We’ve updated our Terms of Use to reflect our new entity name and address. You can review the changes here.
We’ve updated our Terms of Use. You can review the changes here.

Bear Awakener

by Tuomas Rounakari

/
  • Streaming + Download

    Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    Purchasable with gift card

      €15 EUR  or more

     

  • Compact Disc (CD) + Digital Album

    Includes unlimited streaming of Bear Awakener via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    ships out within 7 days
    Purchasable with gift card

      €22 EUR or more 

     

1.
(The track is instrumental, but this is an excerpt from a Bear Awakening song from the Mansi people) Awake, dear animal! Arise, dear animal! The red of dawn, your dear aunt Rose to the top of a shallow tree  Rose to the lower branch of a tall tree Living in your dark forest  Living in your thick forest You were a swamp-dwelling cub awakening at dawn You were a forest-dwelling cub awaking early  While walking the seven nooks of the dark forest  while walking the six nooks of the dark forest No winged animal used to awake earlier than you No footed animal used to awake earlier than you How does the well-rooted dream move in you? How do the vapours of fresh-roots move you in dream?
2.
3.
4.
A woman waking up early,  all her washing water she throws over you. Sweeps the dust from the floor, swings it all over you The light-of-dawn, your aunt is already glowing in red,  Arise, dear-one, arise! (As sung by Semeon Paitkin)
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.

about

The Bears in Helsinki Korkeasaari Zoo awoke well over a month earlier than usual on 5th of February 2016. It had been an alarmingly warm winter but it did not quite feel like an adequate explanation. The very same day, we had our premier of a Bear Feast performance in another part of town. It included a Khanty Bear Awakening Song that we had been practising the whole week intensely.

Had the bears reacted to our call? How thin is the line between possible and impossible? How deep is our dream?

My passion towards the music of Khanty and Mansi was awakened in the turn of millennium. I felt in their music a connection with my own hunter gatherer ancestors, music that is intertwined with nature and deeply connected with the land. That family relation shows up in many places; structures of language, fishing methods and hunting gear, cosmology, a 5-stringed musical instrument and one of the oldest myths we have in Finland - The Bear Origin Myth.

As a violinist, the most natural way to study this connection was to play and re-arranged vocal songs into violin tunes. After doing that for over ten years, I managed to buy newly built Khanty and Mansi instruments in Khanty-Mansiysk in 2009. Among them a ning-juh played on this record.

A late evening in May, Khanty-Mansiysk, we sat by the fire with a friendly group including a Mansi musician Emil Kospolov. He tested the new instruments and that was my first lesson on how to play them. Later that night, exchanging songs and playing to each other, I picked up my violin and started playing my arrangements of the Khanty Bear Feast songs. I also wanted direct feedback on my creative take on their traditional music. Had I understood it? Kospolov stated that my versions had so much originality that they were almost new compositions, but nevertheless they included all the essential elements of the tradition. It’s hard to say which one of us was more touched by this evening - a musical meeting bending centuries of distance.

Returning to Khanty-Mansiysk in Oct 2014, I interviewed a master singer Maria Kuzminitchna Voldina about the origin of musical characteristics in Khanty folk songs. She brought along a bag full of sticks, twigs, stones, bark and so on. For the next hour she picked them up and stroked things together with slight differences. Slowly the subtle differences grew to significant ones as my listening went deeper and deeper. Then she explained that this type of listening was a vital part of the musical upbringing of Khanty children. In a broader perspective, their survival was based on instantly understanding the difference between an insignificant snap of a pine tree reacting to a dropping temperature and the most significant yet similar sound created by an animal on the south-side of that same pine tree. For Voldina, the oldest layer of melodies were nature's movement in a musical form. Movement that never repeated itself exactly the same.

On this album I have focused on that kind of natural movement. It happens outside of keeping the tempo and staying in tune. I chose to use raw-gut strings on violin to get my fingers on something less technological and more alive. All songs in this album are traditional, but this music is how I respond to the spirit of these songs in my own personal way. Without the guidance and encouragement from Emil Kospolov and Maria Voldina I never would have come this far.

credits

released April 14, 2022

license

all rights reserved

tags

about

Tuomas Rounakari Finland

Violinist, composer and ethnomusicologist from Kokkola, Finland.

contact / help

Contact Tuomas Rounakari

Streaming and
Download help

Redeem code

Report this album or account

If you like Tuomas Rounakari, you may also like: