Hans Mossel
Henri Emile "Hans" Mossel (Amsterdam, 24 December 1905 – Auschwitz, Poland, 4 August 1944) was a Dutch clarinetist and saxophonist.
Hans Mossel | |
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Hans Mossel, 1937. | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Henri Emile Mossel |
Born | Amsterdam, Netherlands | December 24, 1905
Died | August 4, 1944 38) Auschwitz, Poland | (aged
Genres | |
Occupation(s) |
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Instruments | Clarinet, Saxophone |
Years active | 1923–1941 |
1905–1935: Early years
Hans Mossel was born into a very musical Jewish family. He was the son of a well-known Dutch cellist Isaäc Mossel (Rotterdam, 1870 – Amsterdam, 1923) and pianist Jeannette Belinfante (1868-1925).[1] He spent his youth with his parents in Laren in the Netherlands, where he lived on the Velthuijsenlaan.[2] At a young age he was taught to play the piano. His father stimulated his love for jazz. In 1923 Mossel played as a drummer and pianist in the “Larensche Jazz Band”. A couple of years later he formed his own jazz band “The Indian Jazz Band”. In 1931 Mossel was employed by the German violinist and bandleader Marek Weber and moved to Germany.[3]
Because he was Jewish, Weber was targeted by the Nazis who wanted to suppress the so called degenerate music (German: Entartete Musik), a label which had also been applied to jazz music. This was meant to isolate, discredit and ultimately ban this form of music. Towards the end of 1932 Marek left Germany and travelled via London to the United States. Mossel returned to the Netherlands.
The last ten years from 1935 until 1944
Hans Mossel was considered to be among the most notable clarinetists and saxophonists performing in Europe.[4] In 1935 Mossel was employed by the Dutch broadcasting company the AVRO as a bandleader for the AVRO Dance Orchestra.[5] In 1939 Mossel married Ada Elizabeth van Ollefen. They had two children. Shortly after the beginning of World War II life became very difficult for Hans Mossel. Although married to a non-Jewish woman, he was forced by the Nazis to fill bomb craters at Schiphol airport, which was used as a German military airfield called Fliegerhorst 561 and as a result regularly attacked by the Allied Forces. On 13 December 1943, 199 American planes dropped about 1600 bombs (about 400.000 kilos) on Fliegerhorst 561, after which it could no longer be used by the Germans.
On the basis of a trumped-up case of sabotage Hans Mossel was deported in 1943 to the Monowitz concentration camp, which was part of the Auschwitz concentration camp in occupied Poland. Here Mossel was murdered on 4 August 1944. There is a short biography of Mossel written by Herman Openneer (1935-2017), one of the founders of the Dutch Jazz Archive.[6][7]
References
Sources
- Herman Openneer (1935-2017), 1993.
- Jewish Biographical Dictionary.
- Peter Dempsey, Marek Weber: His Violin and His Orchestra, 2011.