Jump to content

Sanat Kumara and Lady Master Venus: Difference between revisions

no edit summary
(Marked this version for translation)
No edit summary
Line 221: Line 221:


<!--T:60-->
<!--T:60-->
The strains of Sanat Kumara’s [[keynote]] were captured by Jan Sibelius in ''Finlandia''. So powerful is the release of the flame of freedom through this music, that during the Nazi occupation, its playing was forbidden lest it arouse the fervor of the people for freedom.
The strains of Sanat Kumara’s [[keynote]] were captured by Jan Sibelius in ''Finlandia''. So powerful is the release of the flame of freedom through this music, that during the occupation of Finland by Russia, its playing was forbidden lest it arouse the fervor of the people for freedom.<ref>Finland was under Russian rule from 1809 to 1917, when Finland formally declared her independence. The music of Finnish composer Sibelius, which captured the spirit of the great Finnish epics and legends, heartened the Finns in their movement toward independence. The chorale from Finlandia became so associated with the independence movement that the Russian czar forbade performances of it during periods of political crisis.</ref>


== For more information == <!--T:61-->
== For more information == <!--T:61-->
Line 258: Line 258:
<!--T:85-->
<!--T:85-->
{{POWref|35|42|, October 11, 1992}}
{{POWref|35|42|, October 11, 1992}}
{{POWref|38|20|, May 7, 1995}} Endnote 2.


<!--T:68-->
<!--T:68-->