Artists

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Amy Laurenson

Shetland Islands

Amy Laurenson is an award-winning Scottish pianist from Shetland, currently based in Glasgow. Rooted in the traditional music of Shetland, whilst growing up surrounded by classical music, she has developed a style which ebbs and flows between traditional, classical, and jazz influence. This diversity of influences has resulted in a vision which challenges the role of the piano as a solo instrument in traditional music.

After receiving the title of BBC Radio Scotland Young Traditional Musician of the Year 2023, Amy released her debut album Strands which reflects on her traditional Shetland roots and how this has grown to be intertwined with threads of contemporary influence and ideas. Strands was longlisted for Scottish Album of the Year Award 2024.

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Duo Ruut³

Estonia

The special project Duo Ruut³ draws listeners into rhythms and a soundscape expanded threefold. This time, Duo Ruut’s distinctive musical landscapes merge with the groove of a rhythm section featuring electric guitar, bass, and percussion. The new dimension opens up musical paths that feel both familiar and refreshingly new, and the shared breath and lively rhythms of Duo Ruut³ are sure to get listeners’ hips moving.

Ann-Lisett Rebane and Katariina Kivi - kannel, vocals
Tõnu Tubli - percussion
Indrek Mällo - bass guitar
Jaan Jaago - electric guitar

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Groupa

Sweden/Norway

Contemporary Nordic Folk since 1981.
Nordic folk music stretched, reshaped, and brought vividly into the present.
With their distinctive take on Nordic folk music, Groupa stands as a true supergroup in the genre. Since their founding in 1981, they have been trailblazers of progressive Nordic folk, shaping the sound of generations to come. At Viljandi Folk Music Festival, Groupa appears as a trio – the core format that has defined the band’s sound for much of the past two decades.

You will hear powerful ancient melodies alongside original compositions, free improvisation, and an extraordinary palette of sounds. Deeply rooted in tradition yet constantly in motion, Groupa’s music is playful, exploratory, and intense. Rhythm, texture, and close musical interplay shape a sound world where every detail matters.

The trio features Mats Edén (viola d’amore, hardanger fiddle), Jonas Simonson (flutes), and Terje Isungset (drums and percussion), renowned for his inventive use of natural materials such as wood, stone, and glass.

Minimalist at times, explosive at others, Groupa offers an intimate concert experience where tradition is alive, transformed, and deeply present.

Jonas Simonson - flutes
Terje Isungset - drums, percussion
Mats Edén - viola d’amore, hardanger fiddle 

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HrayBery

Poland/Ukraine

HrayBery is a Polish-Ukrainian ensemble reviving traditional village music. Drawing from nearly forgotten scores and archival audio recordings from the border region of Poland and Ukraine, the band invites the audience to experience a long-forgotten world of music. The ensemble's repertoire proves that this region was once a melting pot of cultures, where Poles, Ukrainians, Jews, and Roma lived side by side. This tradition was shaped by cultural exchange across borders and generations.

Armed with instruments typical for the region (fiddle, hammered dulcimer, frame drum), HrayBery performs vivid traditional dance pieces such as the cossacks, kolomyikas, mazurkas, polkas, waltzes and more. This is an open invitation to dance – solo, in pairs, or in a group.

HrayBery have performed live at numerous dance events and concerts in Poland, where the band resides, and abroad (Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Estonia, Finland, Italy).
In 2023, the band released their first album, "Karczma."

Agata Weber - frame drum
Maksym Nakoneczny - violin
Marta Bodnar - violin
Serhii Postolnikov - hammer dulcimer

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Nancy Vieira

Portugal/Cape Verde

Nancy Vieira’s music invites listeners into the emotional heart of Cape Verde. At Viljandi Folk Music Festival she brings with her morna – a deeply expressive musical style that has not previously been heard at this festival and which is recognised on UNESCO’s List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. Morna is music of longing, tenderness and quiet strength, and in Nancy Vieira’s hands it becomes an intimate conversation between singer and listener.

Nancy’s instrument is her voice: clear, direct and disarmingly honest. Through it she carries the stories, joys and sorrows of Cape Verde, while also reflecting the wider world shaped by migration and encounter. Her music moves naturally between morna and other Atlantic influences – echoes of Lisbon streets, hints of Brazil and Africa, and a subtle openness to jazz, fado and song traditions beyond borders.

Much of Nancy Vieira’s recent music has been recorded on her latest album Gente – meaning people – a title that reflects the human stories and encounters at the heart of her work. On stage in Viljandi, this music unfolds as a living tradition shared in the moment: a voice, a style and a musical language that speaks softly, yet stays with you long after the last note has faded.

Nancy Vieira - vocals
Jorge Cervantes - acoustic guitar
Olmo Marín - acoustic guitar
Nelly Cruz - electric bass
Diogo Carvalho - percussion

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OOPUS

OOPUS is an Estonian audiovisual folktronica band that merges ancient runo songs with contemporary electronic dance music – ranging from techno and acid to dub and ambient. Blending analog synthesizers with traditional instruments like Estonian bagpipes and overtone flutes, OOPUS delivers high-energy performances that reimagine folk heritage as a soundscape of the future.

