Phenomenon of the Baltic Singing Revolution in 1987–1991: Three Latvian Songs as Historical Symbols of Non-Violent Resistance

Authors

Keywords:

fall of communist regime, singing revolution, Latvian cultural-historical traditions, songs, symbols

Abstract

The denomination singing revolution (coined by Estonian artist Heinz Valk, b. 1936) is commonly used for events in Baltic States between 1987 and 1991 that led to the restoration of the independence of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. Three songs – the folk song Pūt, vējiņi! (Blow, Wind!), the choir song Gaismas pils (The Castle of Light) by the national classical composer Jāzeps Vītols (1863–1948) and the song Saule, Pērkons, Daugava (Sun, Thunder, Daugava) by the composer Mārtiņš Brauns (1951) – at that time in Latvia had a special significance in society. Each song represented references to different layers in Latvian cultural and political history. The characteristics of the three songs in the Singing Revolution process are based on the approach and methodology of distant (objective) analysis of cultural context and recent historical experience. As a result, this article reveals the meaning and reception of the three songs as symbols of nonviolent resistance during the fall of communist regime in Latvia in the late 1980s.

References

King, Olga Viola (2012) “Latvia’s Unique Path Toward Independence: The Challenges Associated With The Transition From A Soviet Republic To An Independent State”, International Social Science Review 87, No. 3/4: 127–154.

Maimets, Kaire (2016) “Estonian Singing Revolution: Musematic insights”. In Ivana Perković (ed.) Musical Identities and European Perspective: an Interdisciplinary Approach, Bern: Peter Lang Verlag.

Martinelli, Dario (2014) The Lithuanian Singing Revolution as Cultural Heritage and Source of Soft Power http://www.iass-ais.org/proceedings2014/view_lesson.php?id=149

Miniotaite, Grazina (2002) Nonviolent Resistance in Lithuania: A Story of Peaceful Liberation, Cambridge, MA: The Albert Einstein Institution.

Subrenat, Jean-Jacques (2004) Estonia: Identity and Independence, Amsterdam/New York: Rodopi.

Šmidchens, Guntis (2013) The Power of Song: Nonviolent National Culture in the Baltic Singing Revolution, Seattle, WA: University of Washington Press.

Thomson, Clare (1992) The Singing Revolution: A Political Journey through the Baltic States, London: Joseph.

Valk, Heinz (1988) “Laulev revolutsionn“, Sirp ja Vasar (Tallinn), 1988, June 17. Vesilind, Priit (2008) Singing Revolution How Culture Saved a Nation, Tallinn: Varrak Publishers.

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Published

16.10.2024

How to Cite

“Phenomenon of the Baltic Singing Revolution in 1987–1991: Three Latvian Songs As Historical Symbols of Non-Violent Resistance”. 2024. MUZIKOLOGIJA-MUSICOLOGY, no. 26 (October): 27-39. https://muzikologija-musicology.com/index.php/MM/article/view/181.

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