
In a month, Baltic Music Days 2026 will begin in Riga and Liepaja. With 15 worldpremieres, 9 concert programs, more than 32 additional performances, internationaldelegates and long-term collaboration with composers’ unions of Nordic countries, thefestival with a motto “We Live In Different Times” will begin on April 9 at 17:00 at the RigaCentral Station. “Prelude to Different Times” will transform the station for 20 minutes: thepop-up opening event will feature Latvian choirs “Juventus”, “Minjona” and“Dziesmuvara” led by conductor Valdis Tomsons, performing Finnish composer TyttiArola’s work for voices and tin can telephones.
Finnish composer Tytti Arola’s phōnḗ (20’) for voices and tin can telephones was chosen for theopening event on purpose. The title brings together phōnḗ –“sound, voice, speech, language” –and tēle – “far away, distant.” Each singer makes their own tin can telephone to sing into and“speak” through; during the piece, the choir sends imagined greetings across the world. phōnḗis a reminder to listen to one another, to say what matters, and to stay playful – even acrossdistance.
“The festival begins where time is always in motion: Riga Central Station. Between arrivals anddepartures, clock-time can suddenly turn into presence – listening as a way of meeting”, – saysKrists Auznieks, chairman of the board of the Latvian Composers’ Union and artistic director ofthe festival.
Commissioned for Nordic Music Days 2024 (with support from the Royal Scottish NationalOrchestra and the Danish Ministry of Culture), this performance becomes a symbolic bridgebetween Riga and Liepāja, the Baltics and Scandinavia, past and future, inner and outer time.At the “Prelude to Different Times” choirs “Juventus”, “Minjona” and “Dziesmuvara” will perform,conducted by Valdis Tomsons. Free admission – the concert will be open to everyone.
The “Baltic Music Days 2026. We Live in Different Times” is a central contemporary music eventin the Baltic states, annually rotating between Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania. This year, the
festival initiates a close collaboration not only with the Nordic Music Days but also thecomposers’ associations of Finland, Sweden, Iceland, Norway, Denmark, Scotland, and theFaroe Islands. As a result, the programmes will feature not only outstanding works by Balticcomposers, but also significant music from the Nordic countries, allowing us to betterunderstand and appreciate our closest neighbours.
The festival program: