Thursday 30 April 2015

Day One

Monday, 13th of April

We arrived in Rome on Sunday afternoon. The flight was pleasant and we got a great view over the Alps. We took the buss from Fiumicino's airport  towards Albano Laziale and the trip took almost two hours because of the traffic, though it was just about 30 kilometers. When we finally got to Albano, our host families were already waiting for us.




Our first day in Albano started with going to classes. The experience was very different from the Finnish school system.



Lake Albano


In the evening we went back to our host families to enjoy an Italian dinner.




/ Maj

Sunday 26 April 2015

Italian school

13th - 15th April

The Finnish students were visiting the lessons in Liceo Ugo Foscolo and learning by experience how the Italian school works.

The Italian students had prepared a lecture about the history of Albano.

Physical education

Ping-pong

/ prof Aija Viita

photo: prof. Maria Vittoria Marini Bettolo Marconi

Monday 20 April 2015

Together!

14th April: The Italians and Finns in the amphitheater in Albano Laziale.

photo: prof. Niina Väntänen, Kallion lukio

Sunday 12 April 2015

Greetings from airport!

The time has come, we are on the airport!! 

"We are f*cking exited"

Some of us bought coffee and Tuulia bought cinnamon bun as well. Our flight leaves at 15:55 and feelings are unreal! We are listening to Jungle Drum!

Now we are leaving Cafe Tori.

Cinnamon bun

Coffee time at the Helsinki airport 

-Emma, Maj and Iita <3


Friday 10 April 2015

Folk dance


Traditions through dance
I hear distant music walking through the  front door while arriving on Wednesday evening to Karjalatalo in Käpylä, Helsinki. The youngest kids have just gotten out of their practice  and are dancing happily towards their parents to catch up on what new they have learned today. The teenagers have just gotten back from the local K-market Masurkka and bought snacks for the night and are sitting in the back corner taking selfies and discussing about today’s school food.  On the other side of the lobby the adults are laughing hard to some new cool happening and doing warm ups for their practice. My friends sit around small table speaking excitedly about our new performing dresses when I arrive greeting everyone. In this certain moment there is something that brings us all together. We all have the same hobby, Finnish folk dance known also as “tanhu”.


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Well, what is it?

Finnish folk dance Finland’s traditional dance form which has developed mostly from variations of old court and ballroom dances once fashionable all over Europe and they are better preserved than elsewhere. In the eyes of foreigners it may look very different from the other dances of other European nations. Most of the dances we know were collected in the beginning of 18th century to represent Finnish dance heritage and even today some of the dances are danced all over Finland. Based on the collecting  a certain working group started to define Finnish folk dance and put every found dance including vocabulary for all shapes, steps and positions into one book called “Tanhuvakka”, which has become bible of Finnish folk dance.




In the study of Finnish folklore three distinctly different regions emerge: the Swedish-speaking coast, the Orthodox areas of Karelia in the east, and the rest of Finland. The first two of these have preserved many older dance forms because of their peripheral location. Besides, in these regions religion has always rather favoured dancing. The dances collected among the Swedish-speaking Finns have to a certain degree been influenced by Swedish dances. Stylistically, however, they belong to the Finnish dance tradition.


Karelian dances allow the dancers more liberty to improvise within the figures of the dance than those of western Finland, where the rules are quite strict. The dances of eastern Karelia show some Russian influence, e.g. in the form of men’s solos, which do not appear elsewhere in Finland.









Here are a few videos about Finnish folk dances:


 

 


Traditional Karelian dance by Junnut/ISOn Tanhuujat




The most typical feature is the numerous repetitions - first gentlemen then ladies, first clockwise then anti-clockwise, etc. Rhythms are usually simple but they have great variety in tempo, mood, steps and figures. There is a surprising difference between the brisk and lively polka and the solemn, melancholic minuet. The main explanation for this variety is that dances deriving from different ages and cultural backgrounds have been preserved in Finland. Next year, 2016, Finnish folk dance turns years when 150 years has been from the first official Finnish folk dance performance.


