Description: Shipping: All items will be packed safely in a sturdy package for safe shipping.We ship internationally and offer combined shipping for multiple purchases. Expedited, Priority Mail and FedEx shipping available Once payment is received, we ship your item on the next business day.INTERNATIONAL BUYERS: Pls check the shipping tab. Ebay does not display cheapest shipping on top of the listing. Over 1000 Records available. If you plan to buy several records: Click the "ADD TO CART" button. Once you have selected all the records you want, go to Cart and check out. COMBINED SHIPPING will be applied automatically. If shipping seems high: In Cart click REQUEST TOTAL, and I will send you an invoice. Patrick Conways Band in two band arrangements of modern British Music by EDWARD GERMAN produced as stage music for various hit plays in the 1890s"There is only one man to follow me who has genius, and that is Edward German". Thus did Sir Arthur Sullivan, in the last years of his life, acknowledge the stature of the modest but highly talented composer who was born German Edward Jones in the old Shropshire market town of Whitchurch on February 17, 1862But German's golden opportunity arose as the outcome of a simple, seemingly casual enquiry directed at him in passing one autumn afternoon later that year by an Academy professor, Alberto Randegger. "Can you conduct?" was the innocuous question and, on answering yes, German found himself, in no time at all, appointed Musical Director of the Globe Theatre in London, under the new management of the American actor, Richard Mansfield. It was announced that Henry Irving intended to mount a production of Henry VIII at the Lyceum Theatre. Irving knew and liked the composer's Richard III music and he quite specifically wanted him to compose the score for Henry VIII. Irving and his manager - Bram Stoker, the author of Dracula, as it happened - proposed an exceptionally generous fee and the delighted German set to work immediately, determined to create something out of the ordinary which would clinch, once and for all, his reputation as a composer of the very highest order.His fortunes were, indeed, set to rise even higher with the turn of the century. The non-Shakespearean production mentioned earlier was Anthony Hope and Edward Rose's English Nell, starring Marie Tempest, and it was, in fact, at the famous actress' insistence that German was asked to provide the music. It was this score that contained the subsequently hugely popular Nell Gwyn Dances. Really more than any other pieces, these three dances were responsible for spreading the name of Edward German far and wide. Universally regarded as representing the high spots of Sir Henry Irving's production of the Shakespeare play which opened at the Lyceum Theatre in London on January 5, 1892, they were soon to be heard in concert halls up and down the country as well as being published in a bewildering variety of arrangements. They became especially popular, by all accounts, in Italy of all places! A Morris Dance gets proceedings under way, the home key of A minor, as well as the main theme itself, being well prepared in the introduction. The simple rhythm laid down by the drum at the very outset is never absent and provides a firm foundation, rather like a village tabor, for the charming, unhurried melodic discourse. In Act I Scene 4, the King, disguised as a shepherd, chooses his wife's Maid of Honour, Anne Boleyn, as a dancing partner. "The fairest hand I ever touch'd! O beauty! Till now I never knew thee", he tells her and monarch, maiden and courtiers tread a dainty step to the strains of the Shepherds' Dance. This charming movement was a particular favourite of Sir Edward Elgar who revealed that he could never listen to it without a lump coming into his throat. Dances from Henry VIII Morris dance ; Shepherds' dance Edward German (composer) Conway's Band (Musical group) Patrick Conway (conductor) 8/7/1914 Camden, New Jersey NELL GWYN English Neil, by Anthony Hope, author of the best-selling Rupert of Henzau and The Prisoner of Zenda, and Edward Rose, was first staged at The Prince of Wales Theatre, London on August 21, 1900, in a production by Frank Curzon. Based on Hope's novel Simon Dale, it was written specifically for Marie Tempest and, as mentioned earlier, it was the famous actress herself who insisted that the incidental music be written by Edward German. [2] Country Dance This cheerful terpsichorean trio ranks second in popularity only to the Henry VIII Dances. All three pieces proved an immediate success with audiences and were later described by the composer's life-long friend William Herbert Scott as being "thoroughly English, conceived in the happiest vein, and charged with that fragrant essence of the greenwood". The Country Dance opens quite ebulliently but quickly settles