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Genre

finnish pop

Top Finnish pop Artists

Showing 25 of 1,661 artists
1

Käärijä

Finland

334,269

1.3 million listeners

2

386,265

977,552 listeners

3

131,685

718,229 listeners

4

Erika Sirola

United States

8,465

711,416 listeners

5

JVG

Finland

359,961

666,117 listeners

6

Ares

Finland

50,101

581,924 listeners

7

68,767

580,983 listeners

8

Cheek

Finland

310,917

566,013 listeners

9

Turisti

Finland

113,568

561,836 listeners

10

Behm

Finland

138,501

556,058 listeners

11

Etta

Finland

43,755

524,200 listeners

12

Mirella

Finland

114,019

521,494 listeners

13

21,130

512,412 listeners

14

255,914

511,418 listeners

15

Lauri Haav

Finland

52,921

505,564 listeners

16

Gettomasa

Finland

191,319

503,966 listeners

17

Bizi

Finland

15,125

454,041 listeners

18

KUUMAA

Finland

119,081

450,825 listeners

19

66,698

438,293 listeners

20

33,969

430,832 listeners

21

197,137

430,761 listeners

22

AHTI

Finland

46,581

425,377 listeners

23

106,038

410,163 listeners

24

Sexmane

Finland

84,532

409,540 listeners

25

Cledos

Finland

70,890

407,537 listeners

About Finnish pop

Finnish pop, or Suomipop, is the flagship strand of Finland’s popular music. It’s a broad, evolving umbrella that covers glossy electropop, catchy pop-rock, indie-leaning singer‑songwriter material, and melodically driven ballads sung in Finnish as often as in English. What ties it together is a strong melodic intuition, a willingness to blend intimate lyrics with big, radio-friendly hooks, and a distinctive Finnish sensibility that breathes through the language and mood of the songs.

Its birth is best understood as a continuity with Finland’s postwar iskelmä tradition—the Finnish schlager that flooded radio and dance halls in the 1950s and 1960s. This era laid the groundwork for a domestic pop vocabulary: accessible tunes, clear storytelling, and a sense that a pop song should feel familiar and singable in everyday life. By the 1960s and 1970s, Finnish artists like Katri Helena and Juice Leskinen began translating that same drive into songs that resonated with a Finnish audience while hinting at broader possibilities. The 1980s and 1990s widened the palette with pop-rock hybrids and more polished studio production, as Finnish acts learned to straddle local language authenticity and international pop aesthetics.

The modern Finnish pop surge—especially in the 2000s and 2010s—coincided with the rise of digital production, streaming, and a new generation of writer-performers who embraced Finnish as a living, contemporary language for pop. Antti Tuisku became one of the era’s defining voices, delivering a string of chart-topping albums and an unmistakable Finnish pop swagger. Jenni Vartiainen emerged as a leading light, offering sleek, emotionally direct songs that married clever melodies to introspective lyrics. The wave continued with artists who would help define the sound of a new era: Alma, Sanni, Kaija Koo, and Saara Aalto, among others, each bringing different textures—danceable electro-pop, catchy indie-pop, and emotive balladry—to the scene.

In today’s scene, Finnish pop is marked by a productive bilingual streak: many artists release in Finnish to connect deeply with domestic listeners, while others cross over into English to reach wider European audiences. The production is often crisp and glossy, with strong hooks, bright synths, and a focus on memorable choruses. Yet it remains rooted in Finnish lyric craft—conversations about love, resilience, everyday life, and personal identity that speak directly to a Finnish-speaking audience, even when the music travels beyond borders.

Ambassadors of Finnish pop in the international arena include names like Saara Aalto, who bridged national success to European stages, Softengine, who brought a Nordic pop-rock energy to Eurovision, and newer stars such as Alma and Sanni, who push Finnish pop toward global streaming platforms without losing its characteristic warmth and candor. The genre’s core market remains Finland, where it commands the airwaves and festival stages year after year. In Sweden and the broader Nordic region there is ample cross-pollination, and in Europe and beyond a growing curiosity about Finnish-language pop often hinges on Eurovision exposure, streaming playlists, and live tours.

For enthusiasts, Finnish pop offers a living chart of Finland’s modern cultural moment: a music scene that celebrates intimate storytelling and grand, hook-filled moments alike, all sung with a distinctly Finnish voice.