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Astronuc's recent post about Dardistan and its languages reminded me of the obscure "Baltic Finnish" languages of northern Europe, basically around the Gulf of Finland (today's Finland-adjacent Russia, along with Estonia and Latvia). The Finnish and Estonian languages are alive and well, but they have several close relatives that have tenuous existence.
The Estonian composer Veljo Tormis (1920-2017) wrote a cycle of choral music, settings of folk songs in those languages: Forgotten Peoples (Unustatud rahvad, 1970-89), recorded by the Estonian Philhamonic Chamber Choir conducted by Tõnu Kaljuste, and released on a 2-CD set by the ECM label in 1992. It's apparently available on several streaming services.
From Tormis's notes in the CD booklet (1992):
From Wikipedia:
The Estonian composer Veljo Tormis (1920-2017) wrote a cycle of choral music, settings of folk songs in those languages: Forgotten Peoples (Unustatud rahvad, 1970-89), recorded by the Estonian Philhamonic Chamber Choir conducted by Tõnu Kaljuste, and released on a 2-CD set by the ECM label in 1992. It's apparently available on several streaming services.
- Livonian Heritage
- Votic Wedding Songs
- Izhorian Epic
- Ingrian Evenings
- Vepsian Paths
- Karelian Destiny
From Tormis's notes in the CD booklet (1992):
Veljo Tormis said:All of the Baltic Finns have had a tragic history; they have been trampled from both east and west by so-called liberators during the two great wars of this [20th] century. Hundreds of thousands of people were driven from their homes and scattered over the plains of Russia and Siberia, and the small groups who managed to remain are dying out. By now, all the Livonian, Votic and Izhorian singers, whose voices I still vividly remember, have passed away. I still get a Christmas card every year in Livonian, but for how much longer?
From Wikipedia:
- Livonian: the last native speaker died in 2013.
- Votic: 4 native speakers in 2021.
- Izhorian (Ingrian): 120 native speakers in 2010.
- Ingrian (dialects of Finnish): ?
- Veps: 3600 native speakers in 2010.
- Karelian: 36000 native speakers 1994-2010.