into a gentle, lilting tune. Contrast is offered in the shape of the secondary theme which is earthier and more rustic in nature, the side drum setting a steady rhythm. And, as is often the case in German's dances, there is a sprightly finish in a quicker tempo. Country dance from Nell Gwyn Edward German (composer) Victor Military Band (Musical group) Edward T. King (conductor) 2/8/1916 Camden, New Jersey 12" original issue Batwing Victor 78rpm record Condition: EXCELLENT close to pristine, faint scuff, , plays EXCEPTIONALLY QUIETAMAZING SOUNDA CHOICE COPY Edward German (1862 -1936) "There is only one man to follow me who has genius, and that is Edward German". Thus did Sir Arthur Sullivan, in the last years of his life, acknowledge the stature of the modest but highly talented composer who was born German Edward Jones in the old Shropshire market town of Whitchurch on February 17, 1862. His father, John David Jones, was honorary organist and choirmaster at the local Congregational Church and his mother, while not a practising musician, had a great love of all things musical and undoubtedly took pains to foster the same feelings in her son. Edward was the second of five children, all of whom displayed musical ability, and he grew up in a calm, well-ordered household amidst pleasant, pastoral surroundings. Although the church organ, at which he occasionally deputised for his father, and the domestic piano were the first instruments to attract the young boy's artistic interest, it was, in fact, the local brass band that most appealed to him. He was not much more than five when he would slip out of the house to hear the stirring tunes and marching rhythms before returning home to attempt to repeat these musical experiences at the piano. He even formed a small band amongst his friends, consisting of toy instruments and primitive percussion. His theatrical instincts, later to come to splendid maturity in works such as Merrie England and Tom Jones, also began to manifest themselves early on. A travelling theatre inspired him to build his own miniature stage, complete with puppets, costumes and scenery while, on another occasion, he was to be found imitating a well-known entertainer of the time, devising his own comic sketches and even writing songs, both words and music. His competence as a keyboard player steadily improved, thanks in no small measure to the efforts of a local teacher but, increasingly, his sympathies moved more towards the violin. He eventually persuaded his parents to buy him one and immediately set about mastering it by himself. Before he was fifteen, he had progressed to the stage where he was able to form, and perform in, a small ensemble made up of friends and family which gave recitals in the local neighbourhood. His musical interests and talents were further enhanced while he was boarding at Bridge House School in Chester but his education, both musical and general, then suffered a severe set-back when he contracted a serious illness. The 16 year old boy was forced to return home to recuperate and, for a while, his future looked uncertain. But this did not stop him studying in private and, day after day, he devoted himself to reading and copying scores as well as undertaking a little composition. His parents, while fully aware of this considerable artistic talent, nonetheless deemed that a career in another sphere would be more beneficial. The boy had also shown engineering ability and so this was the area that was felt to be most promising. An opportunity to become an apprentice with Laird Shipbuilders at Birkenhead presented itself and German was sent there for an interview. But this got nowhere, the company deciding that the applicant, although barely past his mid-teens, was too old to begin an apprenticeship! This unexpected turn of events was duly resolved by the conductor of the Whitchurch Choral Society, Walter Cecil Hay. Hay had known German for some time as the boy had sung in his choir, and he had been especially impressed by the youngster's remarkable self-taught mastery of the violin. He offered to teach the budding composer and helped German to persuade his parents to accept the idea. As a result, German left home in the first days of 1880 to go to study with Hay in Shrewsbury with the intention of preparing himself for entry to the Royal Academy of Music in London. Hay duly worked his pupil hard for nine months but German willingly responded to the challenge and made excellent progress as an all-round musician. With what proved to be remarkable foresight, the older man on one occasion confided to his daughter that, in his opinion, his protégé "would make a second Sullivan". Not surprisingly, the youngster passed the Academy's entrance examinations with ease and, in September 1880, embarked on a course of study at that distinguished institution. To