Gustave Satter
Biography
Gustave (or Gustav) Josephe Satter was born on February 12, 1832, in Vienna, Austria[2] to Dr. John N. Satter and Caroline Weisshappel.[3] (Satter claimed Napoleonic lineage, but there is no proof of this.)[4] He did not follow in his father's footsteps to study medicine, and he pursued a career in music without much formal training. Satter first earned notice as a composer in Vienna, but this was quickly overshadowed by his solo piano recitals. After a series of successful concerts in New York City and Boston in 1855 he settled in the United States, where he taught, composed, and held concerts. He composed one opera, Olanthe. By 1861 he was back in Europe, but returned to the U.S. in 1875, touring across the country for years. His last appearances seem to have been in 1882, with concerts in New England and New Orleans.[5] The same year, he married a young Belgian woman, Antoinette Victorine Gilman, in Northwood, NH, 3 October 1882.[6]
References
- A death year of 1879 is sometimes referenced due to the publication of Satter's autobiography, published in Savannah with the subtitle "In Memoriam" likely tongue-in-cheek given his poor reception in the South. See Johnson, pp. 61, 68-70.
- Rann (present-day Brežice, Slovenia) according to Johnson, p. 61.
- "New Hampshire Marriage Records, 1637-1947," database, FamilySearch (free signup required) https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FLF3-LV7. Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics, Concord; FHL microfilm 1,001,308.
- Johnson, p. 70.
- The Times-Picayune, 26 October 1882, p. 4.
- "New Hampshire Marriage Records, 1637-1947," database, FamilySearch (free signup required) https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FLF3-LV7. Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics, Concord; FHL microfilm 1,001,308.
Johnson, H. Earle (1963), "Gustave Satter, Eccentric", Journal of the American Musicological Society, 16 (1): 61–73, doi:10.1525/jams.1963.16.1.03a00040, ISSN 0003-0139, JSTOR 829920
External links