Sorry for my tardy response on this one Gill Sans... I take your point, but it strikes me as being one of those sticky subjects, from which an ongoing debate could (and probably does :) arise -
...should folk music (if I could use the term: "Indigenous folk" music (as opposed to simply folk-rock style folk )) be included in classical, as I'm sure arguments will be made that lots of classical drew from, or was inspired by traditional folk songs / melodies / tunes (Mozart, for instance (?)), and given that some entries already made could be regarded as folk music, rather than classical, even though they are accepted as being classical: Songs of the Auvergne, Spanish, and Flamenco, and stuff like Lieder (recitals by solo vocalists) etc.
I don't know the answers myself, but perhaps a consensus will build over time, using the community "sorting hat" :)
(I opted for this world for this entry due to, what seemed to me to be the "antiquity" or traditional nature of the music, the "classical" sounding renditions, and the label it was on - being compatible with classical world.)
Did someone order a loud and tasteless seventies sleeve?
...Oh, because this, I think fits the bill nicely!
And What's that? ......You want some horrendous orange labels to go with it?
...Well, you're in luck, as here's one to blind each of your eyes.
Discogs has this in various pressings, all with the kind of standard tourist souvenir sleeve - men-in-local- thigh-slapping-folk attire kind of thing.
So I think this has been in constant press since it's initial 1967 issue. This one is 1973-4, and it was both the ugly sleeve, the odd orange labels, and the promise of Moravian folk songs that drew me in.
Another high scorer on the Marma-meter (The Marma-lo-meter is in the shop, this is a courtesy Marming meter till I get that back :)
It's exactly what you'd expect, and you can kind of picture yourself overlooking lakes and forests in deepest Supraphonia, as it evokes the spirit of a place well (though I've never been there, with this, I feel I have!).