begin with, his principal studies concentrated on the organ (under Charles Steggall), with the violin being placed second in importance, but it was not long before his exceptional promise on the latter instrument brought about a change of priorities, and he was placed in the care of Alfred Burnett. The end of his first year saw his winning a major prize as the best violin student and the future looked bright although, from time to time, he seemed to suffer from depression and harboured doubts that he would be able to survive the pressures of the course. But survive it he did, winning certificates and prizes along the way and making steady progress as a violinist, both in a solo capacity and as a chamber music player, culminating in his appointment as sub-professor of the instrument in 1884. His earliest original works from this period include some piano pieces, a few miniatures for violin and piano, ballads, partsongs, some hymn-tunes and chants, and a Pizzicato for strings entitled The Guitar, his official "Opus 1", performed at an Academy concert in London's St. James's Hall in June 1883. He was still writing and performing as German Edward Jones but around this time, he changed his nomenclature, initially to J.E. German before finally adopting the name by which we now know him. Why he made the alteration is not entirely clear but the existence of another student called Edward Jones may have had some bearing. 1883 also saw his first orchestral piece, a Bolero for violin which had begun life shortly before in a version with piano accompaniment. Notwithstanding that this first enterprise with larger instrumental forces was little more, therefore, than a scoring exercise, German was greatly encouraged by his achievement and it served to strengthen his determination to become a serious composer. One movement of a piano sonata led on to his first major attempt at a large-scale work, a setting of the Te Deum for soloists, chorus and organ which, to his delight, won him the coveted Charles Lucas Medal in 1885. This raised his confidence even higher and so it was that he commenced work on a symphony. It took him about a year to compose but, when it was finally performed in St. James's Hall in 1887, he was rewarded with the most enthusiastic response from the audience. The previous year had also seen the completion and performance of another large-scale undertaking - a two-act operetta (or "opera de salon", as German dubbed it) called The Two Poets (later completely re-drafted as The Rival Poets). Written for just six soloists and two-piano accompaniment, it took shape over a three-year period, most of the writing taking place during holiday times. Though hardly a masterpiece, it provided impressive evidence of the young composer's natural dramatic flair that was to yield such splendid results in later years. Not until the summer of 1887 did German finally leave the Academy. By now, he had established a fine reputation as a violinist which, in addition to his duties as sub-professor, mentioned earlier, had also led to an appointment as professor at Wimbledon School. During his tenure at this educational establishment, he wrote a March and Chorus for a planned production by one of his teaching colleagues of Sophocles' Antigone but, in the event, the cast, along with most of the school's pupils, were laid low with a nasty outbreak of sickness, and the play was quietly shelved. He also played from time to time in London orchestras, and could occasionally be found in the pit at the Savoy Theatre performing Gilbert and Sullivan. As a composer, in addition to the pieces just mentioned, he was perfecting the art of song-writing and began to see a number of his ballads appear in print. As yet, there was no possibility of his earning a living solely by composition, but his hopes continued to remain on a high level. In 1888, an actress friend arranged a commission for him to set some words by W.S. Gilbert for her to sing in one of the great writer's plays being performed at the Savoy. The result pleased Gilbert - and Sir Arthur Sullivan, who happened to hear it. But German's golden opportunity arose as the outcome of a simple, seemingly casual enquiry directed at him in passing one autumn afternoon later that year by an Academy professor, Alberto Randegger. "Can you conduct?" was the innocuous question and, on answering yes, German found himself, in no time at all, appointed Musical Director of the Globe Theatre in London, under the new management of the American actor, Richard Mansfield. Immediately, he set about raising artistic standards, moulding the twenty-eight piece orchestra into a formidable musical unit and achieving quite extraordinary results in a remarkably short space of time. He entered the New Year with his first big commission from the theatre - to provide the music for