Antti Railio

(Redirected from Celesty)

Antti Railio (born 1984)[1][2] is a Finnish rock and pop rock singer and vocalist in a number of Finnish bands, notably the power metal band Celesty, in addition to Diecell and The WildFire. After reaching the semi-finals in Finnish Idols (2007), and taking part in Kuorosota (Finnish version of Clash of the Choirs), he took part in season 2 of the Finnish music competition The Voice of Finland carrying the title in the final held on 26 April 2013.

Antti Railio
Antti Railio in 2013
Antti Railio in 2013
Background information
Born1984 (age 39–40)
Helsinki, Finland[1]
GenresRock
Occupations
  • Singer
  • songwriter
Years active2003–present
Websiteanttirailio.fi

Musical career

edit

Antti Railio started as a vocalist in the Finnish power metal band Celesty starting in 2003. During his six years in the band, Celesty released three albums, Legacy of Hate in 2004, Mortal Mind Creation in 2006 and Vendetta in 2009. He left the band just after the release of the album in 2009. While in Celesty, he also cooperated with band Diecell recording with them a demo, Audile Assault in 2005 and an EP Thrashborne in 2005.

In 2009, he moved to another band, The WildFire, releasing with them the album Sands of Time, a promotional album

Musical competitions and reality shows

edit

Railio has been very active in music competition shows and reality television programmes. First he took part in season 3 of the Finnish version of Idols in 2007 reaching the semi-final stage before being eliminated.

In 2009, he was in the inaugural season of Kuorosota, the Finnish version of Clash of the Choirs. The series was won by Timo Kotipelto.

The Voice of Finland

edit

In 2013, Railio returned to competition with The Voice of Finland which started on 4 January 2013 on the Finnish television Nelonen. He was the first contestant to appear on the show singing "Who Wants to Live Forever" from Queen. All four judges, Elastinen, Lauri Tähkä, Paula Koivuniemi and Michael Monroe turned their seats. Railio opted to be with Team Paula. In the Battle Rounds, Koivuniemi put him against Daniela Persson. Both sang "(I Just) Died in Your Arms" and Koivuniemi picked Railio to moved to the next round. In the live rounds starting on 15 March 2013, he sang consecutively "Maniac", "Rebel Yell", "Romanssi" and "Minun tuulessa soi" and in the semi-finals, "Skyfall" advancing to the finals as Team Paula finalist, alongside Suvi Aalto (Team Michael), Emilia Ekström (Team Lauri) and Ike Ikegwuonu (Team Elastinen). The final was aired 26 April 2013 singing "Sulava jää" as solo and "Kuuleeko yö" as a duo with his mentor Koivuniemi. He carried the title with a high score of 124 out of a possible 200, against runner up Ekström with just 76 out of 200.

Solo career

edit

After his win, Railio embarked on a solo career. His debut single "Vieras maa" entered at #3 on Suomen virallinen lista, the official Finnish Singles Chart in its first week of release.

Discography

edit

Band appearances

edit
  • In Celesty – Legacy of Hate (2004) / Mortal Mind Creation (2006) / Vendetta (2009)
  • In Diecell – Audile Assault (demo) (2005) / Thrashborne (EP) (2006)
  • In The WildFire – Sands of Time (Promo) (2011)
  • In Christmas compilations
    • Raskasta Joulua (2013) – "Enkelikello" / "Tulkoon joulu"
    • Raskasta Joulua 2 (2014) – "Joulu juhla parahin"
    • Ragnarok Juletide (2014) – "We Celebrate at Christmastime" / "Christmas Has Come"
    • Tulkoon joulu – akustisesti (2015) – "Tulkoon joulu"
  • Jani LiimatainenMy Father's Son (2022) / "My Father's Son"

Singles

edit
Year Single Peak positions Certification Album
FIN
[3]
2014 "Vieras maa" 3 TBA
edit
Year Single Peak positions Certification Album
FIN
[3]
2013 "Tulkoon joulu"
(Marco Hietala, Tony Kakko, Jarkko Ahola, Juha-Pekka Leppäluoto, Antti Railio, Ari Koivunen, Pasi Rantanen, Tommi Salmela, Ville Tuomi, Antony Parviainen, Kimmo Blom, Ilja Jalkanen & Elize Ryd)
20 Raskasta Joulua

References

edit
  1. ^ a b Kojonen, Veli (12 December 2014). "Antti Railion elämänmuutos: Yli 20 kiloa kevyempi!". Iltalehti (in Finnish). Retrieved 8 November 2023.
  2. ^ "Antti Railion ja Siiri-vaimon suurperheessä seitsemän lasta – tulossa niukka joulu: "Olemme valmistelleet muksuja"". www.iltalehti.fi (in Finnish). Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  3. ^ a b "Antti Railio discography". finnishcharts.com. Hung Medien. Retrieved 24 May 2013.
Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Mikko Sipola
The Voice of Finland Winner
2013
Succeeded by