" performing at the festival of
Baltic crafts and
warfare "
Apuolė 854" in Apuolė Castle mound, August 2009 Traditional Latvian
folklore, especially the dance of the
folk songs, date back well over a thousand years. More than 1.2 million texts and 30,000 melodies of folk songs have been identified. Dainas are very short, which usually consist only one or two stanzas, are unrhymed, and are in a four-footed trochaic metre. Lyrically, dainas concern themselves with native mythology, but in contrast to most similar forms, do not have any legendary
heroes. Stories often revolve around pre-Christian deities like the
sun goddess Saule, the
moon god Mēness and, most notably, the life of people, especially its three most important events – birth, wedding, and death (including burial). The first collection of dainas was published between 1894 and 1915 as
Latvju Dainas by
Krišjānis Barons. .
Latvju tautas mūzikas materiāli, translated in English as the Materials of Latvian Folk Music, is the anthology and commentary of Latvian folk. It analysed 5999 items of Latvian ethnography published in 6 editions from 1894 to 1926 by the Latvian musicologist and composer
Andrejs Jurjāns (1856–1922).
Latvju tautas mūzikas materiāli Sestā grāmata (the sixth book) was published posthumously in Riga, 1926. On page 1
latvju komponistu biedrības izdevums is inscribed, translated as the Latvian Society of Composers edition. ==Instrumentation==