a new production of Shakespeare's Richard III. There was limited time, and German was already bearing a heavy workload, but he completed the score quite quickly and, as the curtain fell on the first performance on March 16, 1889, it was clear to all that a major musical talent had emerged on the theatrical scene. At the age of 27, Edward German had, indeed, "arrived". By the end of the seven-month run, so many people had seen - and heard - the play that German's reputation had spread far and wide. He declined to join Mansfield on an American tour of the play and turned his attentions instead to making his name as an orchestral writer. He had some success, finding a champion in the renowned conductor Sir August Manns, who performed his works, including the Richard III Overture, the First Symphony and, later, the Gipsy Suite at the Crystal Palace. He still had to supplement his income with teaching while planning more compositions, such as another symphony which, he hoped, would make him more self-sufficient. It was, however, at the instigation of his sister Rachel that he eventually found himself back in the theatre. It was announced that Henry Irving intended to mount a production of Henry VIII at the Lyceum Theatre and she suggested to her ever-modest brother that he should offer to provide the score. Hesitant at first, German nonetheless wrote to Irving and was openly surprised to receive an invitation to meet the great actor. He was even more astounded at the subsequent interview to learn that Irving knew and liked the composer's Richard III music and he quite specifically wanted him to compose the score for Henry VIII. Irving and his manager - Bram Stoker, the author of Dracula, as it happened - proposed an exceptionally generous fee and the delighted German set to work immediately, determined to create something out of the ordinary which would clinch, once and for all, his reputation as a composer of the very highest order. The first night was not scheduled for another year or so and, therefore, German was not obliged to work under the same pressure as he had done for Richard III. Even so, little more than an orchestral Marche Solonelle and an Overture on German Airs, plus a few songs occupied his attention throughout 1891 as he applied himself steadily to the task in hand, liaising closely with Irving and resisting the latter's request to incorporate some traditional and period music into the score. Every note, while designed to reflect the spirit of the play and its era, was to be wholly original. And when the production finally opened in 1892, German's handiwork was lavishly praised. It did not take long for a set of Three Dances to become a concert favourite in its own right and, entering the repertoires of a number of orchestras, helped to further enhance its composer's name. Later that year, German conducted his Richard III Overture at the Leeds Festival and, as he took his bow, was publicly congratulated by Sir Arthur Sullivan who came on stage to shake his hand. 1893 saw the first performance, and enthusiastic reception, of his Second Symphony, named after the city for which it was written, Norwich. The same year also witnessed a request from another great thespian, Herbert Beerbohm Tree, for some music to accompany a production at London's Haymarket Theatre of The Tempter by Henry Arthur Jones, a commission that, once more, was accomplished with singular success. The 1890s saw a steady stream of new compositions, both for the theatre and outside it. His dramatic talents produced music for three more Shakespeare plays between 1895 and 1898 (Romeo and Juliet, As You Like It and Much Ado About Nothing) and one non-Shakespearean production in 1900. In addition to the pieces already mentioned, the concert hall witnessed substantial new works in the forms of the Leeds Suite in 1895 (which won yet more public approval from Sullivan and whose second movement, the Valse gracieuse, became especially popular), the English Fantasia: Commemoration and Symphonic Poem: Hamlet in 1897, the idea for the latter implanted by an abortive commission to provide incidental music for a planned production of the play earlier that year, and the impressive Symphonic Suite: The Seasons in 1899. And there was still the occasional song or two-more than a dozen actually. In January 1896, German moved to a house in a quiet street in Maida Vale, north-west London, and this was to be his home for the next quarter century or so. Life, however, was not unmitigated sweetness and success. His music for another Henry Arthur Jones play, Michael and the Lost Angel, was doomed to oblivion when the production faded after just a week. It is characteristic of the composer's pleasant and generous nature that he was prepared to share the promoter's losses by offering to return his fee for the commission. 