Väinö Raitio

Väinö Eerikki Raitio (15 April 1891 – 10 September 1945) was part of the small group of composers who appeared in the Finnish art music scene in the 1920s with a new cosmopolitan music style, very different from the dominant conservative National Romanticism. He was born in Sortavala, Grand Duchy of Finland. Raitio's career as a composer reached its peak in the 1920s when eight large symphonic poems appeared from his pen. Influenced by Alexander Scriabin, his style was too modern for Nordic music circles, and his orchestral work Joutsenet (The Swans, Les Cygnes) of 1919 remained as his sole orchestral piece to be published (in 1938). Raitio's profile as a composer slipped, as he concentrated on shorter works for smaller ensembles in the 1930s and 1940s. In private, however, much effort was made by the composer to write operatic works. He died in Helsinki. Even today, his five operas are only known from the composer's hand-written manuscripts.

Väinö Raitio, œuvres pour piano - 2019-03-25T00:00:00.000000Z

Raitio, V.: Queen of the Flowers - Works for Small Orchestra - 2003-01-01T00:00:00.000000Z

Raitio, V.: Fantasia Poetica / Fantasia Estatica / The Swans / The Column Fountain / Antigone - 1992-01-01T00:00:00.000000Z

Raitio: Scherzo ‘Felis domestica' - 2025-06-13T00:00:00.000000Z

Raitio: The Swans, Op. 15 - 2011-10-14T00:00:00.000000Z

Similar Artists

Gerard Schurmann

Philip Sawyers

John Kinsella

Arthur Meulemans

Ernest Pingoud

Roger Epple

Gavriil Popov

Pehr Henrik Nordgren

Robert Kajanus

Ivan Karabits

Marek Sewen

Steve Elcock

Stanley Bate

Boris Ivanovich Tishchenko

Alan Bush

Rangstrom, Ture

Tauno Hannikainen

Vytautas Bacevičius

Eduard Tubin

Jouni Kaipainen