Heikki Suolahti
Heikki Theodor Suolahti (2 February 1920, Helsinki – 27 December 1936, Helsinki) was a Finnish composer.
Suolahti studied under Arvo Laitinen in Helsinki from 1929 to his death. In 1935, he composed Sinfonia piccola, which was first performed in February 1938 under Tauno Hannikainen. Hannikainen also orchestrated some of Suolahti's songs. Sinfonia piccola was published in the United States in 1959. When the composer died at the age of 16, none of his works had been performed publicly yet. He left the opera Pärttylin yö and a few other works unfinished.
Suolahti, a huge admirer of Richard Wagner, was promised a trip to the Bayreuth Festival in the summer of 1937, but he died soon after Christmas 1936.
Jean Sibelius was fascinated with Sinfonia piccola and praised it to Suolahti's mother after the composer's untimely death.[1]
References
- ↑ Ranta, Sulho (ed.): Suomen säveltäjiä, p. 739. WSOY, Helsinki. 1945.
External links
- The Finnish Music Information Centre on Suolahti
- Free scores by Heikki Suolahti at the International Music Score Library Project
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