Kanteletar and
Kalevala has generally been used as a source of inspiration in
the arts. They have been used as a source of lyrics for Finnish
folk music in addition to archived Finnish folk poetry. The Kalevala-metred poems had originally been sung poetry.
Music •
Mari Kaasinen has explained that
Kanteletar and
Kalevala have been used as a source of inspiration for the music of
Värttinä. For example, the lyrics in the Värttinä song
Niin mie mieltynen (The Beloved, Music: P. Lehti – Words: S. Reiman, trad.) Onpa tietty tietyssäni, mesimarja mielessäni. Lempilintu liitossani, soriainen suojassani. are taken directly from the 31st poem of the second book. The name of the poem is
Onpa tietty tietyssäni (I Am Thinking of a Particular One) and has been translated: His image is fastened in my mind My sweet one in my memory, My little bird flies along with me My dear one under my wing. •
Akseli Törnudd (1874–1923) had written about twenty songs based on
Kanteletar poems, the most popular being perhaps the humorous story about a
cat from
Viipuri Tuomittu katti ("The Convicted Cat"). • The men's
choir Viipurin Lauluveikot, conducted by
Urpo Rauhala, put out the song for the album
Yhä kohoaa tuttu torni and other songs were recorded for their collection
Te luulette meidän unohtaneen in 2005. • A cappella group
Rajaton has recorded several songs with lyrics taken from
Kanteletar. •
Kanteletar has been a source of inspiration for the lyrics of the
choral works by
Toivo Kuula,
Veljo Tormis ("Kolme Karjalan neitoa"),
Jean Sibelius and
Selim Palmgren. • In 1996, Finnish metal band
Amorphis released their third album
Elegy based around the stories and poems within the Kanteletar.
Visual art • In addition to his paintings inspired by
Kalevala,
Akseli Gallen-Kallela produced paintings based on
Kanteletar in the late 19th century.
Online literature •
Project Gutenberg added
Kanteletar to its
e-book collection. == Sources ==