Music Composers, Authors & Songs

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Siegel, Al
456
posers Club. Works: five symphonies; forty anthems incl. Joyful We Adore Thee (sung by chorus of five thou­sand Cleveland Stadium, July 1950 by Baptist World Alliance Chorus); pieces for piano and organ; symphony, Circles of Washington; organ suite, Through Palestine (played in Holy City 1935 upon invitation); piano suite Lyric Wasliington; Choric Sym­phony; spec, in White Spirituals in­cluding "Old Boat Zion. Home: 8 Pine Ave., Takoma Park, Md.
Siegel, Al, composer; b. New York, N.Y., Aug. 27, 1898. ASCAP 1938. Songs: "Sioux City Sue"; "Get Hot"; ''Cry Baby"; "Vote for Mr. Rhythm"; "Panamania"; "Swing High, Swing Low"; "If I Put My Heart In My Song"; "Mountain Music." Home: 49 E. 92 St., New York, N.Y.
Siegel, Arsene, composer, organist, teacher, arranger, recording artist; b. Lyons, France, Nov. 26, 1897. ASCAP 1947. To U.S. 1912; citizen 1926. Educ.: public schools, France; piano and organ with private tutors. Awarded scholarship in composition at Chicago Musical Coll. with Felix Borowsky 1920. Studied piano with Heniot Levey 1926. Played organ in churches, vaudeville, and motion-picture theaters. Solo organist, the­aters and radio. For five years at Fisher Theater, Detroit; seven years, Chicago Theater, Chicago. Staff or­ganist, various radio stations; now staff organist, A.B.C., Chicago. At present writing incidental music for radio plays. First place National Com­posers Clinic, 1944, for two poems for piano, "Mirage" and "Sanctuary," and second place for "Pasquinade," Rhapsody for Saxophone or Clarinet and Piano. Second prize for organ num­ber, "The Hour of Worship," Lorenz's Sixtieth Anniversary Competition, 1949. Songs: "Keep Thou Not Silent, O God"; 'The Iron Bells"; "Sacred Moments" (collection of eight songs);
"Holy Reverie." Also The Windy City, Suite of Four Movements for piano and other works for piano, orchestra chorus and organ. Home: 5205 W. Foster Ave., Chicago 30, 111.
Siegel, Paul, composer, author; b. New York, N.Y., Dec. 8, 1914. ASCAP 1948. Educ.: Brooklyn Col­lege, B.A.; New York Univ., advanced orchestration with Philip James, M.A.; Cornell Univ.; Henry Street Music Settlement; harmony and composi­tion, Juilliard Cons., violin Seligman, piano, Sidney Sukoenig; Academy of Music in Vienna, student of Hofrat Josef Marx. Instrumentation with members of Vienna Philharmonic Or­chestra; conducting, Prof. Hans Swa-rovvsky. World War II, 1943-47, Office of Strategic Services agent. Captured Pierre Laval; took Nijinsky through sixty miles to safety. Chosen as Soldier of the Week in European Theater of Operations. Wrote music for college shows; conducted and ar­ranged for chorus. Musical program director of wired music services. Sym­phonic and popular disk jockey on mutual network, Miami, Fla., also W.M.C.A., New York. Works: Sym­phonic Diary; One World Symphony; Four Symphonic Songs, for orchestra and bass voice; Ballet Nijinsky; Be­tween Two Worlds, piano concerto; also String Quartets and Sonatas. Songs: "A Cigarette in Europe"; "In Vienna So Far Away"; "The Differ­ence is You"; "Goodbye is Not For Us"; "Through Wind and Rain"; "There I Go Again." Home: Brook­lyn, N.Y. Address: c/o ASCAP.
Sigler, Maurice, author, b. New Yoik, N.Y., Nov. 30, 1901. ASCAP 1934. Educ.: .Birmingham, Ala., public schools. Worked in various business capacities before musical post playing banjo in orchestra. Organized own orchestra, played dances at Univ. of Alabama; made recordings and played in vaudeville. Opened night club with