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Estonian song of the month.
cookign is fun
Veljo Tormis "Raua needmine / Curse Upon Iron/ Dzelzs apvÄrdoÅ”ana" (by ralfens)
Most gay men my age are like: "So KP's new album, let's talk bout that" and I'm like: "let's get coffee and discuss contemporary Baltic choral music."

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Veljo Tormis in 2004.
Veljo TormisĀ (born 7 August 1930 inĀ Kuusalu) is anĀ EstonianĀ composer, regarded as one of the greatest living choral composers[1][2]Ā and one of the most important composers of the 20th century in Estonia.[3]Ā Internationally, his fame arises chiefly from his extensive body of choral music, which exceeds 500 individualĀ choralĀ songs, most of itĀ a cappella. The great majority of these pieces are based on traditional ancient EstonianĀ folksongsĀ (regilaulud), either textually, melodically, or merely stylistically.
His composition most often performed outside Estonia,Ā Curse Upon IronĀ (Raua needmine) (1972), invokes ancientĀ ShamanisticĀ traditions to construct an allegory about the evils of war. Some of his works were banned by the Soviet government, but because folk music was fundamental to his style most of his compositions were accepted by the censors.
More recently, Tormis' works have been lionized in worldwide performances and several recordings by Tõnu Kaljuste and the Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir. In the 1990s, Tormis also began to receive commissions from some of the pre-eminent a cappella groups in the West such as the King's Singers and the Hilliard Ensemble.
Tormis has famously said of his settings of traditional melodies and verse: "It is not I who makes use of folk music, it is folk music that makes use of me."[3]His work demonstrates his conviction that traditional Estonian and otherĀ Balto-FinnicĀ music represents a treasure which must be guarded and nourished, and that culture may be kept alive through the medium of song.[3]
Incantatio Maris Aestuosi -Ā Veljo Tormis
Performed by Cantus
This song was composed for mourning over 800 people who sank with ferry 'Estonia' in Baltic sea in September 28th, 1994
Lauliku LapsepƵli (The Singer's Childhood), Veljo Tormis, 1966 Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir