Events in the year 1898 in music.
Specific locations
Events
Published popular music
Christmas songs
Recorded popular music
- "The Amorous Goldfish" (w. Harry Greenbank m. Sidney Jones) <br> â Syria Lamonte on Berliner Gramophone
- "At A Georgia Camp Meeting" (w.m. Kerry Mills) <br> â Sousa's Band on Berliner Gramophone<br> â Dan W. Quinn on Columbia Records
- "The Battle Cry Of Freedom" (w.m. George Frederick Root) <br> â John Terrell on Berliner Gramophone
- "Believe Me, If All Those Endearing Young Charms" (w. Thomas Moore m. trad) <br> â J. W. Myers on Berliner Gramophone
- "Break The News To Mother" (w.m. Charles K. Harris) <br> â George J. Gaskin on Edison Records
- "Chin, Chin, Chinaman" (w. Harry Greenbank m. Sidney Jones) <br> â James T. Powers on Berliner Gramophone
- "Don Jose Of Sevilla" (Smith, Herbert) <br> â Jessie Bartlett Davis & W. H. MacDonald on Berliner Gramophone
- "Happy Days In Dixie" (m. Kerry Mills) <br> â Arthur Collins on Edison Records
- "The Harp That Once Thro' Tara's Halls" (w. Thomas Moore m. trad) <br> â J. W. Myers on Berliner Gramophone
- "A Hot Time In The Old Town" (w. Joe Hayden m. Theodore A. Metz) <br> â Sousa's Band on Berliner Gramophone<br> â Roger Harding on Edison Records
- "I'se Gwine Back To Dixie" (w.m. C. A. White) <br> â Edison Male Quartette on Edison Records
- "Just Before The Battle, Mother" (w.m. George Frederick Root) <br> â Frank C. Stanley on Edison Records
- "Killarney" (w. Edmund Falconer m. Michael William Balfe) <br> â Arthur Gladstone on Berliner Gramophone
- "Largo Al Factotum" (w. Cesare Sterbini m. Giaocchino Rossini) <br> â Alberto Del Bassini on Berliner Gramophone
- "Love's Old Sweet Song" (w. George Clifton Bingham m. James Lyman Molloy) <br> â Annie Carter on Berliner Gramophone
- "The Miner's Dream Of Home" (w.m. Will Godwin & Leo Dryden) <br> â Leo Dryden on Berliner Gramophone
- "Mister Johnson Don't Get Gay" (w.m. Dave Reed Jr) <br> â Press Eldridge on Edison Records
- "Mister Johnson, Turn Me Loose" (w.m. Ben Harney) <br> â Marguerite Newton on Edison Records<br> â Len Spencer with Vess L. Ossman on Columbia Records
- "My Old Kentucky Home, Good Night" (w. m. Stephen Collins Foster) <br> â Diamond Four on Berliner Gramophone<br> â Edison Male Quartette on Edison Records
- "Oh, Promise Me" (w. Clement Scott m. Reginald DeKoven) <br> â Jessie Bartlett Davis on Berliner Gramophone
- "Old Folks At Home" (w. m. Stephen Collins Foster) <br> â Diamond Four on Berliner Gramophone
- "On The Banks Of The Wabash Far Away" (w.m. Paul Dresser) <br> â Annie Carter on Berliner Gramophone
- "Orange Blossoms" (m. Arthur Pryor) <br> â Sousa's Band on Berliner Gramophone
- "The Palms" (m. Gabriel Fauré) <br> â Diamond Four on Berliner Gramophone
- "Rocked In The Cradle Of The Deep" (w. Mrs Emma Hart Willard m. Joseph Phillip Knight) <br> â William Hooley on Edison Records
- "She Never Did the Same Thing Twice" <br> â Dan W. Quinn on Berliner Gramophone
- "She Was Bred In Old Kentucky" (w. Harry Braisted m. Stanley Carter) <br> â Albert C. Campbell on Edison Records
- "She was Happy Til She Met You" <br> â Dan W. Quinn on Columbia Records <br> â S. H. Dudley (singer)
- "Smoky Mokes" (m. Abe Holzmann) <br> â banjo Vess L. Ossman on Columbia Records
- "Sweet Genevieve" (w. George Cooper m. Henry Tucker) <br> â Jessie Bartlett Davis on Berliner Gramophone
- "The Sweetest Story Ever Told" (w.m. R. M. Stults) <br> â Diamond Four on Berliner Gramophone<br> â George J. Gaskin on Edison Records
- "Then You'll Remember Me" (w. Alfred Bunn m. Michael William Balfe) <br> â James Norrie on Berliner Gramophone<br>- Annie Carter on Berliner Gramophone
- "There's A Little Star Shining For You" (w.m. James Thornton) <br> â Dan W. Quinn on Edison Records
- "Tramp, Tramp, Tramp" (w.m. George Frederick Root) <br> â Frank C. Stanley on Edison Records
- "When Johnny Comes Marching Home" (w.m. Louis Lambert) <br> â Frank C. Stanley on Edison Records
