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Were  the band always pagan?
Kaido: Absolutely
Ank: It started in 1993 when the religious movement was a very hot  topic. There were bands like Dark Throne and we wanted to do something  similar but to our own taste.
How do you incorporate Estonian folk culture  into your music?
Ank: It's more like it's  subconscious. 
Kaido: We don’t take  stories directly from folklore, it's more like we use symbols. We have a  song called Merekurat, the sea devil. This is not a story of a  spiritual being. It is a story of a so called sea devil which would be a  symbol of the beast that the Estonians are so well acquainted with. It  has taken many lives.
So are you talking occultism  here?
K: No.... forget “the beast”. It’s the  so called beast, the power of nature that works on the sea. There is a saying in Estonia  ,  “the sea gives and the sea takes.” This basically means that it can  provide food but sometimes with a very high cost of lives. The song of  the sea devil is not about a man with horns beneath the water, it's  giving respect to the power of nature. 
It  addresses the nautical and spiritual history of Estonia  ?
K:  Yes. They couldn’t live without the sea but they also had to be wary of  it. It’s a good symbol because it's not about us as mortals living here  and gods in their pantheon. It's all mixed, entwined in everyday life.  It is in us and it surrounds us.
Can you tell us about the Estonian god,  Tharaphita, whom you are named after? 
Kaido:  He has the same roots as Thor. One thing you must understand about  Estonian mythology and culture is that there is very little that we know  about what people thought and what they wrote down because during all  the wars that have happened here, lots of people were killed and  couldn’t pass on their verbal knowledge.
 As you may  know, both the poetic and prose Edda (the principal texts of Norse  mythology) were written centuries after the Viking era and by  Christians. Nothing like that happened for Estonian folklore. Nobody  wrote it down until about 1000 years after the Viking era.  You can make the comparison between Thor and  Tharaphita, but it doesn’t really make sense, because there is not so  much information from our pagan times. In a way that’s good, because as a  result there are no set images of any deities. It is all obscure. Set  images can be open to personal interpretation, which people use to their  own advantage. We have freedom of interpretation. This leaves a lot of  room for a personal voyage in the maze of our inheritance. Its hard to  put into words, because there are so few that can be said with  certainty. 
It’s instinctive perhaps?
Kaido:  In a way yes. When we talk about being inspired by paganism, you can  only relate to what you feel inside and your relationship with your  surroundings.
How do you  feel about the black metal bands whose interpretation of Nordic paganism  has led them to controversial politics?
Ank:  Everyone knows what he is doing; we do it our own way. We are not  against other people’s views. 
K:  When you say you don’t like someone else because they have made a  stand, you are forming an opinion. You force yourself onto their world.  You must allow them to do what they think is best. Maybe it is best,  everything has its own purpose. 
Does  it annoy you, being associated with things like church burning?
K:  When something like that happens in a society, especially when it  happens in a wave that a lot of people sympathise with and want to participate in, somewhere, something is  quite wrong. Maybe it has its roots thousands of years back, maybe it  doesn’t. Maybe its just a couple of pissed off kids. When something like  that happens, there is a reason. It's not up to us to say It's good to  burn any building, but is it good for society to let it come to that?  Rather than being a problem in itself, it is probably the result of a  problem. 
Do you think it true that in Estonia ,  folk practices have remained more active than in Western  Europe ?
K:  Baltic countries like Lithuania    were the last to submit to the church. Lithuanians still had a strong  folk culture when Estonia    was already under various Christian rulers as a result of the crusades.
How do  you see yourselves in relation to the black metal movement?
Ank: Yeah,  we have black metal roots. Musically we are black, but not so much  lyrically. We have dark and aggressive lyrics but we are not Satanists.  My lyrics come like a flow sometimes. It cannot be controlled. 
What do you think of Tallinn   music week?
Ank: for  us it is unusual. The other bands here are totally different from us.  We usually play with other metal bands. We are grateful that it is Tallinn   music week.
K:  It is excellent that this kind of festival is happening in Estonia  .  It is something we have been missing for half a century. We have been  cut off. It's been almost 20 years since then end of occupation and  there are still young bands who have no idea how to get a good recording  and how to market it. We are comparatively old dudes, although we don’t  feel very old. It’s excellent that they could get the knowledge to do  well in 2 years while it has taken us 15 years. For some underground  bands here, we are a role model. 
Ank: (laughing) Still young musicians...


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