
“When I begin to sing” sounds like a simple beginning. In an Estonian runic song, it is already a social event.This episode explores Kui mina hakkan laulemaie, a regilaul with roots more than a thousand years old, where a solo voice is never truly alone. The structure is built on repetition, return, and response. A line is answered, echoed, and reshaped by others. What begins as singing becomes something larger: memory, attention, and judgment.The episode places this tradition within a wider runosong world across the Baltic region, from Finnish and Karelian chant to Seto leelo and Lithuanian sutartinės. It then traces how these forms survived into modern Estonia, where folk material became part of national identity and continues to be reinterpreted in contemporary styles.Across choral, jazz, instrumental, and pop versions, the song keeps its core logic intact. The melody circles. The pattern holds. The voice is never entirely its own.
Podzilla Summary coming soon
Sign up to get notified when the full AI-powered summary is ready.
Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.

La Bamba: The Story Behind the Most Famous "Arriba"

Susanna Meets Venus: The Uncomfortable History Behind a Ridiculously Catchy Hook

Hurrian Hymn: What Does a 3,400-Year-Old Song Tell Us Today?

Scarborough Fair: A Love Song Built from Impossible Tasks
Free AI-powered recaps of Songs from the Dead: 10-Minute Histories of Legendary Songs and your other favorite podcasts, delivered to your inbox.
Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.