Emil Mollenhauer

From Wind Repertory Project
Emil Mollenhauer

Biography

Emil Mollenhauer (4 August 1855, Brooklyn, N.Y. – 10 December 1927, Boston, Mass.) was an American musician, orchestra violinist, and conductor.

He was born to Frederick Mollenhauer of Erfurt, Germany, who was himself a violinist. Mollenhauer attended public school in Brooklyn. He was a musical prodigy and was playing in the orchestra of Niblo's Garden in February 1864 before he was nine years old. From the age of sixteen he played in the orchestras of the Booth Theatre, where his uncle led the orchestra, that of Theodore Thomas at Central Park Garden, and the Damrosch Orchestra, where he also played piano.

Mollenhauer left New York City for Boston where he played at the Bijou Opera House, playing first violin in the Boston Symphony Orchestra from 1884 to 1888. Following this, Mollenhauer turned to conducting and led the Germania Orchestra for several years and then led several annual tours as head of the Boston Festival Orchestra, leading concerts with such notable soloists as Emma Calvé, Nellie Melba, and Eugène Ysaÿe. Mollenhauer was conductor of the Apollo Club of Boston, an acclaimed men's chorus, from November 1901 through April 1927. He then became conductor of Boston's Handel and Haydn Society in 1899 and held that post until his death.


Works for Winds


Resources