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Frederick Adolph Mueller (nl) (né Frederich Adolf Mueller; 3 March 1921 Berlin – 5 March 2002 Mount Sterling, Kentucky) was a German-born American composer, music educator, musicologist, conductor, and bassoonist.[1][2][3][4]

Career

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Frederick Adolf Mueller, born in Berlin, emigrated from Cuxhaven, Germany, with his mother and sister, arriving in the United States November 30, 1934, when he was thirteen. Initially, they lived in the Jewish community of the place Skokie. His father and his older brother later died in the concentration camp Auschwitz. During the World War II he served in the United States Army. From 1946 to 1947 he studied at the Juilliard School of Music in New York City. From 1947 to 1955 he was a bassoonist in the United States 4th Army Band at Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio, Texas, and during this time he was also a bassoon connoisseur Kansas City Symphony, but he also served in the army during the Korean War. From 1955 to 1956 he served as a bassist in the United States 97th Army Band at Fort Sill, Oklahoma.

Formal education

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Post graduate career

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1961–1967: Mueller Chairman of the Department of Music at Spring Hill College in Mobile Alabama. While there, he met Mary Faye Moore, whom he married in 1966.
1966: Mueller studied at the New York Pro-Musica Institute, Oakland University, Rochester Hills, Michigan, and wrote a booklet about blockbuster, crooked horn and bassoon.
1967–1991: Mueller taught bassoon, music theory, and composition in the Music Department of the School of Humanities at Morehead State University. The Kentucky Music Teachers Association, in 1978, bestowed him its President's Award, and in 1987, the Association bestowed him with its Teacher of the Year Award for Colleges and Universities. Mueller retired from Morehead State in 1991 as Professor Emeritus.

In addition to these activities, he worked as a composer, bassist, conductor and judge in concert competitions.

Mueller is buried in Lee Cemetery, Morehead, Kentucky

Compositions

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Symphonic works

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  1. Fame: Concerto, for baritone and symphonic band
    By Frederick A. Mueller
    OCLC 5591628
  2. Concerto, for euphonium and band (1970)
    By Frederick A. Mueller
    1. "Allegro"
    2. "Cavatina"
    3. "Rondo"
    OCLC 8713534
  3. "Nocturne
  4. Sinfonia No. 3, "Appalachian Heraldry"
    For concert band
    By Frederick A. Mueller
  5. "Symphonic Suite No. 2
  6. "Variations on a Theme by Barber," for Tuba and Harmony Orchestra

Songs (vocal)

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  1. Five Songs on Blake Texts (1963)
    For singing voice and piano
    Music by Frederick A. Mueller
    Text by William Blake

Chamber Music

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  1. "Dance" (1951)
    Music by Frederick A. Mueller
    © 20 July 1951; EU244787
  2. "Duex," for bassoon and timpani (1972)
    Music by Frederick A. Mueller
    Edited by Bruce Gbur
    OCLC 884937412
  3. "Tuba Trio," for euphonium and 2 tubas
    By Frederick A. Mueller (1973)
    OCLC 4400217
  4. "Duex," for bassoon and timpani (1972)
    Music by Frederick A. Mueller
    Edited by Bruce Edward Gbur, DMA
    Prairie Dawg Press
    OCLC 884937412, 53358116
  5. "Dance Suite," for E alto saxophone and dancer (1973)
    Includes dance instructions
    OCLC 165329312
  6. Trio, for clarinet, alto saxophone, and bassoon (n.d.)
  7. Sextet, for piano and winds (n.d.)

Studies

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  1. Twenty-Four New Progressive Studies, for tuba
    By Frederick A. Mueller (1973)
    OCLC 4314953
  2. New Studies for Bassoon (1973)
    By Frederick A. Mueller
    Morehead State University
    OCLC 1063746, 321039893
  3. The Art of Bassoon Playing (1969)
    By William Spencer
    Revised in 1969 by Frederick A. Mueller
    Princeton, New Jersey: Summy-Birchard (1969);[a][6][7]
    OCLC 903966526; ISBN 9780874870732

Selected publications

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Miscellaneous

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  • Sara S. Studebaker (1952–2017), who, in 1986, married James M. Salamon, was a bassoonist and a 1975 alumna of Morehead State. Studebaker, who was related to the bygone automobile manufacturer, endowed the Studebaker-Mueller scholarship in 2009 to support Morehead State music education students who are bassoon majors.

Notes and references

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General references

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Notes

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  1. ^ Summy-Birchard was an American music publisher. Dating back to 1931, John F. Sengstack (1893–1970) acquired the Clayton F. Summy Company which was founded in Chicago in 1888. In 1957 Summy took over C.C. Birchard & Co., a Boston firm founded in 1901, and the resulting firm took the name Summy-Birchard Company; at that time it was based in Evanston, Illinois, but it later moved to Princeton, New Jersey, and became known as Birchtree, Ltd. Clarence Birchard had a particular interest. (Grove Music Online)

References

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  1. ^ Directory of American Scholars (Vol. 1 of 4: "History"), Jaques Cattell Press (ed.), R.R. Bowker; ISSN 0070-5101
          6th ed. (1974); OCLC 463017871
          7th ed. (1978); OCLC 956663125, 969714698
          8th ed. (1982); OCLC 631252371
  2. ^ International Who's Who in Music and Musicians' Directory, Adrian Gaster (1919–1989), Ernest Kay, David M. Cummings, Dennis K. McIntire (eds.), Cambridge, England: International Who's Who in Music; ISSN 0307-2894
          8th ed. (1977); OCLC 896663661, 889989015, 926822105
          9th ed. (1980); OCLC 872719393, 924748515, 956671704
        10th ed. (1984); OCLC 924748516
        12th ed. (1990); OCLC 660087014, 185572505
  3. ^ Who's Who in American Music: Classical, R.R. Bowker (1983); OCLC 9484726; ISSN 0737-9137
  4. ^ "Mueller, Frederick Adolph, Dr., 81" (obituary), Morehead News, March 8, 2002
  5. ^ Symphony No. 2, Opus 25 (DMA thesis), by Frederick A. Mueller, Florida State University (1961); OCLC 20674320, 25255620
  6. ^ "Summy-Birchard," by W. Thomas Marrocco, Mark Jacobs, Leslie A. Troutman, Grove Music Online, (January 2001); ISBN 9781561592630
  7. ^ "John Sengstack, Accountant, 77" (obituary), New York Times, October 13, 1970
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