Žalvarinis

Žalvarinis (English: made from brass) is a folk rock band from Vilnius, Lithuania. They were formed in 2001 as a collaboration between the pagan metal group Ugnėlakis and the pagan folk group Kūlgrinda. This was reflected in the title of their debut album in 2002, Ugnėlakis su Kūlgrinda.

Žalvarinis
Performing at "Rock nights 2005" festival
Background information
OriginVilnius, Lithuania
GenresFolk rock, World music
Years active2001–present
LabelsNone
Associated actsUgnėlakis
Marijonas MIkutavičius
Kūlgrinda
Websitehttp://www.zalvarinis.lt/
MembersRobertas Semeniukas
Sigita Jonynaitė-Būdienė

Style

The lyrics for band's songs are usually taken from the folklore of Lithuanian people and are sung in their original Lithuanian language. Žalvarinis' music frequently features singing technique of traditional Lithuanian sutartinė (a form of glee), usually sung by band's three female singers – examples of sutartinė can be heard in tracks Ailiom susėdom, Dijūta or Ožys. Authentic pronunciation as well as ancient words and their forms in folk songs are also usually preserved by the band. As a legacy of Kūlgrinda, the band also features few folk-songs of Old Prussians.

Žalvarinis's sound, on the other hand, while still influenced by traditional Lithuanian folk music, is more modern – generally speaking, it's a mix of traditional heavy metal and progressive rock. The first album of the band was metal-influenced, however with later albums, the sound becomes more progressive.

The song Aš kanapį sėjau (I Sowed a Hemp), taken from the 2005 album Žalio vario was featured on Transformations in Lithuanian Song – a 2006 compilation CD that covered the development of Lithuanian folk music over many years, published by the Lithuanian-American journal Lituanus.

Members

Current members

  • Robertas Semeniukas – vocals, electric, acoustic & slide guitars, keyboards, music director
  • Justė Kraujelytė - vocals
  • Sigita Jonynaitė-Būdienė – vocals
  • Domas Žostautas - bass guitar
  • Jonas Lengvinas - drums

Former members

  • Ineta Meduneckytė-Tamošiūnienė – vocals
  • Laurita Peleniūtė – vocals
  • Paulius Jaskūnas – bass guitar
  • Simonas Gudelis – drums
  • Aurimas Lemežis – bass guitar
  • Marius Būda – electric guitar
  • Ramūnas Pocius – vocals, pipes
  • Eglė Pakšytė – vocals
  • Dariush Loznikoff – bass
  • Demonas – bass
  • Arūnas Lukaševičius – bass
  • Ilja Molodcov – drums
  • Aidas Buivydas – guitar

Discography

  • Ugnėlakis su Kūlgrinda (2002, Bomba records)
  • Žalio vario (2005, Prior music) translates as [Made] of Green Copper, green copper being an archaic name for brass)
  • Folk n' Rock (2008, Monako Productions)
  • Gyvas (2014, Robertas Semeniukas)
  • Teka (2016, Robertas Semeniukas)
  • Einam Tolyn (2018, Robertas Semeniukas)
  • The Best of Žalvarinis (2019, Robertas Semeniukas)

Further reading

  • Strmiska, Michael F. (2012). "Paganism-inspired folkmusic/Folkmusic-inspired paganism". In Cusack, Carole M.; Norman, Alex (eds.). Handbook of New Religions and Cultural Production. Handbooks on Contemporary Religion. 4. BRILL. pp. 364–368. ISBN 9789004221871.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
gollark: It turns out that there's actually somewhat significant demand for such a thing, so I've tweaked the format and now people are working on alternative encoders/players.
gollark: Remember my tape shuffler program thing which runs the music in my base?
gollark: `est potatOS.disable_ezcopy false`.
gollark: Luca_S: you can force-enable EZCopy.
gollark: Hi. Who pinged me?
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.