Friday, October 17, 2008
Mose Christensen
Mose Christensen (1871–1920) was an American musician, and founder and conductor of the Oregon Symphony (then known as the Portland Symphony Orchestra).
Biography
Mose was born on February 12, 1871, in Salt Lake City, Utah. His father, Lars Christensen, had emigrated from Denmark in the early 1850s to Utah as one of the Mormon pioneers. Mose's mother, Elsa Bjerregaard, was Lars Christensen's second wife in a plural marriage.
After Mose married Carrie Nichols in 1898, he traveled to the East Coast to study with the German violinist Henry Schradieck. After returning to the western United States, he eventually settled in Boise, Idaho, in 1901. During his early years in Boise, Mose traveled to Boston, Massachusetts, to study dancing at the M. B. Gilbert School. In Boise, Mose was a partner of the Riverside Pavilion ballroom where he carried out a social dancing business. Besides playing in his dance orchestra he also played in string quartets, and in 1908 was the conductor of the Boise Philharmonic.

In 1911, Mose gathered with a number of his musician friends at his dance hall to form the Portland Symphony Orchestra on a permanent basis. Until then, symphony concerts were intermittent affairs and years would sometimes pass with no concerts at all. Mose was the first president of the symphony, played the viola, and was one of its conductors on a rotating basis. Mose stopped conducting in 1918 when Carl Denton become the permanent conductor. Mose died two years later on October 1920 at the age of 49.
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