Erik Werner Tawaststjerna (10 October 1916 – 22 January 1993) was the best known Finnish musicologist of his generation. He was also a pianist, pedagogue, critic, and biographer of Jean Sibelius.
Erik Werner Tawaststjerna was born in Mikkeli in 1916. His piano studies were with Ilmari Hannikainen, K. Bernhard, Heinrich Leygraf, Heinrich Neuhaus, Alfred Cortot and Jules Gentil. His concert career began in 1943, and was confined to Scandinavia, Vienna and the then Soviet Union, after which he became a private teacher.[1] He held posts in the Press and Cultural Affairs Department of the Foreign Ministry of Finland from 1948 to 1960.[1] His doctoral dissertation from University of Helsinki in 1960 was on the piano works of Jean Sibelius; he became Professor of Musicology there from 1960 to 1983.[1]
His magnum opus was his biography of Sibelius, who had been a personal friend of his. It used a wealth of hitherto unavailable personal material including private letters and diaries, to which he was given unrestricted access. It was published in five volumes in Finnish; then five in Swedish; three in English (translated by Robert Layton)[2]; and one in Russian. It was awarded the Tieto-Finlandia Award.[3] The immediate impetus for the work was the 1959 biography of Sibelius by Harold E Johnson, which created an uproar in Finland, and caused Sibelius's family to commission Tawaststjerna to write a more balanced life.[4]
He also served on the juries of international piano competitions (Tchaikovsky Competition 1970, 1974; Rio de Janeiro Competition 1973; Ravel Competition 1975), and was music critic for the leading Finnish daily newspaper.[1] Tawaststjerna also wrote on Sergei Prokofiev, but was unable to complete a major biography of Dmitri Shostakovich before his death. He died in Helsinki in 1993, aged 76.
His son Erik T. (Thomas) Tawaststjerna (born 1951; sometimes seen as Erick Tawaststjerna) is also a pianist and pedagogue, who teaches at the Sibelius Academy in Helsinki. He has recorded the complete original piano music of Sibelius.[5] He gave the first Finnish performance of Leonard Bernstein's Symphony No. 2 "The Age of Anxiety" in 1981.[6]