Static, the Master Wand, and very large choirs
Stereophile
|October 2025
The largest regularly scheduled choral singing event in the world is the Estonian National Song Festival, or Laulupidu, which comes around about once every five years in Tallinn, Estonia's capital city. The numbers are pretty mind blowing.
Two all-day concerts are held over a weekend in early July, and this year, at its peak, the number of singers on stage at one time reached 32,022, performing to an audience of 100,000. Pretty amazing for a small country of just 1.4 million people. This is truly Choral Woodstock. I wrote about my first trip to the 1985 Laulupidu in Spin Doctor #9,¹ which took place in what at the time was occupied Soviet Estonia. Since then, I have attended four more times.
It's impossible to overstate the importance of singing in Estonian culture. The 1991 revolution that brought Estonia its independence from Soviet occupation is commonly known as the Singing Revolution due to the use of song as a form of protest. Almost every town, village, school, and social club in the country has its own choir. The 990 choirs that participated in this year's festival had to audition to be selected: If your choir doesn't meet the standards of the selection committee, you'll be watching from the audience. As in the last festival in 2019, my sister Lisa and one of her daughters were in choirs that passed muster and were able to participate.
It's hard to describe the sound produced by 32,000 well-trained singers going full tilt. Surprisingly, it's not about volume. Because Laulupidu is held in a bowl-like outdoor setting, when I pulled up an app to measure the sound pressure level from my position about 300' behind the conductor, it was reaching peaks of
Bu hikaye Stereophile dergisinin October 2025 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
Stereophile'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
Stereophile
Buzz Me In
If you like 1970s rock music, particularly hard rock music, something you love was recorded or mixed in a Record Plant studio.
3 mins
January 2026
Stereophile
NuPrime MCX-800AD
IMMERSIVE AUDIO PROCESSOR
11 mins
January 2026
Stereophile
Shanachie Records
The term 'sales' is an anachronism. Today, it's about streaming and ancillary income.\"
3 mins
January 2026
Stereophile
Advance Paris X-CD9
CD PLAYER
11 mins
January 2026
Stereophile
T+A Symphonia for phono; a new NAD M10
Out of the box, the T+A Symphonia streaming integrated amplifier Rogier van Bakel reviewed in the November 2025 issue¹ has two pairs of single-ended analog line inputs.
20 mins
January 2026
Stereophile
Why the Music We Love Feels Different Now
There's a scene in the 2002 movie The Pianist in which Adrien Brody's character, the Polish-Jewish pianist Władysław Szpilman, is hiding in the ruins of a Warsaw villa.
3 mins
January 2026
Stereophile
A tale of two Walters
Acommon theme in this space in Stereophile is the need to reach new audiences and generate broader interest in the hi-fi hobby.
3 mins
January 2026
Stereophile
Eversolo Play CD Edition
ALL-IN-ONE STREAMING PLAYER
12 mins
January 2026
Stereophile
Timeless flights
How many adventurous rock’n’roll bands forged in the late-’60s/early-’70s would have been left by the wayside—or relegated to languish in perpetual cutout-bin purgatory—had it not been for the wide-open programming M.O. of stereo-loving FM radio stations? The Moody Blues could very easily have been one of those sidelined, notched-cover footnotes, but they altered their gameplan when guitarist/vocalist Justin Hayward and bassist/vocalist John Lodge joined the fold a few years after the chart success of “Go Now” in 1964.¹
3 mins
January 2026
Stereophile
You still believe in me
One of my foundational memories of becoming an audiophile was waiting to listen to a pair of speakers at Sound by Singer in Manhattan.
12 mins
January 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

