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INGRIAN EVENINGS

FORGOTTEN PEOPLES

1990-01-01T22:00:00Z

TALLINN

"Ingrian Evenings" is the fouth movement of the monumental series "Forgotten Peoples" that Veljo Tormis based on older folk songs of six endangered Baltic-Finnic peoples.

ESTONIAN PHILHARMONIC CHAMBER CHOIR
CONDUCTOR – TÕNU KALJUSTE

ESTONIAN PUBLIC BROADCASTING ARCHIVE 1990

AUTHOR OF THE IDEA – TÕNU KALJUSTE
DIRECTOR – ELMO LÖÖVE
PRODUCERS – ELA TOMSON AND EEVA POTTER


VELJO TORMIS (1930–2017)
INGRIAN EVENINGS („Ingerimaa õhtud", 1979)
A cycle of Ingrian folk songs, 4th part of series "Forgotten Peoples"
Text: folklore, arranged by Ada Ambus (in Ingrian Finnish)
Dedicated to Tõnu Kaljuste
1. Röntyshkä (A Dance Song) I
2. Röntyshkä (A Dance Song) II
3. Röntyshkä (A Dance Song) III
4. Chastushka (Swing Song) I
5. Chastushka (Swing Song) II
6. Circle Game Song
7. Röntyshkä (Dance Song) IV
8. Röntyshkä (Dance Song) V
9. Ending and Going Home


Veljo Tormis composed the monumental series "Forgotten Peoples" for mixed choir as a collective musical portrait of six Baltic-Finnic peoples nearing extinction and based it on their older folk songs.

The impressive set of six cycles composed between 1970 and 1989 is based on archaic runic songs of six Baltic-Finnic peoples – Livonians, Votes, Izhorians, Vepsians, Ingrians and Karelians. Veljo Tormis has said that he wrote "Forgotten Peoples" at the time when these peoples were facing extinction and being forgotten by the world and perhaps by us as well. The folk singers whose songs Tormis used in his compositions are now all gone. Many of the Baltic-Finnic peoples have almost disappeared and some of the languages have only a few speakers left. Veljo Tormis has given all of them an eternal life in music, however, and would not let us forget that there was a time when these languages were thought to last forever in songs.

The series includes six cycles – "Livonian Heritage" („Liivlaste pärandus”, 1970), "Votic Wedding Songs" („Vadja pulmalaulud”, 1971), "Izhorian Epic" („Isuri eepos”, 1975), "Ingrian Evenings" („Ingerimaa õhtud”, 1979), "Vepsian Paths" („Vepsa rajad”, 1983), and "Karelian Destiny" („Karjala saatus”, 1989). Tõnu Kaljuste and the Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir premiered the entire series at the House of Nobility in Helsinki on two consecutive evenings in 1989. They have performed the series in many countries and recorded it on the "Forgotten Peoples" CD (ECM, 1992) which is the most highly valued carrier of Tormis’ music in the world.

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