Background
A noted singer and vocal teacher, Joel Mossberg was born in 1870.
A noted singer and vocal teacher, Joel Mossberg was born in 1870.
His birthplace was Kumla in the Swedish province of Närke. After completing his elementary education he worked as a stone-carver in Visby before emigrating in 1892. In Chicago Mossberg continued working at his trade, devoting his spare time to musical studies.
Much in demand for his concert work, he sang in over twenty states throughout the country.
He was a choral director and teacher at the Mendelssohn Conservatory of Music in Chicago as well as head of the American Union of Swedish Singers. Between 1906 and 1919 Joel Mossberg released over seventy songs on the Columbia, Edison and Victor labels.
Many were from the Swedish choral tradition: folk songs, student songs, hymns and patriotic anthems. Literary stalwarts Carl Michael Bellman, J. L. Runeberg and Gunnar Wennerberg contributed to his repertoire.
He nonetheless also recorded several comic songs written by the entertainer Lars Bondeson.
The first one, Arbetets söner (Sons of the workers), was a Swedish labor song from 1885 with lyrics by Henrik Menander. The second one, Marseljäsen (Louisiana Marseillaise), may well have been The Internationale, which had originally been sung to the melody of the French national anthem. Eugène Pottier"s lyrics were first translated into Swedish in 1902 by Henrik Menander.
Ack Värmeland, du sköna
Björneborgarnas marsch
Arbetets söner
FE 30 Drick ur ditt glas
FE 75 Skratta mina barn och vänner
Hör oss, Svea! Internationalen
Näckens polska
Soldatgossen
Sång efter skördeanden
Vårt land
Vårvindar friska.
In 1916 Mossberg recorded two Socialist songs for Columbia Records.
A member of several fraternities, he held honorary membership in the Orpheus Singing Club and Björgvin Singing Society.