Pērkons (band)

Pērkons (Latvian: thunder) is a Latvian rock band formed in the 1980s. The group's lineup is Juris Kulakovs (keyboard, compositions), Juris Sējāns (bass, vocals), Leons Sējāns (lead guitar), Ieva Akurātere (vocals), Raimonds Bartaševics (vocals), and Ikars Ruņģis (drums).

Pērkons
OriginRiga, Latvia
GenresRock
Years active1981-present[1]
MembersJuris Kulakovs
Ieva Akurātere
Juris Sējāns
Leons Sējāns
Raimonds Bartaševičs
Nauris Puntulis (1982-92)
Dainis Strazdiņš (1981-88)
Māris Students (1981-91)
Ikars Ruņģis (1988-92)

At first, Pērkons played two completely different kinds of music – instrumental classical music, and rock'n'roll bordering on hard rock. The band then became better known for the latter. Their songs became the folklore of the youth, speaking about things nobody else dared to speak about. In 1983, the band was banned by the Soviet power in 1983.however they renamed and continued to play as the Ensemble of the Soviet Latvia Collective Farm,[2]. In 1985, after a concert in Ogre, a group of teenagers demolished two train compartments. After this, the group was banned again immediately, even though it had nothing to do with the incident. The concert, demolished train, and court trials were documented by Juris Podnieks in the film, Is It Easy to Be Young?

After a few more years, in 1987, they arrived to the song festival Liepājas dzintars (English: Amber of Liepāja) as the ensemble of the fishermen's kolkhoz "Selga".

The texts of their music are at least as rebellious as the music itself, mostly written by Māris Melgalvs, one of the best-known examples is Balāde par gulbi. The group has also performed Songs of Fredman by the Swedish 18th century song-poet Carl Michael Bellman.[3]

References

  1. Vanzovičs, Sandris (4 August 2016). "Pērkonam jaunas dziesmas un divi Kulakovi" (in Latvian). nra.lv. Retrieved 5 February 2017.
  2. Bousfeld, Jonathan (2021-04-19). "Gods of thunder: the 80s rock group that shook Soviet Latvia and forged a new youth culture". The Calvert Journal. Retrieved 2021-05-16.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. Bellman utomlands (translates as "Bellman abroad"), article by Hans Nilsson on bellman.net. (Swedish)
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