1897 brought him ill-health and news of the death of his father. But he overcame all these setbacks and ended the century with both his reputation and his hopes at an encouraging level. His fortunes were, indeed, set to rise even higher with the turn of the century. The non-Shakespearean production mentioned earlier was Anthony Hope and Edward Rose's English Nell, starring Marie Tempest, and it was, in fact, at the famous actress' insistence that German was asked to provide the music. It was this score that contained the subsequently hugely popular Nell Gwyn Dances. And then, within just a few months of the première of English Nell, came the announcement that Sir Arthur Sullivan had died at the age of 58, leaving behind him an unfinished operetta, The Emerald Isle, that he had been working on with librettist Basil Hood. Richard D'Oyly Carte and the management of the Savoy Theatre pondered the dilemma. Was it possible for the work to be completed by another hand, notwithstanding that Sullivan's score had been left in the most rudimentary state, with only two numbers actually finished, fifteen others existing as little more than melody lines and eleven not even sketched at all? Various names were suggested, including Ernest Ford, composer of Jane Annie, and François Cellier, musical director of the Savoy, who had known Sullivan well and worked with him over a number of years. But the predominant feeling was that there was really only one man capable of undertaking the task - the composer whom Sullivan himself had acknowledged as his musical heir, Edward German. An approach was duly made and the latter, greatly flattered as well as somewhat apprehensive, accepted the challenge. With only a comparatively short time allotted to him to prepare the score for its first production, he was obliged to withdraw from a recently-signed contract to write a violin concerto in order that he could apply all his efforts to the new project. How well he succeeded may be judged from the reviews that appeared after the premiere on April 27, 1901. "Edward German... may be described as [Sullivan's] heir-at-music", ran one notice. "A thousand times over has Edward German justified the choice which selected him to complete Sullivan's score", remarked another. "Mr. German's accomplishment of an amazingly difficult task is brilliant", enthused a third - and so on. Small wonder, then, that shortly afterwards, Hood and German put their respective talents together again to create a wholly original stage piece - Merrie England. Yet German did not find its composition a totally felicitous occupation. Deeply distressed at the death of his mother, and feeling himself constantly under the pressure of deadlines, occasional signs of depression and weariness made themselves evident in his letters. But he was a professional through and through, never giving anything less than his absolute best to the undertaking, and before the year was out, the score was finished. His sterling efforts were once again rewarded with glowing critical reviews after the first night of Merrie England at the Savoy Theatre on April 2, 1902. Sensing that a new Gilbert and Sullivan-type partnership might be in the offing, the public called for more and German and Hood duly responded in under a year with A Princess of Kensington, a somewhat complicated but still effective piece of light drama. The premiere in January 1903 proved another personal triumph, but the composer now felt that, after more than two years of hard, deadline-dominated work, he was entitled to a rest from the theatre. He duly took a few weeks' holiday in his home town of Whitchurch before turning his attention to other areas of composition. A proposed cantata on the subject of the notorious highwayman Dick Turpin failed to materialise on account of the composer's distaste of the central character. He toyed with the idea of writing a series of cantatas based on Shakespeare, but this also came to naught. What did appear in 1903, however, was a collection of twelve songs for voice and piano, setting poems from Rudyard Kipling's Just So Stories. Published as the Just-So Song Book, the work was enthusiastically praised for its artistry and its singular success in capturing exactly the varied, and at times elusive, moods of Kipling's characteristic texts. 1904 saw a return to orchestral music, this time in response to a commission from the Cardiff Musical Festival. German thought long and hard about what to write and he began and aborted many ideas. But finally, the concept of a specifically Welsh piece, based on traditional tunes, caught his imagination and, after months of painstaking work, he came up with the Welsh Rhapsody - in effect, a one-movement symphony in miniature. 