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Never mind he鈥檚 only in his mid-20s. He鈥檚 already conducted 22,000 performers.

Rasmus Puur was one of the chief conductors last month for Laulupidu, a big choral event in Estonia. His message for its young participants goes beyond music.

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Isabelle de Pommereau
Rasmus Puur gets children in Tallinn, Estonia, ready for Laulupidu, which features thousands of young singers.

The rehearsal in June at a school in Viimsi, Estonia 鈥 a Baltic coastal town that was a Soviet submarine base 鈥 ended quite a stint for Rasmus Puur. For weeks this composer and conductor had crisscrossed his native Estonia, preparing thousands of children for Laulupidu, a big choral event that happens every few years in this tiny country on Europe鈥檚 eastern frontier.

In his Bermuda shorts and a T-shirt, Mr. Puur could be mistaken for one of the young singers. Yet he鈥檚 composed an opera and created an orchestra, and he was chosen as one of Laulupidu鈥檚 chief conductors 鈥 the youngest ever for the event. At the rehearsal, the last of 73, he speaks, quietly, about 鈥淢eie鈥 (鈥淲e鈥), the song he wrote for Laulupidu鈥檚 opening.

鈥 鈥榃e,鈥 鈥 he says, 鈥渢ells us we don鈥檛 want to be a forgettable page of history.鈥 In Estonia, he explains, choral conductors and composers have shaped history. For example, they helped push back the Soviets in the late 1980s. 鈥淲hat about you? What will your contribution be?鈥 Puur asks. The youngsters take in the question, silently.

A few weeks later, before an audience of 100,000 at Laulupidu on July 2, the children from Viimsi merged with a choir of 22,000 youngsters on an open stage along the Baltic Sea in Tallinn, Estonia鈥檚 capital. As the singers began to swing to the rock-sounding tunes in 鈥淲e鈥 and sway together in its a cappella parts, Puur, on the conductor鈥檚 podium, was satisfied that the message he鈥檇 worked so hard to spread had reached the youths.

鈥淭he children understood,鈥 he said after the event. 鈥淭hey know they can live up to their dreams.鈥

Generally speaking, being part of a choir isn鈥檛 something that today鈥檚 young people brag about. But in Estonia, singing is different. And the kind of message offered by Puur has resonated with Laulupidu鈥檚 participants. He鈥檚 urged them to appreciate their national heritage 鈥 and to not be part of the 鈥渂rain drain鈥 that the country has seen among young people.

As someone in his mid-20s, Puur represents a key figure in Estonia鈥檚 next generation of leading musicians who will be responsible for continuing the nation鈥檚 singing tradition.

鈥淭o have the population of one country come together ... to celebrate its historical identity through classical and folk music, that鈥檚 quite remarkable,鈥 says Maaja Roos of New York, a conductor of Estonian descent who, for the first time, brought 60 children from the United States (also of Estonian descent) to participate in Laulupidu. The gift Puur gave the children, she says, is 鈥渢he recognition that they are part of a much greater whole, a national choral identity that they will carry with them throughout their lives.鈥

Since its creation in 1869, Laulupidu (which also has a dance component) has been a national force. It鈥檚 credited with helping Estonia become independent twice. First, when the region was part of the Russian Empire, it gave voice to a yearning for self-determination that culminated with independence in 1917. Then, starting in the late 鈥80s, hundreds of thousands of Estonians took to the streets to sing forbidden songs in defiance of the Soviet regime, a phenomenon later called the peaceful Singing Revolution. Estonia separated from the Soviet Union in 1991.

Today, Laulupidu still has the power to rally. It is to Estonians a bit what Thanksgiving is to Americans: a time to give thanks for what is held dearest. For Estonians, that is their language, their culture, their identity, which successive waves of occupiers have sought but failed to snuff out.