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I get often asked about my hobby cause it isn’t the most wanted and popular hobby to have. In Finland people often get this image of middle-aged men and women dancing clumsily to a badly played polka or humppa and get the wrong picture of todays folk music and dance. It is nothing like it used to be in the 80s or 60s! Well, of course there are those middle-aged men and women dancing without rhythm and singing loudly that traditional melody but it isn’t absolutely the whole case. Finnish folk dance changes constantly where as people develop. 
Tanhuvakka is the bible, but it is also the base 
to build on to. When you know all steps and shapes, it is easy to variate those and put own twist on to dances or build completely own ones. Tanhuvakka is full of dances to dance, but it is also allowed to change those as much as you want. There is also no limits for the music, but it is rather Finnish music and most likely folk music, but I’ve seen many different performances from heavy metal to Robin’s Boom Kah. In performances it is prefered to have live music as it used to be back in the old days. Finnish folk dance has spread it’s wings also into the world of dance motion classes. Few years back this motive dance form FolkJam was created by Oulu university benefiting the traditional dance moves and Finnish folk music.




My mom put me to a first dance practice when I was 3 years old and still here I am dancing 14 years later enjoying it. I dance in a dance group called “Roigu” and teach with my friend one group for 8-11 old girls and boys named “Jenga”. We make our own choreographies and design our dance costumes by ourselves respecting the traditions but whilst creating something new and exciting.  In our rehearsals we dance, sing, play different games and the most importantly have fun.  We learn new techniques and dances and each group produces a performance which is judged annually in the classification event somewhere in Finland.

My group Roigu performing at the classification event last year.



Junnut performing at annual Finnish folk dance and music cruise Folklandia.


Finnish folk dance is a dance form where you get to travel without being high-class and overly talented. Via folk dance I have went to Norway, Denmark and Iceland, I have cruised in the Baltic sea boat full of other dancers, gotten to be a part of Finnish- Estonian dance piece with over 4000 other folk dancers and much more. I think Finnish folk dance is worth trying nowadays. Next time someone tells you that they dance Finnish folk dance, I hope you see them in a new light.



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Our accommodation school room while visiting Iceland last summer.
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Roigu performing.
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Two group pictures from Iceland.
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Me and my friend Vilma at Karjalainen karonkka cruise in our performance costumes.
-Anni



Wednesday 8 April 2015

A Saturday evening in Castelli Romani

DISCOVER ANCIENT AND MODERN ALBANO

What to do and see in the little city near the beautiful Rome


40.872 inhabitants and a beautiful history :
It’s Albano Laziale, one of the most animated and important districts of Castelli Romani, considered very interesting because of its archaeology: in fact it seems to coincide with the old latin capital “ Alba Longa”, legendary built by Ascania, Enea’s son.

There are many interesting places to visit, let’s begin with the “Anfiteatro Severiano”: built in 300 A.D. by legions, It could host up to 16.000 people, so it was called “ Little Colosseo”. It changed through the years: During the Middle Age It was a cave, in the XI century It was a burial ground and and Nowadays It’s where “ Anfiteatro Festival” takes place. The Anfiteatro Festival is an event where you can listen to classical music, jazz, opera, and see plays and dances. 
 
Another place to visit are the “Cisternoni”: they are ancient tanks that receive water from lake Albano. They guaranteed water to all the ancient inhabitants. They are still well functioning.

But what about Nowadays? Walking along the two main streets you can find all sorts of shops, restaurants, pizzerias and bars. One of the most loved places is “Pompi” on Corso Matteotti, a pastry shop where you can taste lots of different “Tiramisù” from chocolate to strawberries. Another nice place(where you can also sit) is “Fortini”, one of the historical bars of Albano: you can taste a great variety of different ice creams, all made with fresh fruits.

Also you are going to visit Albano in September be sure not to miss “ Bajocco Festival”: good music and streets artists exhibit along the streets and hand crafters and artists expose their works on little stands where you can find everything from original clothes and jewellery to elf ears!
There are lots of places to discover in this little city.. enjoy your stay!!

Written by: Gaia Barocci
 III D liceo Ugo Foscolo, Albano laziale.