Wild, Harrison M.
1861-
Well-known organist and conductor; born at Hoboken,
New Jersey, March 6, 1861; his parents were musical, his father playing both
violin and cello. He began music study at nine, and with the exception of a
year at Leipsic, where he studied organ under a Rust, theory under Richter, and
piano under Zwintscher and Louis Maas, his musical education was received in
Chicago, his teachers in that city being Arthur J. Creswold and Clarence Eddy
for organ and Emil Liebling for piano. Since the age of fifteen he has been
active as an organist, holding positions at Ascension Episcopal Church, then
for a year at Memorial Baptist, and for thirteen years at Unity Church, where
he gave over two hundred recitals. Since 1898 he has been organist of Grace
Episcopal Church, where the high order of his service playing and his artistic
rendering of works from all schools have brought him into great demand as a
teacher. Although then the youngest of Chicago's prominent organists, he was
chosen to give the opening concert on the Auditorium organ in 1891, and in 1893
to give three recitals at the Columbian Exposition. For ten years he has been
conductor of the Apollo Musical Club, Chicago, for six years of the Mendelssohn
Club, Chicago, a male choral society, and for three years of the Mendelssohn
Club at Rockford, Illinois, an organization of women's voices. He is Dean of
the Western chapter of the American Guild of Organists. Mr. Wild is also a good
pianist. Personally he is unassuming and courteous, with a vein of quiet humor,
and during his thirty years' work in Chicago has made many friends and
admirers.
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