Dzeltenie Pastnieki
Latvian musical group / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Dzeltenie Pastnieki are a Latvian band formed in 1979 in Riga, Latvia. Their name means "the yellow postmen" in Latvian, and is sometimes abbreviated to DzP. They were among the pioneers of new wave as well as reggae in the former Soviet Union. The music has ranged from guitar/bass/drums-based post-punk to minimal synthpop to experimental tape manipulation.
Dzeltenie Pastnieki | |
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Background information | |
Origin | Latvia |
Genres | Synthpop, new wave, post-punk |
Years active | 1979–1987, 1989, 2002-present |
Labels | IB Ieraksti Mikrofona Ieraksti |
Members | Ingus Baušķenieks Viesturs Slava Uģis Vītiņš Fabiass Nils Īle |
Past members | Roberts Gobziņš Andris Kalniņš Mārtiņš Rutkis Ilgvars Rišķis Zigmunds Streiķis |
Website | http://www.draugiem.lv/dzelteniepastnieki |
The constant core members of the band have remained Ingus Baušķenieks (bass, keyboards, vocals) and Viesturs Slava (guitar, keyboards, vocals), with Zigmunds Streiķis (keyboards) and Ilgvars Rišķis (drums) completing the "classic" line-up. Members of the band, past and present, include alumni of the school currently known as Riga State Gymnasium No.1 (formerly Leons Paegle Riga Secondary School No.1): Ingus Baušķenieks, Viesturs Slava, Andris Kalniņš (all 1974), and Mārtiņš Rutkis (1975).[1]
Their first six albums (1981–1987) were home-recorded using consumer tape recorders, and distributed by means of magnitizdat, on 1/4" reel-to-reel tape and compact cassette, with no artwork.[2] Despite popular demand throughout the 1990s, none of these albums was released properly until 2003, when Baušķenieks began issuing them on compact disc on his own label, IB Ieraksti.
Contemporary Latvian composer Mārtiņš Brauns has said that Dzeltenie Pastnieki influenced the entire Latvian scene, including himself, and even Raimonds Pauls.[2] The band's work of the 1980s has often been praised by leading Russian music critic Artemy Troitsky.[3] Also, DzP were the only Latvian-language artists featured in Alexander Kushnir's book 100 магнитоальбомов советского рока (1999, "100 Tape Albums of Soviet Rock"), with dedicated chapters for two of their albums - Bolderājas dzelzceļš (1981) and Alise (1984).[2]