Female artists compose new songs with Aspazija’s poetry on “Pretējības”

In honor of Latvian poet Aspazija’s 150th birthday in 2015, a project to compose new songs with her poetry was initiated by the University of Latvia radio station Naba. The result, a collection of fifteen songs performed by women and groups led by women is called Pretējības, and was published by NABA Music/Melo Records.

Gathering a wide variety of female artists, the eclectic collection features performers like Sus Dungo, Alise Joste, Zāle, among many others. The album art is provided by Alisa Ādamsone.

Radio Naba was founded in 2002 at the University of Latvia as a free format radio station, and can also be streamed online.

For further information, please visit the Radio Naba website.

 

Track listing:

  1. Dana Indāne – Pabērtas sēkliņas
  2. Zāle – Nemiera bērns
  3. Alise Joste feat. Čipsis un Dullais – Gar paradīzes maliņu
  4. Jauno Jāņu Orķestris – Odziņa
  5. Evija Vēbere feat. Aurora – Tāltālu aiz laika
  6. Kuzucuk – Das jüngste Gericht
  7. Biezoknis – Dzelzceļa vilciens naktī
  8. Waterflower (Sabīne Moore) – Nervu koks
  9. UP – Princese
  10. Anna Pluto – Aspazijas sapnis
  11. Sus Dungo – Rembranta gaismā
  12. Stūrī zēvele – Visaugstāko!
  13. Nebijušā restauratori – Pēc tūkstots gadiem
  14. Amorālā pshihoze – Aizgāja
  15. Helēna Kozlova – Viens vienīgs vārds

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.

Australian Latvians to celebrate their culture in Melbourne in December

The 56th Latvian Cultural Festival, to be held in Melbourne from 26th Dec 2016 to 1st Jan 2017 is just around the corner. Latvians Online spoke to one of the organisers, Lara Brenners, to find out what’s in store for Australian Latvians – and anyone else interested in Latvian culture – at the end of the year.

1. The first question on everyone’s lips is – who will this year’s guests from Latvia be? And will there be any other groups from overseas?
This year we have a number of guests from Latvia. Firstly we have folk dance group from Latvia – “Līgo” – with their leader, Jānis Purviņš, (organiser of countless Latvian Dance festivals, recipient of the Order of the Three Stars, choreographer of many folk dances) as well as mixed choir “Anima” from Saulkrasti, led by Laura Leontjeva un Kārlis Rūtentāls. “Anima” un “Līgo” will have separate guest concerts at the Cultural Festival. Ivars Cinkuss an Uģis Prauliņš will also be here to help produce the project “Pagānu Gadagrāmata” as well as weaver Māris Maniņš.

2. Are any official representatives from the Latvian government planning to attend the Festival?
Several invitations have been extended and we are still waiting for replies. We are hopeful on this front.

3. What is planned in terms of Latvian events in Federation Square [for those unfamiliar with Melbourne – an events/performance space in the centre of town, opposite Flinders St Station]? 
This event is planned as an exhibition of traditional song & dance where we can showcase a small excerpt of our culture to the broader Australian Public.  On the centre stage, our short performance will be broadcast onto the big screen, a free event for passersby to stop and enjoy!

4. Will all the usual KDs events be part of the programme? Choral concert, folk dancing concert, a theatre performance, etc?
Yes, the standard KDs events will all be part of the program.  These events are part of the rich history of the Cultural Festival and are important to the continuing traditions of the festival as a whole.

5. Any other events planned that haven’t been part of the programme previously?
This year we have a new event – “Pagānu Gadagrāmata”. This is a musical piece written by Uģis Praulins, directed by Ivars Cinkuss which has not been performed outside of Latvia before. Melbourne’s own koris “Daina” and male choir ” Veseris” were personally selected to perform this. We also have an Arts and Crafts exhibition planned which has not featured as part of the festival for many years.

6. Where can people get more information about the Festival?
The website is almost up and running. Here information will be readily available and constantly updated.

7. The World Latvian Economics and Innovations Forum is also scheduled in Melbourne during these dates. Can you tell me a bit about this event? Will events of both the Festival and Forum overlap?
This event was first hosted in Rīga in 2013, the second in 2015 and it was decided in 2015 that the next event should be held outside Latvia, with Australia selected as the next venue.  The forum will be held on the 29th and 30th December in conjunction with KDs.

8. Which Festival events will those who don’t speak Latvian be able to enjoy?
With two art exhibitions, sports, a youth musical performance, folk dancing, a combined choir concert, a musical (with subtitles), a comedy show, film night etc., there are many events that can be enjoyed by those who don’t speak Latvian.

9. What is the overall feeling within the Melbourne Latvian community, gearing up for the Festival (bearing in mind that it only takes place in Melbourne every six years)?
Melbourne is starting to get the KDs buzz, with many warm-up fundraising events occuring throughout the year.  The Melbourne community is exceptionally supportive of the upcoming KDs festival & looks forward to welcoming interstate visitors & overseas guests alike to its home.

10. What would you like to say to those who live interstate and are thinking of attending the Festival?
This year’s KDs is gearing up to be a big event with a lot to see and do for all people.  We have aimed to keep most of the festival events around the Latvian House hub so that a central location is maintained adding for ease of travel access for guests.

