Orchestral Works of Väinö Raitio (2000, Kimmo Korhonen)

© Kimmo Korhonen & Fimic, 2000
Translation Susan Sinisalo

Väinö Raitio (April 15, 1891 – September 10, 1945) began his composing career as a Late Romantic, but in the early 1920s he underwent a change of style that was for the next decade to place him in the vanguard of Finnish Modernism. His chief output consists of his colourful orchestral works combining impressionistic nuance with the expressionistic force and abrasiveness associated with Skryabin. Dating from the late 1920s onwards are his operas, lyrical in tone, and the rhythmically striking ballet Vesipatsas (Water Column). In his orchestral music of the 1930s Raitio returned to a more traditional, conventional style.

Joutsenet (The Swans) op. 15 (1919)

Väinö Raitio began his composing career as a Late Romantic, but in the early 1920s proceeded to a brand of Modernism coloured by Impressionism and Expressionism. Possibly his best-known work is the tone poem The Swans, a work of his transitional period marked by both rich romanticism and impressionistic colour. The idea for composing a work about swans was partly inspired by a poem by Otto Manninen.

Nocturne op. 17 (1920)

Of all the Finnish Modernists of the 1920s, Raitio had the firmest ties with Impressionism. His statement that “music is colour” is revealing. Whereas the tone poem The Swans (1919) was still on the watershed between Romanticism and Impressionism, Nocturne was already a clear product of Impressionism. The pentatonic main motif is suggestive of folk music, though not of the Finnish variety, while the second subject is evocative of Debussy. The music has both mysterious, shimmering sheets of timbre and fast-flowing climaxes.

Fantasia estatica op. 21 (1921)

Raitio’s individual brand of Modernism bursts into full flower in the Fantasia estatica. He was to have composed a triptych of three fantasias, but the Fantasia chaotica intended as a continuation to the Fantasia estatica and the Fantasia poetica (1923) was never written. The Fantasia estatica is scored for large orchestra and characterised by both the impressionistic colour of delicate webs of sound and an expressionistic force that erupts in ecstasy as promised by the title. In this respect the music possibly comes closest to Skryabin.

Antigone op. 23 (1922)

1. Antigonen kuolinuhri veljelleen (Antigone’s sacrifice for her brother)
2. Tyrannin tuomio (The fall of the tyrant)
3. Antigonen kuolema (The Death of Antigone)

Raitio’s 1920s Modernism has elements of both Impressionism and Expressionism. The most cogent representative of the expressionistic streak is the orchestral tone poem Antigone in three movements. It was inspired by the tragedy of Sophocles, but although each of the three movements has a title, they can in no way be called programme music giving a detailed description of any events. The three rather loosely constructed movements are dominated by slow tempi underlining the tragedy, and the closing movement alone has a short Allegro passage. This is music characterised by the poetry of subdued timbres and climaxes of tremendous impact.

Kuutamo Jupiterissa (Moonlight on Jupiter) op. 24 (1922)

In the Modernist works written in the 1920s Raitio juggled with Impressionism and an Expressionism akin to that of Skryabin. Moonlight on Jupiter, subtitled “a fantastic tone poem for orchestra”, has a slightly impressionistic orientation. In the quietest passages, particularly, it has all the delicacy and colour of the Impressionists and even Debussy, but the climaxes have more in common with the Expressionists.

Fantasia poetica op. 25 (1923)

The Fantasia poetica was to be the middle movement of an orchestral triptych beginning with the Fantasia estatica (1921), but the third and final movement, Fantasia chaotica, never materialised. The Fantasia poetica is, however, capable of standing on its own and is as such one of the finest works by Raitio. Like his other best works of the 1920s, it has a rich, and in this case “poetic” colour dimension, here combined with the expressionistic force of the crests of three waves. The motto of the work is the poem Erlebnis by Hugo von Hofmannsthal.

Vesipatsas (Water Column) (1929)

Towards the end of the 1920s Raitio turned increasingly away from orchestral tone poems to music for the stage. The first works to be completed in this category were the opera Jeftan tytär (Jephthah’s Daughter, 1929) and the two-act ballet Water Column. Despite its stage background, Water Column may nevertheless be classified as an orchestral work, and one of Raitio’s finest at that. It is packed with the richness of colour characteristic of Raitio, but it also introduces a new feature: effective, pounding rhythms often evocative of Stravinsky. The Expressionism of the earlier works is at the same time supplemented and enriched by a Neoclassical dimension.

Neiet niemien nenissä (Maidens of the Headland) (1935)

In the 1930s Raitio turned away from his Modernistic, idiosyncratic style. Maidens of the Headland, composed for the 100th anniversary of the Finnish national epic, the Kalevala, in 1935 adopts a more simplified idiom though it does still bear traces of the Impressionism of the previous decade. A further indication of its more traditional ideals is the use of an old kantele melody, The Konevitsa Church Bells, as one of the motifs for the work.

Raitio’s piano works

This text was originally published on the leaflet of Väinö Raitio – Œuvres pour piano CD, played by Jean Dubé. (Syrius SYR 141491) Read a review of the album here.

The earliest of the piano pieces featured on this CD, Andante (1912), Danse macabre (1912), Toccata (1913), and the 4-part suite Kesäidyllejä [Summer idylls] (1914) are firmly rooted in the Romantic tradition, with a clear tonality and structure. Stylistically, the surprisingly slow Danse macabre differs from the other early pieces with its quotation and variation of a known hymn melody.

Impressionist influences start to emerge in the Romantic idiom first in the pieces from the opus 8 (probably from 1915–1916). The first one, Ballade, appears to relate to the Piano Concerto No. 2 (”The River”, 1913) by a Finnish impressionist-romantic composer and pianist Selim Palmgren (1878–1951). The second, Valoisa yö (La nuit Boréale), is dedicated to Raitio’s younger sister Sylvi, a pianist who also studied in the Helsinki Music Institute.

In the opus 12 (probably from 1917) and opus 14 (probably from 1918) works the Romantic traits fade, while thematic, harmonic and structural ambiguity increases. The impact of Debussy’s piano music, which Raitio frequently performed in 1910s and 1920s, is clear in these works, especially in the Étude of opus 12.

Neljä värirunoelmaa pianolle [Four colour poems for piano], op. 22 (1923) is often considered Raitio’s main work for the piano. It was composed at the same time as Raitio’s most modernist orchestral works. Indeed, the thematic material relates to the orchestral works; it’s fragmentary and includes similar motives. The titles of the short movements – Haavan lehdet [Aspen leaves], Punahattaroita [Red cloudlets], Kellastunut koivu [Yellowed birch] and Auringon savua [Sun haze] reflect Raitio’s love for the nature and its phenomena.

The last piece on this disc is an unfinished Pilven varjo [Shadow of a cloud] (probably from 1923 or 1924), that was to be the first piece of another piano opus, 26. The reason why Raitio never finished this or the possible other works in the opus 26 is not known. Pilven varjo is stylistically comparable with the Neljä värirunoelmaa pieces.

c) Hanna Isolammi 2019