List of music festivals in Estonia
This is an incomplete list of music festivals held yearly in Estonia:
| Name | Estonian name | Location | Time | Years | Link | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amme Rock | Vasula | July | 1997–present | ||||
| August Blues Festival | Augustibluus | Haapsalu | August | 2004–present | |||
| Baroque Musique Festival | Barokkmuusikafestival | Estonian National Opera, Tallinn | January/February | 2006–present | |||
| International Choir Festival Tallinn | Koorifestival Tallinn | Tallinn | April | held every two years | |||
| Eclectica | Tartu | beginning of September | Avant Garde Culture Festival | ||||
| Estonian Mixed Choirs' Competition | Eesti segakooride võistulaulmine | Tartu | February | 1993–present | |||
| Estonian Song Festival | Laulupidu | Tallinn Song Festival Grounds, Tallinn | July | 1869–present | held every five years | ||
| Glasperlenspiel Music Festival | Klaaspärlimäng | Tartu, Tallinn, Pärnu, Jõhvi, Vormsi | June–July | 1995–present | |||
| Green Christmas | Rakvere | December | 1996–present | ||||
| Hard Rock Laager | Vana-Vigala | July | 2002–present | ||||
| Hard Rock Laager | Vana-Vigala | July | 2002–present | ||||
| Intsikurmu Music Festival | Põlva | 2013–present | |||||
| Jazzkaar | 1990–present | ||||||
| Kuressaare Chamber Music Days | Kuressaare Kammermuusika Päevad | Kuressaare | focused on chamber music | ||||
| Laulusillad | Tallinn | July | 1991 | ||||
| Lelle Alternatiiv | Lelle | July | 2004–present | ||||
| Music of Seven Cities | |||||||
| MustonenFest | |||||||
| Orient, the Festival of Eastern Music | Festival of Eastern Music | ||||||
| Nargen Opera | Nargen Festival | Tallinn, Naissaar | 2006–present | Opera music | |||
| Pärnu Opera Days | Pärnu | Opera music | |||||
| Piano Festival "Captivated by the Piano" | Klaverifestival "Klaveri embuses" | Tallinn, Kadriorg Palace | July | 2018–present | Festival of piano and chamber music
Genres: classical, cross-over | ||
| Plink Plonk | Tartu | July | Indie music festival | ||||
| Punk'n'Roll | different locations | 1998 | |||||
| Rabarock | Järvakandi | June | 2005–2009, 2011–present | ||||
| Rock Ramp | Viljandi | August | |||||
| Rock Summer | Tallinn Song Festival Grounds, Tallinn | 1988–1997 | |||||
| Suure-Jaani Music Festival | Suure-Jaani Muusikafestival | Suure-Jaani | 1998–present | celebrates the musical works of notable Suure-Jaani residents Artur Kapp, Villem Kapp, Eugen Kapp and Mart Saar | |||
| Tallinn JazzOn | Tallinn JazzOn | Tallinn | June | 2012–present | 1st, free, not commercial open air festival in Tallinn Oldtown. Music genres: Jazz, soul jazz, electro jazz, acid jazz, funk | ||
| Tallinn International Organ Festival | Tallinn | ||||||
| Tallinn Music Week | Tallinn | end of March to beginning of April | 2009–present | Annual showcase music festival. | |||
| Tallinn Piano Festival | Tallinn | ||||||
| Tartu Jazz | Tartu | ||||||
| Tartu Music Days | Tartu | ||||||
| Tartu Pop Music Festival | Tartu | ||||||
| Viljandi Folk Festival | Viljandi Pärimusmuusika Festival | Viljandi | end of July | 1993–present | |||
| Viru Folk | Käsmu | August | 2008–present | ||||
| Viru Säru | Viru säru | Lääne-Viru County | 1986–2008? | Folklore festival. About 300-800 participants with about 1000-4000 spectators. Author of idea: dance teacher Maie Orav.[1] | |||
| Võnge Festival | Travelling festival | July | 2015–present |
See also
References
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.