“There I Found a Bone Pipe”: On the Folk Songs and Self-Identification of Laine Mägi Cover Image

Säält ma löüdse luidsõ lutu ehk Hiiumaal elava võrukesest pärimusekandja Laine Mägi regilauludest ja enesemääratlusest
“There I Found a Bone Pipe”: On the Folk Songs and Self-Identification of Laine Mägi

Author(s): Helen Kõmmus
Subject(s): Customs / Folklore
Published by: Eesti Kirjandusmuuseum
Keywords: folk song; folklore collection; regilaul or Kalevala-metric folk song; Võru culture; Võru language

Summary/Abstract: The article discusses written and video material recorded from Laine Mägi, a folklore informant who was born in Võru County, South Estonia, but is living on the island of Hiiumaa. The materials were recorded during the folklore collection on the islandi n 2004–2007. The collected materials include fifteen Kalevala-metric end-rhymed folk songs (regilaul) in dialect and literary language. A more detailed discussion involves three Kalevala-metric folk songs in Võru dialect: “Veli ai ussõ” [‘Brother Drove Me out’], a song about family relationships, “Vanamiis minno kose” [‘An Old Man Proposed Marriage to Me’], a song about proposing marriage, and “Väikene olli” [‘When I Was Young’], a song about orphanhood. These three songs are analysed from the angle of formal rules and dialectal language, and the collected material is discussed from the aspect of the performer’s biography and the social contex

  • Issue Year: 2009
  • Issue No: 41
  • Page Range: 123-134
  • Page Count: 12
  • Language: Estonian