Nonetheless, Jauna Muzika weaves between different epochs and styles, producing one programme with the alternative world music band Merope and diving into archaic folk songs, and the next with American post-minimalist David Lang, together reproducing the hypnotic effect of his music. “We are quite versatile,” says the choir director, “though I think we should no longer take on early music (because it requires narrower specialisation), gospels, spirituals, pop show style... Of course, with some rare exceptions. The tendencies of the choir’s repertoire are changing – although I personally find the music of the 20th and 21st centuries the most interesting.”
Vaclovas Augustinas is a multifaceted figure in Lithuanian music: he is also a rock musician who has played with the legendary Lithuanian bands Antis and Saulės Laikrodis (Sundial), and a composer whose works are eagerly included by various choirs and music publishers into their repertoire, as well as professor and head of the Department of Composition at the Lithuanian Academy of Music and Theatre. For at least the last two reasons, the focus of the choir Jauna Muzika is the development and promotion of Lithuanian choral music. For more than a decade, Jauna Muzika together with the Lithuanian Composers’ Union has been organising the young composers’ choral music competition Vox Juventutis, providing debut authors with a practical creative platform.Vox Juventutis constantly attracts the attention of young composers. A competition of such format is probably one of the best ways to practice, test one’s knowledge, discover one’s unique composing style, and test one’s ability to write choral scores that are then performed by the professional choir, Jauna Muzika, in concert. For emerging composers, this is an opportunity to experiment, to get acquainted with the peculiarities of choir singing, the possibilities of the human voice, and for Lithuanian choirs – a chance to discover new names.
According to musicologist Vytautė Markeliūnienė, the choir Aidija is distinguished not only by its youthful intensity and fresh creative spirit but also by its selected programmes and the unexpected interplay between details and the whole. Performative elements, rituality, extended ways of performing and the use of archaic instruments comprise another strong feature of Aidija, formed by a long-standing authentic connection with the music by the Lithuanian composer Bronius Kutavičius. Ritualistic, elemental, graphic oratorios by the composer of the ‘pagan avant-garde’ – The Last Pagan Rites (1978), From the Yotvingian Stone (1983) or The Magic Circle of Sanskrit (1990) – are deeply rooted in the repertoire of the ensemble and are actively performed both in Lithuania and abroad.
Back in 2001, the record label Ondine released a CD of the choir performing Bronius Kutavičius’ pieces entitled The Last Pagan Rites, which was rated with five stars by international experts. This year, the choir recorded the composer's oratorios again, this time for a vinyl record released by the Music Information Centre Lithuania – and with such fervour that even the great stones of the Baltic lands used in the performance which have long come to be seen as relics by performers were cracking. Thus, it can be said that this creative and personal connection with Kutavičius shaped some of the distinctive features of the choir.“I met the composer Bronius Kutavičius around 1976 as a student at the M. K. Čiurlionis School of Art,” recalls the artistic director of Aidija. “At the time, he was working at the school and taught me score reading. It was from him that I experienced a slightly different ‘feeling’ of a lesson: it was not that important to ‘deliver,’ which was usual at the time, but rather to discover and understand. Later, while rehearsing Kutavičius’ works, I used to invite the composer to rehearsals, hoping for his advice on performing. However, he amazed me with a completely different view of the world, understanding of the situation and his compositional hearing. Initially, I even felt disappointed because I didn't get any tips from the artist... He kept wanting to hear if there was music in the piece he wrote. He kept saying: “Sing, sing, please! I want to hear if there is the music I imagined.”
Aidija’s repertoire also includes the music of other Lithuanian composers. The choir was the first to perform large-scale scores by Onutė Narbutaitė, Algirdas Martinaitis and Osvaldas Balakauskas. It regularly presents fresh premieres at the Thomas Mann Music Festival in Nida. Aidija takes on the most diverse repertoire of professional Lithuanian music, from the works of the classic M. K. Čiurlionis to the creative puzzles of the most radical experimenter Rytis Mažulis. In general, Aidija’s repertoire is especially marked by variety, including works from all epochs of Western music history, from Gregorian chants to the 21st-century compositions.Indeed, during the 30 years of Lithuanian independence, the professional growth of the Lithuanian choir community has been uneven: visible and progressing, yet in some places still inhibited, as if drowning in the abundance of the cultural field, and sometimes irregular, when something is only being done ‘from project to project.’ Therefore, the fact that Jauna Muzika and Aidija survived to this day in such a turbulent context of changing times is an exceptional phenomenon, especially having in mind that both choirs continue to seek new directions for development and operate with great vitality.
Translated from the Lithuanian by Julija Gulbinovič