11. Why do you think the Australian Latvian Cultural Festival is still going strong – already into its 56th year?
The festival, although now held every second year, is still going strong because of an ongoing drive within the community for people to identify with their past and their culture. Many of my friends now have children of their own and are back actively in the community exposing their children to the Latvian lifestyle in all its glory.

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.

Kurland Sounds – symphonic works by Šmīdbergs, Ešenvalds and Vasks

Odradek Records, a classical and jazz musical label founded in 2012, considers itself a “democratic, non-profit, artist controlled cooperative label” that determines what to release based on the process of “democratically evaluating anonymously submitted demos”. As a result, the selections released by the label are an eclectic group, and the label has also turned its attention to Latvian artists and compositions.

The first such release focusing on Latvian artists is 2015’s Kurland Sounds, collecting symphonic works by three Latvian composers who originally hailed from the Kurzeme area of Latvia – Vilnis Šmīdbergs, Ēriks Ešenvalds, and Pēteris Vasks. All the works are, appropriately, performed by an orchestra from the Kurzeme region – the Liepāja Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Atvars Lakstīgala. The city has nearly a century and a half of history with symphonic music — the first Baltic symphony orchestra was founded in 1881 in Liepāja.

The first work presented on the CD is composer Vilnis Šmīdbergs’ “Merry-Go-Round” for symphony orchestra. Šmīdbergs, originally from Ventspils, though musical for his entire life, only became a full-fledged composer later in life, though he did dabble in art rock in the 1960s with the group Katedrāle and initial forays into composition with smaller scale chamber and symphonic works in the 1970s/1980s. Now, in the 21st century, Šmīdbergs is an active composer, and his music is described as “harsh and sometimes stinging” but “refreshing”. “Merry-Go-Round” is such a work – presenting the titular carnival ride as a wheel of life, reflecting many different emotions, but with the tragic undertone that we only go in circles – humanity still continues to repeat the same mistakes in terms of war and destruction. In fact, though the merry-go-round is a children’s ride, it can turn into something quite frightful – the work may remind listeners of the out-of-control carousel in the climax of Alfred Hitchcock’s film “Strangers on a Train”. Šmīdbergs presents a vision that is at once humorous and terrifying.

Ēriks Ešenvalds, originally from Priekule, though perhaps best known for his choir works, is also an adept composer of symphonic music. His contribution to this collection is the 4th Liepāja concerto “Visions of Arctic: Night”. Many of Ešenvalds’ works have been inspired by the Northern Lights, and, as per the composer himself, this work includes both elements from Kurzeme and from the Arctic. The clarinet is performed by renowned Latvian clarinetist (and former Latvian Minister of Culture) Ints Dālderis. The windy city of Liepāja and the remote yet beautiful area above the Arctic Circle are presented in dreamy, thoughtful musical language – the first movement concludes with a quiet and light wind symbolizing the city. The second movement presents a picture of the Arctic, though cold and desolate, a place of great wonder and beauty. The third and final movement, a dramatic and stormy journey, brings this journey to a close, with Dalderis bringing the right amount of mystery and wonderment to this expansive landscape. The work is labeled as the “4th Liepāja concerto” as there is an ongoing effort to compose and record twelve concertos by different composers on the theme of the city of Liepāja (and Odradek Records has committed to release all of them when ready).

The album concludes with Pēteris Vasks’ (originally from Aizpute) monumental Symphony No. 2. From its dramatic opening, the work also displays themes of Latvian nature and imagery. Much of Vasks’ music is full of foreboding, about the fragility of life and Latvian flora and fauna, but still some glimmers and rays of hope that it is not too late to preserve all that has been created. The middle section of the symphony, which seems to present a musical view of dawn in the forest, with birds chirping and streams flowing, is a particularly engrossing performance, which then rapidly increases in dramatic tension as the landscape comes under threat. The Liepāja Symphony Orchestra proves to be an exceptional interpreter of this large-scale work, being at once dramatic and reserved, and presents a compelling performance of Vasks’ vivid vision.

The CD booklet has extensive notes on the composers, the works, and the performers in English, German and Latvian, as well as pictures of all of the orchestra members.

Kurland Sounds is a remarkable achievement by the Liepāja Symphony Orchestra and conductor Atvars Lakstīgala. Providing memorable performances of these disparate works, the Orchestra shows its versatility and flexibility. Odradek Records is to be thanked and praised for ensuring that these performances are available for a larger audience, as these composers from Kurzeme confirm that the music of Latvian composers, in the hands of such talented musicians as the Liepāja Symphony Orchestra and Atvars Lakstīgala, is unparalleled in its beauty and creativity.

For further information, please visit the Odradek Records website at  and the Liepāja Symphony Orchestra website.

Liepāja Symphony Orchestra - Kurland Sounds 001

Kurland Sounds

Liepāja Symphony Orchestra
Odradek, ODRCD319, 2015

Track listing:

  1. Merry-Go-Round – Vilnis Šmīdbergs
  2. 4th Liepāja concerto “Visions of Arctic: Night” – Ēriks Ešenvalds – Part I
  3. Part II
  4. Part III
  5. Symphony No. 2 – Pēteris Vasks

 

 

 

 

 

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.