At the heart of every OOPUS show lies a unique fusion of live music, immersive visuals, and storytelling drawn from Finno-Ugric mythology. Their performances are known for custom-built light installations, movement-reactive visuals, and a club-inspired stage presence, often placing the audience at the center of the experience.

Formed in 2017 by musicians Mari Meentalo and Johannes Ahun, OOPUS began as an exploration of the space between folk and electronic music. Visual artist Aleksander Sprohgis later joined the team, bringing a new visual language to the group. In 2019, dancer Raho Aadla expanded the project’s creative direction further, integrating dance and movement-triggered visuals.

Since releasing their debut album NÕIDUS (2019), which was nominated at the Estonian Music Awards 2020, OOPUS has brought their signature blend of analog synths, live looping, and Estonian folk to a wide variety of stages – from underground raves and immersive meditative sets to major international festivals such as Burning Man (USA), ESNS (Netherlands), Linecheck (Italy), Nordischer Klang (Germany), Borderland (Sweden), and Viljandi Folk Music Festival (Estonia) to name a few. Their second album Folk On Acid (2022) received the Raadio 2 Special Prize at the Estonian Ethno Music Awards. Their third album Reivlender was released in 2026.

OOPUS has collaborated on multidisciplinary projects such as Meelte Videvik
(Twilight of Senses, with Sunbeam Productions and a renowned conductor Kristjan Järvi), BMW Estonia’s 4th Series launch, the town of Viljandi, and the Tartu 2024 European Capital of Culture.

Mari Meentalo - Estonian bagpipes, vocals, mouth harps, overtone flute, live
looping
Johannes Ahun - analog and digital synthesizers, sound engineer
Aleksander Sprohgis - custom-built light installations, visuals
Raho Aadla - dance
Aurelia Kuum - assistant/manager

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The Zawose Queens

Tanzania

There is spirit and fire in the music of The Zawose Queens. There are the vibrations of the ancestors, coming through on traditional instruments – soaring chizeze fiddle, buzzing illimba thumb piano, ngoma drums that chatter and thunder – and voices that go deep, high and out there. There's the connection to nature, to ceremony and ritual, in their dance-inspired fusion, their blend of the organic, harmonic and modern-day electronic. There are lyrics that tell, in their native kigogo, of the passion for music, the wonders of life. Of pride in environment, in tradition. In their East African roots.

Pendo and Leah Zawose showcase the fluid polyrhythms and rapturous polyphonic singing of the Gogo (aka Wagogo) people of the arid, hilly Dodoma region of central Tanzania.
The most famous exponent of this musical tradition is the late, great Dr Hukwe Zawose (Pendo’s father and Leah’s grandfather).

Their debut album Maisha (2024) marks the first time that women from this famous musical family take their place as lead vocalists and performers. The collection of songs ranges from the stripped back and traditional-sounding to those treated with subtle electronic elements.

Pendo Zawose
Leah Zawose

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Trifoor

Estonia

Trifoor sets the ground rumbling with Estonian folk music and fierce female energy! They draw the listener into the mysterious depths of traditional folk music and bring to the stage the material from archives. By combining the traditional sound of acoustic instruments with the rhythmic groove of electric instruments, the band creates a genre-bending and unique musical style. They give folk and rock a fresh breath of air and a playful form.

Trifoor came together in 2023 at the Viljandi Culture Academy and has since grown into a five-member band. The band proudly holds the Grand Prix of a youth folkband contest “Noor Pärimusbänd 2025.” In January 2026 Trifoor released their debut album.

Marta-Helene Hansing - fiddle, vocals
Ariana Arutjunjan - guitar, vocals
Emma Lotta Kiviberg - flute, vocals
Emilia Peil - drums
Kristina Kullang - bass guitar, vocals

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Zetod

Estonia

Zetod is a musical phenomenon born in Värska in 2003, which began with the idea of bringing Seto boys into the pop-rock world, combining a contemporary sound with their cultural heritage. At the time, it was something completely new and electrifying.

Over the years, this bold initiative has grown into one of Estonia’s most beloved and unique ensembles. Zetod have won numerous awards, released seven studio albums, and even experimented with creative boundaries using music generated by artificial intelligence. In 2026, the band will celebrate its 23rd year of activity.

With unforgettable stage energy, yet always respecting tradition, Zetod are vital popularizers of heritage culture among the younger generation and a worthy calling card for Southern Estonia worldwide.

Zetod's goal is simple: as long as the Seto man's heart beats – and it beats hotter with time – the Seto spirit and song must be brought to stages all over the world for the joy of the listener.

Jalmar Vabarna
Matis Leima
Artur Linnus
Martin Kütt
Jaanus Viskar

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