Volleyball vs. singing

Little predestined Puur to take a leading role in his country鈥檚 biggest, most prestigious event. In high school in his native Tallinn, volleyball had priority over singing. But in Tartu, where he studied literature, he found it unbearable to be away from the orchestra he鈥檇 created at age 15. So he went back to Tallinn, where he then studied composition at the famous Estonian Academy of Music and Theatre.

He鈥檇 just graduated in 2014 when Laulupidu 鈥 the adult version of the event 鈥 was taking place. He sang in it, just as he had as a child. But this time, he says, 鈥淚 was fascinated about this big machine that gathers all Estonians together, and wanted to be part of the big process.鈥

The calling came while performing 鈥淢y Country Is My Love,鈥 Estonia鈥檚 unofficial anthem, with tens of thousands of other singers. As people held hands and unfurled the Estonian flag, Puur grasped the power that singing has held in his country.

Well before that 2014 performance, Estonia had become independent. But still, times were difficult. The country had undergone belt-tightening so it could join European groups, notably the eurozone 鈥 and young people were leaving in droves to look for better-paying jobs elsewhere.

鈥淚 could see the headlines: Estonians are leaving!鈥 he remembers. 鈥淏ut I wanted to say that not all the young people go away.鈥

Puur had his chance to make a statement when entries for the theme of the next Laulupidu 鈥 the youth one this July 鈥 were being solicited. His idea? To make Laulupidu about the importance of one鈥檚 roots, of learning from older generations.

In thinking about a song he hoped would be sung at Laulupidu鈥檚 opening, he gained inspiration from Anna Haava, who wrote poems in Estonia when her fellow countrymen were yearning for their first independence. 鈥淚 looked for poetry to really touch and move me, to be in the service of the idea. Then the music just flowed,鈥 he says.

Puur鈥檚 entry won unanimously, and his ideas translated into the theme of 鈥淗ere I鈥檒l Stay.鈥

A tough start

In the two years of preparations leading up to Laulupidu, the first rehearsals were especially challenging, Puur says. He was shy. He felt like a fool making people sing when he was barely older than them. He thought of quitting.

But as he talked about 鈥渢he culture, the spirit of Laulupidu,鈥 he saw a spark in the children鈥檚 eyes and received words of thanks. He knew he had to go on.

Beatrice Hellrand, a Tallinn middle-schooler, finds it 鈥渁mazing鈥 that Puur wrote an opera and created an orchestra at such a young age. But what impresses her the most is his connection to the choir. 鈥淗e looks at you in the eyes and smiles at you, and that makes us smile in return,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat makes the song sound better.鈥

Marta Lee Krall, a member of the renowned Estonian TV Girls鈥 Choir in Tallinn, is thinking of a career in music. Her experience with Puur has given her a burst of inspiration. Conducting Laulupidu 鈥渉as been Rasmus鈥檚 dream and his dream has come true, and that鈥檚 pushing me to go catch my dream,鈥 says the 14-year-old.

Calling new conductors

On average, each Laulupidu has debuted two conductors. But Puur saw a need for more. 鈥淢any of our conductors are getting old, and we don鈥檛 want to be in a situation where all the old ones cannot do it and the new ones do not know how to do it,鈥 he says.

As described by Heli J眉rgenson, Laulupidu鈥檚 artistic director this year, Puur frenetically wrote every conducting and composing graduate in the country. It was 鈥渁 wake-up call for young musicians: Please get involved!鈥 says Ms. J眉rgenson, who is the longtime conductor of the Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir.

So at this Laulupidu, there were 17 debuting conductors. One is Ksenija Grabova. She says that Puur鈥檚 inclusion of so many newcomers was 鈥渂old鈥 and 鈥渋mportant.鈥

Getting 15,000 children to perform 鈥淟ife Is Hope and Creation鈥 was bigger than anything she has done 鈥 and she runs three choirs in Tallinn. The song, she says, is about 鈥渃arrying on [one鈥檚] dreams and not being scared off when not everything works.鈥

That is part of Puur鈥檚 message, too.

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