne uz vienu dienu

Ne uz vienu dienu, the newest compact disc by the Latvian modern folklore group Iļģi, has made it to No. 2 on World Music Charts Europe, where it is in good company with top groups from around the world. This is the highest international placing for a Latvian world music group and a powerful statement about the recording’s and the group’s quality.

Ne uz vienu dienu (Not for Just One Day) is a CD of wedding songs. But this is not an educational collection in the obvious sense; the songs do not form a complete wedding ceremony set. The best-known part of the ceremony—mičošana—is sung about in only one song, “Līgodama upe nesa.” Instead, Iļģi deals to a much greater extent with the more vague issue of beginning a new stage in one’s life.

“Tautiets jūdza bāliņš jūdza, Visi meži guni dega” and “Viena saule viena zeme” are beautiful texts about a bride wishing that her new home will be kind and that her married life will be gentle. These could be tear-jerkers, but Iļģi does not dwell on melancholy. Rather, as the liner notes state, even though a wedding is a serious event, it is nevertheless a happy one. The heavy “Dej eglīte, lec eglīte” bids a dignified farewell to the bride’s old life and proudly greets her new life. In “Kodaļa sprēslīca” the new bride’s lonely spinning wheel is encouraged to follow her to her new husband’s house, but the new couple has already exchanged rings, and now no one can undo the vows anymore. In “Skaista mana līgaviņa” the new bridegroom sings about his bride’s beauty and gently offers his shoulder for her to sleep.

Iļģi keeps on expanding its influences, this time by including African musician Samite on kalimba and German musician Mark Feder on banjo. Both instruments fit surprisingly well with Latvian folk melodies and the result is very pleasant world music. Of course, Iļģi plays all of its regular folk instruments as well: kokle, bagpipe, wooden flutes, ģīga, etc. The addition of Rūta Muktupāvela and three singers from the group Saucējas is also very fitting, because weddings are not usually the place for solo singing—everyone is expected to join in.

Despite a few calmer songs, the overall feel of Ne uz vienu dienu is almost exceedingly upbeat. All in all, though, this is another very polished CD typical of Iļģi, “restrained and yet refreshing,” according to World Music Charts Europe.

Details

Ne uz vienu dienu

Iļģi

Upe Records,  2006

UPECD 069

President leads delegation to United Kingdom

Meetings with Queen Elizabeth II and Prime Minister Tony Blair are on Latvian President Vaira Vīķe-Freiberga’s agenda when she visits the United Kingdom from July 9-13, the president’s press office has announced.

The president will lead a delegation that is to include Minister for Economics Aigars Štokenbergs and Minister for Science and Education Baiba Rivža, as well as her husband Imants Freibergs, other officials and about 40 business people.

Vīķe-Freiberga’s stay will begin July 9 with a visit to the men’s final of the Wimbledon tennis championship. That evening, she is to speak at a dinner hosted by the British Business Council.

The following day, July 10, Vīķe-Freiberga is scheduled to meet with Blair and Jack Straw, leader of the House of Commons. She also will visit the British Library to view the Magna Carta and Latvian manuscipts. A reception hosted by Latvian business people is planned that evening in the Royal Garden Hotel in London.

A forum hosted by the Latvian Investment and Development Agency and the London Chamber of Commerce is scheduled the morning of July 11 in the Royal Garden Hotel. Also on the agenda is a meeting with London’s Lord Mayor David Brewer, a speech at the London School of Economics, a meeting with members of Parliament, and an evening reception at the Embassy of Latvia in London.

On July 12 it’s off to Cambridge University, where among other activities the president will meet with Māra Kalniņš, who is a university reader in modern English literature at Corpus Christi College.

Vīķe-Freiberga is scheduled to arrive at 15:30 hours at the Latvian rest home Straumēni in Catthorpe, where she will meet with community members.

Back in London on July 14, the president will visit the Tower of London and view the Crown Jewels and, in the afternoon, visit with Queen Elizabeth in Buckingham Palace. The queen is expected to visit Latvia in October.

Vīķe-Freiberga is scheduled to arrive back in Rīga the evening of July 14.

The trip to the United Kingdom follows a state visit last week to Slovakia.

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