Sebastian Bach Mills

Sebastian Bach Mills (13 March 1839 – 21 December 1898) was a noted English pianist, composer and piano instructor who made his concert career in the United States and gave the first American performances of many important works.

Biography

Born in Cirencester, Gloucestershire, Mills received his earliest instruction from his father, who was organist at Gloucester Cathedral. The father was a great admirer of Johann Sebastian Bach, hence the name he gave his firstborn son. In adulthood, Mills simply signed himself "S.B. Mills." In spite of the name and his father's vocation, Mills chose piano over the organ. His precocious talent brought him to the attention of the French light music composer Louis-Antoine Jullien, who engaged the "infant prodigy" for his earliest concert performances.

Young Mills played at Drury Lane Theatre in London in 1846 at the age of six, performing Czerny’s Rondo Brillant on Themes from Preciosa[1] and gave a command performance before Queen Victoria at age seven.[2] He studied in England with Cipriani Potter and William Sterndale Bennett [3] and at the Leipzig Conservatory with Louis Plaidy, Carl Czerny, Ignaz Moscheles, Julius Rietz and Moritz Hauptmann.[1][4] At Leipzig, he met his future wife, Antonia Young, a native of Germany whose family had emigrated to Chicago.[2]

He went to America in 1856 and, after some disappointing initial receptions, was engaged by New York Philharmonic Society music director Carl Bergmann to perform the Schumann Piano Concerto in A minor. Its favorable reception before a largely German-speaking crowd let Bergmann to re-engage Mills for other performances, and the pianist appeared annually with the Philharmonic Society from 1859 to 1877.[1][3] He also made tours of Germany in 1859, 1867 and 1878.[5] A personal friend of William Steinway, he performed exclusively on Steinway pianos.[6]

Mills retired from active concertizing in 1880 – coincident with the arrival in New York of pianist Rafael Joseffy, who was more often engaged by the New York Philharmonic's new music director, Theodore Thomas to play Mills' repertoire – and he subsequently devoted himself to teaching. Suffering from failing health in his latter years, he moved to Germany at his wife's insistence in April 1898 and died in Wiesbaden on December 21.[2]

American premieres given

These are the earliest known U.S. performances of the works listed unless otherwise noted.[7]

Compositions

  • Three Tarantelles (1863, 1865, and 1888)
  • Murmuring Fountain (1865)
  • Polonaise (1866)
  • Fairy Fingers (1867)
  • Recollections of Home (1867)
  • Waltz Impromptu (1873)
  • Saltarello (1874)
  • Two Études de Concert (1880)

Notes

  1. Bomberger, E. Douglas (ed.): Brainard's Biographies of American Musicians (Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1999), pp. 187–188; ISBN 0313307822.
  2. "Sebastian Bach Mills Dead". Chicago Tribune. 24 December 1898.
  3. Elson, Louis Charles. The History of American Music, Macmillan Company, 1904.
  4. Lawrence, Vera Brodsky: Strong on Music, vol. 3 Repercussions, 1857–1862 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999), pp. 278–279; ISBN 0-226-47015-6.
  5. "Grande Musica Biographies".
  6. Saffle, Michael and Heintze, James R. (eds.): Music and Culture in America, 1861–1918 (London: Routledge, 1998), p. 5; ISBN 0815321252.
  7. Johnson, H. Earle, First Performances in America to 1900, The College Music Society, Detroit, 1979, 446 pp., ISBN 0-911772-94-4
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References

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