1905 was taken up with providing music for a drama by the Duchess of Sutherland, The Conqueror, first performed at the brand new Scala Theatre in London. That was also the year in which he was approached by Robert Courtneidge with a proposal that he should write the score for an operetta based on the novel Tom Jones by Henry Fielding, the 200th anniversary of whose birth was scheduled to fall in 1907. The idea appealed to him but the project was a time-consuming one, involving several months of planning and discussion before composition proper could get under way. Meantime, he undertook an assortment of conducting engagements and continued to fulfil a seemingly endless demand from his publisher for piano arrangements of his most popular orchestral and theatre works. The preparation of Tom Jones was an enjoyable but tiring affair and by the time of the first performance in Manchester's Prince's Theatre on April 3, 1907, the weary German felt obliged to have a substitute conductor standing by in case he failed to get through the evening. But he was still on the rostrum as the curtain fell and was in excellent spirits as he joined the cast on stage afterwards to enjoy the ovation. In October that year, German found himself on board ship - the Lusitania, no less - destined for New York where Tom Jones was scheduled to be staged. His name was already well known in the States and his presence aroused considerable press interest. In addition to performances of the operetta, the composer had also been invited by Walter Damrosch to conduct the New York Symphony Orchestra, which he did at concerts in Washington, Philadelphia and the Orchestra's home city. He was applauded wherever he went and, although his visit lasted less than six weeks, it enhanced his transatlantic reputation beyond all expectations. 1908 was comparatively uneventful and it was only in the closing days of that year that the stirrings of a major new project became evident. German received a letter from W.S. Gilbert, who had written no operatic libretto since The Grand Duke of 1896. The playwright revealed that he wanted to create a musical version of a play, The Wicked World, he had produced over three and a half decades earlier. He had, in fact, suggested this idea some years before to Sullivan who had rejected it on account of there being no requirement in the plot for a men's chorus. German, while recognising the limitations this imposed, felt undaunted and in early 1909, both men began work in earnest on the project. Relations between the two of them were excellent (unlike those between Gilbert and Sullivan) and each took great pains to accommodate the other's requirements. Later in the year, German privately expressed a nagging doubt about the emerging piece's character, fearing it might prove too whimsical for the public's taste, but this worry in no way interfered with his commitment to the task. In fact, the opera was more or less complete before either the venue or date of the first performance had been agreed upon. There was also the question of what to call it. Moon Fairies and Dream Fairies were proposed but it was as Fallen Fairies that it went on stage at the Savoy on December 15, 1909. While by no means a failure, receiving some glowing reviews in the press, the work did not prove a lasting popular success - as German and, indeed, Gilbert had suspected might be the case - and it was to be the last operatic venture for both men. In truth, although he did not know it at the time, Fallen Fairies was to mark the end of Edward German's golden period of composing. The reason for the subsequent gradual silencing of his creative muse becomes evident in a series of letters. It is, quite simply, the advent of modernism in art generally, and music in particular. He felt himself completely out of step with contemporary stylistic trends. An offer from Herbert Beerbohm Tree in 1912 to collaborate once more with Basil Hood on an operatic venture based on the life of Sir Francis Drake was turned down, admittedly not without reluctance, nor could other proposed libretti succeed in interesting him. In addition to concern that his work might be considered out-dated in the face of the mounting challenge from the new-style musical comedy, he also began to harbour an underlying fear that he might not be able to maintain the standard of his earlier pieces. A good proportion of his time, however, was spent in overseeing the publication of a number of his compositions, a task that gave him relatively little artistic satisfaction although he appreciated the opportunities it provided of further performances of his music. Apart from a few songs, his only substantial new work during this period was the Coronation March and Hymn: Veni Creator Spiritus, written for and performed at the Coronation of King George V in Westminster Abbey on June 22, 1911, and based on two tunes from his score for Henry VIII. Otherwise, he occupied himself