Mark Wessel
Quick Facts
Biography
Mark Wessel (March 26, 1894 – May 9, 1973) was an American pianist and composer.
Wessel was born in Coldwater, Michigan, and graduated from Northwestern School of Music, now known as Bienen School of Music; he later taught piano and theory there. When Wessel left Northwestern, he became a professor of piano and composition at the University of Colorado in Boulder.
Wessel was a former pupil of Arnold Schoenberg. He was twice awarded Guggenheim Fellowships, in 1930 and 1932. He was also the recipient in 1930 of a Pulitzer Scholarship to further his education in Europe (Anon. 1930). In the 1938 contest of the New York Philharmonic-Symphony Society his choral-orchestral work The King of Babylon won honorable mention, while his former student David Van Vactor won the competition with his Symphony in D (Anon. 1938a; Anon. 1938b).
He died on May 9, 1973 in Orchard Lake, Oakland County, Michigan (Michigan Department of Vital and Health Records 1998).
Selected compositions
- Adagio, for orchestra
- Allegro pomposo, for two pianos (pub. 1982)
- The Amorous Peacock, for piano
- Ballade, for solo violin, solo oboe, string orchestra (1931)
- Ballade, for violin and piano (1937)
- Concertino, for flute or violin and chamber orchestra (1928)
- Concerto, for piano and orchestra (1941)
- The Day Is No More (words by Rabindranath Tagore), for voice and piano (1919)
- The Departure, for orchestra (1922)
- Etude in G Minor, for piano (before 1947)
- Feminine Conversations and Promenade of Respectable People, for piano (pub. 1931)
- The King of Babylon, for mixed chorus and orchestra (1933)
- Holiday, overture for orchestra (1932)
- The Hour Comes When One May Question Fate, for orchestra (1922)
- Lento Fantasia, for horn and piano (pub. 1941)
- Meerestille (words by Nicolaus Lenau), for voice, viola, violoncello (or horn in C), and piano
- 1945, for orchestra
- Nocturne, for piano
- Original Theme and Four Fantasies, for horn (1979)
- Plains and Mountains, for violin, cello, and piano
- Poem, for orchestra and piano solo (1924)
- Prelude and Fugue, for string quartet (1931)
- Prisms, for two pianos
- Quintet
- Sacred Dances, for piano
- Scherzo, for horn and piano (pub. 1941)
- Scherzo burlesque, for piano and orchestra (ca. 1931)
- Seven Ages of Man, for orchestra
- Sextet, for woodwind and piano (ca. 1931)
- Sonata, for four horns
- Sonata, for violin and piano
- Sonata, for cello and piano (before 1947)
- Sonatine, for piano (before 1937)
- Song and Dance, for orchestra (1933)
- Southern Tour, for piano (pub. 1982)
- String Quartet no. 1 (1931)
- String Quartet no. 2 (ca. 1938)
- String Serenade, for solo violin and string orchestra
- Suite, for large orchestra (and baritone voice in second movement) (1928)
- Symphony (1932)
- Symphony Concertante, for piano and horn with orchestra (1929)
- Theme and Variations on "I've Got a Gal in Summer School", for two pianos, organ, and orchestra
- Two Concert Pieces for the Piano, "Green River" (Symmetrical Toccata) and "Isle Of Death" (pub. 1926)
Discography
- Leonardo De Lorenzo, flautista e compositore: registrazioni storiche 1928–1935 (includes Mark Wessel, Concertino for flute and orchestra, together with works by Ary van Leeuwen, Charles Tomlinson Griffes, and Gian-Luca Petrucci). 1 CD. [n.p.]: Valdom, 2000.