Talk:Music of Lithuania

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is part of the "World music" set of articles nominated for Version 0.7. Discuss this nomination, or see the set nominations page for more details.
This page is part of Wikipedia:WikiProject World music, an attempt at building a resource on the music of all the peoples and places of the world. Please visit the project's listing to see the article's assessment and to help us improve the article as we push to 1.0.
Start Music of Lithuania has been rated as Start-Class on the assessment scale.


Music of Lithuania is within the scope of WikiProject Lithuania, an attempt to build a comprehensive and detailed guide to Lithuania on Wikipedia. To participate simply edit the article or see our to-do list. On the project page we have some tools to help you out. Don't hesitate to ask questions!
Start This article has been rated as start-Class on the quality scale.
Mid This article has been rated as mid-importance on the importance scale.
Comments --Lokyz 08:36, 30 January 2007 (UTC)


[edit] Finno-Ugric?

Since when is Lithuanian music Finno-Ugric? Sure there are some shared elements in traditional music (e.g. KanklÄ—s/Kantele), but this doesn't seem to make sense overall.--Theodore Kloba 14:45, Apr 25, 2005 (UTC)

Good point... minor oversight. A little while ago, Finnish, Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian music were all part of the Nordic music box. I thought they had more in common with each other and decided to switch them out (not only folk music, but in shared recent popular music history). Since we're talking about music, I don't think we should hesitate to use regions that aren't quite the same as standard usage when talking purely geographically -- a musical region doesn't have to be within the same boundaries as a normal region. But, this specific area is not my expertise, so feel free to move stuff around. Tuf-Kat 02:51, Apr 26, 2005 (UTC)
I guess I'm not sure what to do: The issue is not just how Lithuania's music should be classified, since "Finno-Ugric" is a strictly classification of languages, not of musics or cultures.
It may not be a common system, but there are some google hits (Wikipedia doesn't appear to account for any of them). Tuf-Kat 21:09, Apr 26, 2005 (UTC)

[edit] musicbox

Someone might want to create a Musicbox for this article as it expands. Circeus 14:07, 15 March 2006 (UTC)