with a fairly busy round of conducting engagements, including one in his home town of Whitchurch where he took charge of a concert performance of Merrie England on the occasion of his fiftieth birthday, an event celebrated with great enthusiasm. But not long afterwards, the first signs of poor health that was to dog him in his later years began to reveal themselves. Nor were matters helped by his involvement in a taxi crash in 1913 in which he sustained cuts and bruises to the face. But personal concerns were brushed aside with the onset of war in 1914 although one or two of the less intelligent members of the populace felt it necessary to comment on what they perceived to be the inappropriateness of his name! In 1915, German contributed a hymn-tune, Homage to Belgium, 1914, to King Albert's Book, a volume compiled as part of a huge fund-raising effort to provide relief for Belgian refugees. The melody caught the public imagination and it was soon given words, in which form it became known as Father Omnipotent. 1916 saw another setting of words by Rudyard Kipling - a naval ballad entitled Have You News Of My Boy Jack? - written for and first performed with enormous success by Dame Clara Butt. A further Kipling military versification, this time to commemorate the Irish Guards, received invigorating treatment by German in early 1918. Recurring bouts of ill-health still laid him low occasionally, especially a rheumatic attack in 1917, but he still managed to make conducting appearances, in both the concert hall and the recording studio and, just before the end of the war, he played amongst the second violins at a charity concert in an orchestra made up of musical celebrities - including Sir Edward Elgar on cymbals and Benno Moiseiwitsch on triangle! There had, however, been the seeds of a major new work in German's mind since 1910. That was the year he had been asked by the Royal Philharmonic Society to compose something for that venerable institution and, since then, he had considered a number of possible ideas and made several sketches. With the cessation of hostilities in 1918, he turned his full attention to the commission and managed to complete it within a few months. At first, he considered calling it Diversions on an Original Theme (on being asked by an inquisitive acquaintance, if the theme was original, he bluntly replied "Yes, very!") but it was as Theme and Six Diversions that it received its premiere in March 1919. And, once again, German was able to bask in a warm glow of universal admiration from press and public. There was really just one more work to come from the composer's pen - the Tone Poem: The Willow Song - which, in drawing its inspiration from Othello, meant that Edward German's principal creative career could be regarded as being enclosed within a Shakespearean frame (i.e. taking the starting-point as Richard III). This final piece should have received its premiere at the Royal Academy of Music's Centenary Celebration Concert in the presence of the King and Queen but, due to an appalling error amongst the organisers, German was misinformed as to the time when his conducting presence was required and his consequent absence meant that The Willow Song had to be omitted. It was, however, heard the following day but without royalty in attendance. If his compositional muse had now fallen silent, his conducting talents were still in demand. In 1924 and 1927, he travelled to his home town to conduct the Whitchurch Choral Society, both occasions generating enormous interest and enthusiasm amongst the local population. The media of gramophone and radio helped spread his music and reputation further than ever before and it was only a matter of time before the accolade of knighthood was bestowed on him. The announcement on New Year's Day, 1928 came as he was recovering from a long period of bed rest after the discovery of a serious eye condition which left him partially sighted. But he was in good spirits as he went to Buckingham Palace on the day before his 66th birthday to receive the honour. Lauded by his fellow composers, including Sir Edward Elgar, and honoured in 1934 with the award of the hugely prestigious Gold Medal of the Royal Philharmonic Society (but not, incidentally, recognised by any university music faculty which might easily have awarded him an honorary doctorate), Sir Edward German lived out his final years in quiet retirement, indulging in such leisurely pastimes as photography, fishing and watching cricket - failing eyesight notwithstanding. His health gradually declined and in September 1936, hospital treatment was required. But, in truth, he was beyond medical help and he died in London on November 11 of that year, at the age of 74.Patrick "Patsy" Conway (July 4, 1865 – June 10, 1929) was a prominent American bandleader during the golden era of professional bands. He often was referred to as Pat Conway or Patsy Conway.