Mauno Kuusisto

Mauno Arnold Kuusisto[1] (November 3, 1917, Tampere - August 29, 2010, Tampere), was a popular Finnish musician and opera singer, as well as an actor.

Early life

Mauno Arnold Kuusisto was born on November 3, 1917 in Tampere, Finland. Kuusisto was orphaned when he was just a few weeks old and was subsequently taken in by his grandparents who also lived in Tampere. He resided in a Finlayson workers' house during the remainder of his life as a child and then by the time he was a teenager he began to work for the company.[2]

Kuusisto completed his schooling at the Pyynikin old vocational school. However, he was offered a place as a model carpenter at Finlayson which he accepted and began to work before the Winter War. He worked for Finlayson until the year of 1957.[2]

Career

Mauno Kuusisto initially participated in Finlayson's musical activities. Since then, Kuusisto began to study singing and visited choirs and quartets in Tampere. He had his first concert in 1952 in Tampere. In the Tampere Opera he sang a total of twenty-one operas and operetta roles. Tampere orchestra leader Eero Kosonen gladly paid him for these roles. Kusisto also visited the Finnish National Opera in Helsinki, Uusimaa, Finland, twice. Kuusisto appeared as part of the cast in these operas mostly between 1952-1968.[2]

Kuusisto became a familiar radio personality in the 1950s.[2] In 1930 Rudolfo Falvon composed the song "Kertokaa se hänelle" ("Tell it to him") which Kuusisto sang in 1959. As a result, Kuusisto rose to popularity among audiences and "Tell it to him" reached gold record sales in Finland. With 47,000 initial sales, "Tell it to him" is Finland's best-selling domestic single.[3]

Discography

Albums

Collections

Filmography

References

  1. "Pomus - Pomus.net - Mauno Kuusisto". pomus.net. Retrieved 2016-05-06.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Aamulehti. 2010-09-19. p. B21.
  3. "Musiikkituottajat - Tilastot - Myydyimmät levyt". www.ifpi.fi. Retrieved 2016-05-06.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/18/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.