John Bell Young (July 8, 1953 – April 8, 2017)[1] was an American concert pianist, music critic and author, best known for his performances and recordings of the music of the Russian composer Alexander Scriabin.
Early years, education and training
Young spent his childhood on the north shore of Long Island.[2] His mother was a librarian, and his father, of Cherokee descent, was an amateur pianist and inventor.[2][3] As a child, his first piano teachers were Miriam Freundlich, whose brother-in-law Irwin was chair of the piano division at Juilliard, and later Kyriena Siloti, the daughter of Russian pianist Alexander Siloti.[2]
As a pianist be was best known for his performances and recordings of the music of Alexander Scriabin,[4] earning the approval of Scriabin's daughters, Marina Scriabine[5] and Yelena Scriabina Sofronitsky. He was also a consultant to the first Scriabin International Piano Competition in Moscow in 1995, where a special prize was awarded in his name.
Young first came to notice in 1990 with his recordings on Newport Classic of musical works by Friedrich Nietzsche, which were the first commercially issued discs of his piano and chamber music.[6][7][8][9][10][11][12]Sony Classical has since acquired these recordings for eventual re-release.[13] In 1992 he performed Nietzsche's music in Russia, thus ending a nearly 75-year ban of the philosopher's work.[citation needed]
Young built a reputation for playing the works of rarely performed composers.[14][15][16]
Young was a critic for a number of newspapers and magazines, including the St. Petersburg Times,[18] the American Record Guide, the Brattleboro Reformer, Music and Vision, Clavier, Piano, and Opera News.
Following a stroke in 2013 which left him unable to play, Young retired from performing. He continued to produce recordings for other artists as well as to endorse and advise young aspiring artists about their careers through his group Artistic Spirits Productions.[19]
Young died in April 2017.[20] He was pronounced dead on April 8, but indications are that he died some time before then as he lived alone. He died intestate, and he was insolvent at the time of his death.[1]
Publications
Beethoven's Symphonies: A Guided Tour. Montclair, New Jersey: Amadeus Press. 2008. ISBN9781574671698[21]
Brahms: A Listener's Guide. Montclair, New Jersey: Amadeus Press. 2008. ISBN9781574671711[21]
Liszt: A Listener's Guide to His Piano Works. Montclair, New Jersey: Amadeus Press. 2009. ISBN9781574671704[21]
Puccini: A Listener's Guide. Montclair, New Jersey: Amadeus Press. 2008. ISBN9781574671728[21]
Schubert: A Survey of His Symphonic, Piano, and Chamber Music. Montlciar, New Jersey: Amadeus Press. 2009. ISBN9781574671773[21]
The Music of Friedrich Nietzsche for Piano Four Hands. New York, N.Y.: HLH Music Publications. 1992. (Edited by John Bell Young)[22]
The Alexander Scriabin Companion: History, Performance, and Lore. (with Lincoln Ballard and Matthew Bengtson) Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. 2017. ISBN9781442232617
Recordings
Prisms: Music of Scriabin, Mahler-Young, Leo Tolstoi, Hugh Downs, and Michel Block. John Bell Young, pianist. (Americus Records)
Piano Music of Friedrich Nietzsche: John Bell Young, pianist, with assisting artist, Constance Keene, piano. (Newport Classic CD 85513)
The Music of Friedrich Nietzsche: John Bell Young, pianist, with assisting artists John Aler, tenor; Nicholas Eanet, violin. (Newport Classic CD 85535)
Alfred Lord Tennyson's Enoch Arden: A Melodrama Set to Music by Richard Strauss: Michael York, narrator; John Bell Young, pianist. (Americus Records CD 20021025)
^"Artistic Spirits Productions". artisticspiritsproductions.com. Artistic Spirits Recording Production Services. Archived from the original on August 1, 2015. Retrieved August 7, 2015.