But it ended up in his car stereo - luckily - and he was surprised and start digging it and told Quintus of Bone Voyage about it. Espe didn't expect much first, and nearly forgot about it. After some 22-Pistepirkko show, somewhere, in backstage hang-around mode, one of the cassettes where given to Esa Haverinen (22-Pistepirkko drummer/singer) by somebody of Talmud Beach, rather as a gift. Rather for themselves, they put it out on cassette and Helmi Levyt label did a first run of vinyls. Sometimes later, in 2012, they made their first recordings. They went on as a trio, now using bass, drums and guitar. So they asked the old guy Mikko Siltanen to join the band, due to make it just right. Just they found that the duo was a bit limited, while they knew that they needed some limitation. Finally in 2010 even a band name emerged during a trip to the Baltics, Talmud Beach – (special story, you got to ask them yourself, how this name came up.Anyway.Īfter this trip the duo was excited, both about their own material they had and the new name they got. So for some time it's been just them on the streets. Pretty soon they grew out of Juice's songs, more and more their own material emerged. They played by day and by night, whereever and whenever. They've played in front of Hesburger restaurants (Finish burger chain, with larger presence then McDonalds), they've played in front of Kioskis (traiditionally Finnish convenience stores). They had a guitar and a mandoline and they played in the woods, they played in the cities.they played in the villages. Inspired by some Finish painters they knew from the past, Petri and Aleksi got the idea to wander around. Their conclusion of this shortage: they learned the songs of Juice Leskinen, went back on the streets and played (Leskinen is a musical hero of Finland, a legendary singer-songwriter, born 1950 who died in 2006, just shortly before they met). There are many other streets connecting with Mannerheimintie, but all of them either end at Mannerheimintie or continue across it under a different name.The Talmud Beach is a band from Finland, founded in 2006 on Mannerheimintie… Read Full Bio ↴ The Talmud Beach is a band from Finland, founded in 2006 on Mannerheimintie, the most famous Boulevard in Helsinki, named after the Finish hero (military leader and statesman) Baron Mannerheim, where Petri Alanko and Aleksi Lukander lived and met.Īnd while they met they found out that both were running out of money. There are only two streets running across Mannerheimintie: Nordenskiöldinkatu overground, and Tilkanvierto below it as an underpass. These include the Three Smiths Statue and the Statue of Mannerheim near Kiasma. There are many landmark sculptures by Mannerheimintie. These include the House of Parliament, the central offices of the Finnish Posti Group, the Finlandia Hall, the National Museum, the Helsinki Opera House, Hotel Marski, and Tilkka. Many famous buildings are located on, or near, Mannerheimintie. (Geographically, the highway only ends in central Tampere, as a small street called Kalevan Puistotie.) It then continues as a main thoroughfare past the districts of Kamppi, Töölö, Meilahti, Laakso and Ruskeasuo, until it finally merges into the busy Tampere Highway ( E12), which leads outside the city towards Hämeenlinna and Tampere. The street begins at Erottaja in the city centre, near the Swedish Theatre and continues in a northernly direction past the Stockmann department store. The change of name was also a reference to Mannerheim's victory parade along the road during the Finnish Civil War (1918), after German forces, allied with Mannerheim's Finnish forces, had retaken the city. It was originally named Heikinkatu ( Swedish: Henriksgatan), after Robert Henrik Rehbinder on the first part up to the current Kiasma Art museum and Turuntie after that, but was renamed after the Winter War. Mannerheimintie ( Swedish: Mannerheimvägen), named after the Finnish military leader and statesman Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim, is the main street and boulevard of Helsinki, Finland. Mannerheimintie and apartment buildings of Meilahti (left) and Laakso (right), some 3–4 km (1.9–2.5 mi) north from Erottaja. JSTOR ( March 2014) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message).Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. This article needs additional citations for verification.
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