Leena Joutsenlahti
Makale
15.99
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Listen to MP3 samples
Pluus
Valssi
Viime (Last)
Leena Joutsenlahti (alto recorder, soprano recorder, wooden flute, goat's horn, overtone flute, shepherds horn, 15 stringed kantele, harmonium, voice)
Eero Grundström (harmonium), Minna Ilmonen (violin), Topi Korhonen (guitars), Teemu Korpipää (sampler), Anita Lehtola (voice), Ricardo Padilla (lepenelauta and cahón), Hanni-Mari Turunen (violin), Timo Väänänen (21 stringed kantele)
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"Makale
is a journey: a road and another road. Endless variations without a theme, melodies soaring over a base note in the lowest
depths, aesthetics that have withstood the test of millenia. Poised on the forest path with her pipe is a shepherdess,
listening to the echo. Taking her whistle from its pouch she confides to the echo her joys and sorrows. A versatile
musician: (almost ten on this record). A matchless teacher of fanciful variation and improvisation. After completing her
studies of the classical recorder, Leena Joutsenlahti was one of the first to apply for the Sibelius Academy’s new Folk
Music Department in 1983. She soon became known as a member of the Niekku folk music ensemble, later from concerts
with many other groups and recordings, in theatre and dance productions. This first disc of her very own contains
memories of many journeys. The life of anyone intrested in ancient folk instruments is not an easy one: the archives are
silent, the facts scattered far and wide.There is little to catch hold of. Thus the only alternative is to use one’s imagination
and to journey into the past, to drink in the archaic features of the Finnish mind. Along the way, the traveller may be
astonished to encounter peasant women as musicians. From the cliff faces bounced the melodies heard by Carl Axel
Gottlund at Juva in 1815 as the maidens played upon their horns, and as they whistled in the forests. Or as these same
lasses set the pace for the dancing at a wedding, while "the peasant lads drank themselves under the table, a few played
cards and a few sang the poems of ancient times". And what about Liisa Pessi, a woman of 72 whom A .0. Väisänen met
and photographed and whose melodies he jotted down a hundred years later on the Karelian Isthmus, where "as the sun
lights up the evening sky, the shrill dance tunes played by the shepherd’s on their horns can be heard kilometres away
amid the tinkling of the cowbells". A firm grasp of the horn and a farseeing gaze: she could be a great-great-grandmother,
at least in dreams and music. The chaos along the road has given way to an ordered musical world: emotion and will, pure and burning, cleansed by the heat. Maybe this world is an unusual one, after the polskas and waltzes of western Finland. Sähköpaimen (Live wire) is like a premonitory dream operating at many levels, a shepherd’s nightmare. And although Kariitti and Sähköpaimen may, side by side, seem like two diametrically opposed extremes, they too, on closer hearing, are found to inhabit the same harmonius world. An archaic mindscapes in the modern world. Valssi (Waltz) sums up the whole imaginary journey, the coarse, archive sound of the beginning being moulded by the force of invention into a pure echo of eras past and the joyous asynchrony of instruments in consorts. It is strange how only the very latest music technology seems to be able to capture the most archaic sound of all, to accompany the mind on a journey into the past. The lifelong project of Leena Joutsenlahti to gain an insight into the essence of variation relying solely on the memory, and to appreciate the aesthetics and feel for life of Liisa Pessi and the lasses at Juva has produced music impossible to describe in words. It simply has to be heard!" - Heikki Laitinen |
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