- "Yankee Doodle" (trad) <br> â Frank C. Stanley on Edison Records
- "Zizzy Ze Zum Zum" <br> â Arthur Collins
Classical music
- Ernest Chausson â String Quartet (completed posthumously)
- Samuel Coleridge-Taylor
- Hiawatha's Wedding Feast, Op.30
- Ballade, Op.33 (premiered September 12 in Gloucester)
- African Suite for piano, Op.35
- Edward Elgar â Caractacus
- George Enescu
- Trois melodies sur poèmes de Jules Lemaitre et Sully Prudhomme, for bass and piano, Op. 4
- Variations for Two Pianos on an Original Theme in Aâ major, for piano, Op. 5
- Sonata in F minor, for cello and piano, Op. 26, No. 1
- Gabriel Fauré
- Fantaisie, Op. 79
- Pelléas et Mélisande, Op. 80
- Alexander Glazunov â Ruses d'Amour (ballet)
- Paul Juon â Sonata for Violin and Piano no. 1 in A major
- Carl Nielsen â String Quartet No. 3 in E flat major
- Henryk Melcer-SzczawiÃ
Âski â Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor
- Henrique Oswald
- Cello Sonata No. 1 in D minor, Op. 21
- Piano Quartet No. 2 in G major, Op. 26
- Camille Saint-Saëns â Barcarolle in F major
- Christian Sinding â Concerto for Violin in A major
Births
- January 7 â Al Bowlly, big band singer
- January 9 â Gracie Fields, singer and actress
- January 28 â Vittorio Rieti, composer
- February 3 â Lil Hardin Armstrong, wife and musical collaborator of Louis Armstrong
- February 7 â Dock Boggs, banjo player
- February 12 â Roy Harris, composer
- February 15 â Totò, actor and composer
- February 28 â Molly Picon, Broadway star
- March 4 â Robert Schmertz, American folk musician and architect (d. 1975)
- April 3 â George Jessel, American actor, singer & songwriter
- April 9 â Paul Robeson, singer
- May 14 â Zutty Singleton, jazz drummer
- May 15 â Arletty, actress and singer
- May 26 â Ernst Bacon, pianist and composer (d. 1990)
- May 28 â Andy Kirk, jazz musician
- June 6 â Ninette de Valois, founder of the UK's Royal Ballet
- June 29 â Yvonne Lefébure, French pianist
- July 4 â Gertrude Lawrence, English actress, singer and dancer
- July 6 â Hanns Eisler, composer
- July 15 â Noel Gay, English songwriter
- August 2 â Anthony Franchini, Italian-born guitarist
- August 15 â Charles Tobias, US songwriter and singer
- August 24 â Fred Rose, songwriter, music publisher
- September 1
- Marilyn Miller, US actress, singer and dancer
- Violet Carson, actress, singer and pianist
- September 26 â George Gershwin, US composer
- September 27 â Vincent Youmans, US composer
- October 7 â Alfred Wallenstein, US cellist and conductor
- October 8 â Clarence Williams, US jazz pianist and composer
- October 18 â Lotte Lenya, singer and actress, wife of Kurt Weill
- November 1 â Sippie Wallace, blues singer
- December 3 (n.s.) â Lev Knipper, Russian composer (and NKVD agent)
- December 5 â Grace Moore, operatic soprano
- December 14 â Lillian Randolph, actress and singer
- December 24 â Baby Dodds, jazz drummer
Deaths
- January 7 â Heinrich Lichner, composer, 68
- January 8 â Alexandre Dubuque, composer, 85
- January 16 â Antoine François Marmontel, pianist and teacher, 81
- February 15 â Franz Behr, composer (b. 1837)
- March 11 â Tigran Chukhajian, conductor and composer, founder of the first opera institution in the Ottoman Empire, 60
- March 15 â Julius Schulhoff, pianist and composer, 72
- March 28 â Anton Seidl, conductor, 47
- April 21 â Théodore Gouvy, composer, 78
- May 15 â Ede Reményi, violinist, 70
- May 16 â Jean Antoine Zinnen, composer of the Luxembourg national anthem, 71
- August 14 â John Comfort Fillmore, American music educator, organist, arranger, and ethnomusicologist, 55
- August 17 â Karl Zeller, Austrian composer, 56 (pneumonia)
- August 21 â Niccolò van Westerhout, composer, 40 (peritonitis)
- September 9 â William Chatterton Dix, hymn-writer, 61
- September 11 â Adolphe Samuel, Belgian composer, 74
- November 7 â Max Alvary, operatic tenor, 42
- December 13 â George Frederick Bristow, composer, 72
- December 29 â Georg Goltermann, cellist and composer, 74
References
See also