Benjamin Carl Unseld
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Benjamin Carl Unseld (1843 - 1923), better known as B. C. Unseld, was a U.S. gospel music teacher, composer, and publisher. Unseld was born October 18, 1843 in Shepherdstown, West Virginia. In the early 1860s, he moved to Pennsylvania. Though mostly self-taught, he sang in the choir and accepted a position as organist at the Methodist Church in Columbia, Pennsylvania. He studied music under Eben Tourjée and Theodore F. Seward. B. C. Unseld taught at the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston, Massachusetts, and was the school's first secretary. Later he taught at Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee, and was the first principal of the Virginia Normal School of Music. Unseld and Seward, with Biglow and Main publishers, imported John Curwen's Tonic Sol-fa and promoted it. The method was never widely received in the United States.
During his lifetime, he worked with the Biglow & Main Company (New York City), Fillmore Music House (Cincinnati, Ohio) and the Lorenz Publishing Company (Dayton, Ohio). Unseld was editor (1913-1923) of the "Musical Visitor", a periodical published by the Vaughan Music Company. He also served for a time as principal of the Vaughan School of Music. Unseld died in 1923.
Works include: The Tonic Sol-Fa Music Reader (with Theodore Seward, 1880), The Choral Standard (1895), Fillmore's School Singer for Day Schools, Juvenile Classes and Teachers' Institutes (with J. H. Fillmore, 1895), and Progress in Song (with E. T. Hildebrand, 1911). B. C. Unseld prepared the rudiments of music for A. S. Kieffer's popular Temple Star. Unseld’s tunes accompany hymns by James Rowe and Fanny J. Crosby. His most popular musical piece was entitled "Twilight Is Stealing", written with Aldine S. Kieffer.
B. C. Unseld was inducted into the Southern Gospel Music Hall of Fame in 2004.
[edit] References
- Biography of Gospel Song and Hymn Writers, by Jacob Henry Hall, New York: Fleming H. Revell Company, 1914.