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William Mason (composer)

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Name
  
William Mason

Role
  
Composer


Parents
  
Lowell Mason

Siblings
  
Henry Mason

William Mason (composer) wwwmirrorserviceorgsitesgutenbergorg3552

Died
  
July 14, 1908, New York City, New York, United States

Books
  
Memories of a Musical Life, Two-Part Inventions: Piano Collection

Similar People
  
Lowell Mason, Theodore Thomas, Ignaz Moscheles, John Knowles Paine, Edward MacDowell

William mason a pastoral novellette


William Mason (Boston, January 24, 1829 – New York City, July 14, 1908) was an American composer and pianist and a member of a musical family. His father was composer Lowell Mason, a leading figure in American church music, and his younger brother, Henry Mason, was a co-founder of the piano manufacturers Mason and Hamlin.

Contents

William Mason (composer) wwwthefamouspeoplecomprofilesthumbswilliamma

Career

After a successful debut at the Boston Academy of Music, William went to Europe in 1849; there he was the first American piano student of Franz Liszt and Ignaz Moscheles. He became the leader of a chamber ensemble based in New York that introduced many works of Robert Schumann and other famous Europeans to Americans during the Civil War era and beyond, at a time when classical music still had little specifically American identity.

Mason published numerous pedagogical works for the piano student, but is remembered above all for his Chopinesque compositions for piano. The American composer and pianist Edward MacDowell (1860-1908) dedicated his second piano sonata, Op. 50 Sonata Eroica (1895), to William Mason.

References

William Mason (composer) Wikipedia