Robert Kajanus
Robert Kajanus was a Finnish conductor, composer, and teacher. In 1882, he founded the Helsinki Orchestral Society, Finland's first professional orchestra. As a conductor, he was also a notable champion and interpreter of the music of Jean Sibelius.
Life
Kajanus studied music theory with Richard Faltin, violin with Gustaf Niemann in Helsinki, with Hans Richter, Carl Reinecke and Salomon Jadassohn in Leipzig and Johan Svendsen in Paris. His music drew on the folk legends of the Finnish people.He worked in Dresden in the years immediately after his graduation and returned to Helsinki in 1882. He founded the first permanent orchestra in Finland: the Helsinki Orchestral Society. He brought the orchestra to a very high-performance standard very quickly, so that they were able to give quite credible performances of the standard late classical/mid-romantic repertory. Kajanus led the Helsinki Philharmonic for 50 years, and among the milestones of that history was the first performance in Finland of Beethoven's Symphony No. 9 in 1888. His early-electric 78-rpm atmospheric, authoritative recordings of Sibelius symphonies are still interpretive milestones.
Kajanus was appointed director of music at the University of Helsinki in 1897 and remained in the post for the next 29 years, a period in which he had a major impact on music education in his native country. In 1917, he became the first president of the Finnish Musicians' Union. He was also the founder of the Nordic Music Festival in 1919. He received many decorations, including the French Légion d'honneur.
Family
Kajanus's parents were Georg August Cajanus and Agnes Ottilia Flodin.Robert Kajanus was the father of harpists Lilly Kajanus-Blenner and Aino Kajanus-Mangström, and violinist Kaj Kajanus ; the grandfather of award-winning Finnish/Norwegian sculptor Johanna Kajanus; and great-grandfather of pop musician and composer Georg Kajanus, who was famous for a while in Great Britain with his band Sailor which enjoyed chart success in the mid-1970s.
Selected works
Kajanus composed over 200 works, of which Aino and the Finnish Rhapsodies are enduringly popular. He also orchestrated the Finnish national anthem, Maamme and Christian Fredric Kress's Porilaisten marssi, the honour march of the Suomen puolustusvoimat and thus, effectively, the Finnish presidential march.- Adagietto
- Aino, symphonic poem for male chorus and orchestra
- Suomalainen rapsodia No. 1 in D minor, Op. 5
- Suomalainen rapsodia No. 2 in F major
- Huutolaistytön kehtolaulu
- Kullervon surumarssi, Op. 3 ; contains the folk tune "Velisurmaaja"
- Lyrische Stücke
- Overtura sinfonica for orchestra
- Piano Sonata
- Sechs Albumblätter
- Sotamarssi, with lyrics by A. Oksanen – arr. by Arvo Kuikka as an honour march of the Suomen ilmavoimat
- Sinfonietta in B flat major for large orchestra, Op. 16
- Suite ancienne for strings
- Violin Sonata
Kajanus and Sibelius
Kajanus was the first to make recordings of Sibelius's First, Second, Third and Fifth symphonies and Tapiola. They were recorded in the early 1930s, with the London Symphony Orchestra. The relationship between Kajanus and Sibelius was such that his interpretations of the composer's music are usually regarded as authentic.
In 1930, the Finnish government and Britain's EMI-Columbia label, perceiving a potentially wide audience for the composer's work, jointly arranged to record Sibelius's first two symphonies, and Kajanus was selected to record both at the insistence of the composer. In 1932, Kajanus recorded Symphonies Nos. 3 and 5, along with orchestral suites and tone poems. This was a massive recording project for the work of a living composer, and the recordings have been considered definitive for many years and are regarded as necessary listening in the study of Sibelius. Only his death in July 1933, at the age of 76, prevented Kajanus from recording all of Sibelius' Symphonies.