[1]Early lifeConway was born in Troy, New York, but moved to Homer, New York as an infant. He learned to play cornet as a young man while working in a carriage factory, joining the popular Homer Cornet Band and eventually becoming leader of the Cortland Band.The Ithaca BandAfter a successful appearance by the Cortland Band at the 1894 Central New York Volunteer Fireman’s Association convention in Ithaca, New York, Conway was recruited by the judges (including music educator Hollis Dann) to relocate to Ithaca in 1895. He served as director of the Cornell University Cadet Band (predecessor of the Cornell Big Red Marching Band) from 1895 to 1908. He also began teaching students at the new Ithaca Conservatory of Music (predecessor of Ithaca College) at a time when teaching band music and brass instruments was uncommon.Conway formed the Ithaca Band in 1895 and brought the ensemble to national popularity and acclaim. By around 1910, the ensemble came to be known as Conway's Band or Patrick Conway and His Famous Band. In Ithaca, they had a standing contract with the trolley company to perform at Stewart Park (then Renwick Park), but extensive tours brought them around the country to the St. Louis World's Fair, Canadian National Exhibition, Cincinnati Zoo, Corn Palace, Willow Grove Park, the Pan-American Exposition, Atlantic City, Oaks Amusement Park, and the Panama-Pacific Exposition.Many members of Conway's band had substantial success beyond the band, such as Lincoln Holroyd, Getty H. Huffine, Ernest Williams. Conway and the Ithaca Band made many recordings on the Victor and Edison labels. In 1927, they played on the premiere of the General Motors Family Hour radio show.In the stage and film productions of The Music Man, set in 1912, character Harold Hill mentions Conway in the introduction to "Seventy-Six Trombones" alongside other famous bandleaders like Patrick Gilmore and John Philip Sousa. All three were inaugural members of the National Band Association Hall of Fame of Distinguished Band Conductors in 1980.Conway Military Band SchoolIn 1922, sensing the waning popularity of professional bands, Conway founded the Conway Military Band School in affiliation with the Ithaca Conservatory of Music. It was among the first schools of its kind in the country. Students included George S. Howard (first director of the U.S. Air Force Band) and Les Brown (noted bandleader). Conway led the school until his death in 1929 following a prostate operation. The school was merged into Ithaca College in 1931 and laid the foundation for the college's strong band tradition.Other workWhen not touring with the Ithaca Band, Conway conducted the Syracuse Symphony Orchestra from 1910 to 1916 and also led the pit orchestra for a theater in Syracuse. In World War I, he received a captain's commission and led musical activity for the United States Army Air Service while at Camp MacArthur in Waco, Texas. This was the first band program for the predecessor of the United States Air Force. More Great Records on sale right now: CLICK ON THIS LINK TO SEE MORE GREAT RECORDS CLICK ON THIS LINK TO SEE ALL ITEMS - VINTAGE BOOKS, VICTROLA and TURNTABLE ITEMS, CDs, Books and DVDs http://shop.ebay.com/carsten_sf/m.html ==== A Quick NOTE ON GRADING AND SHIPPING: As you can see from my feedback, I try hard to earn your POSITIVE FEEDBACK and FIVE STAR RATINGS. If for any reason your transaction was NOT SATISFACTORY, pls contact me and I will work something out with you. YOU WILL NEVER HAVE A REASON TO GIVE ME A NEGATIVE RATING or a LOW STAR RATING. Quick note on grading: The Grade (Excellent to Poor, I don't give Mint) refers to the WEAR of the record. Any other defects are stated separately When I listen to a record, I may also give it an aural grade (again E to P), and make a SUBJECTIVE judgment of the pressing quality for hiss and surface noise."EXCEPTIONALLY QUIET" is close to noiseless, like a vinyl pressing."VERY QUIET" is an above average quiet record for a given pressing."Quiet" is a record that is a great example with some noise. These judgments are SUBJECTIVE and will depend one the styli, phonograph etc. you use on your own equipment. Multiple item shipping: I am happy to combine items for shipment in one parcel. Records will be packed safely between corrugated cardboard in a sturdy box with plenty of padding for safe shipment. 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Price: 14.99 USD
Location: San Francisco, California
End Time: 2024-11-29T00:27:38.000Z
Shipping Cost: 7.49 USD
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Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Artist: CLICK RIGHT ARROW > FOR CONDITION, Patrick Conway, Victor Military Band, Edward T. King, Edward King
Format: Record
Release Title: Dances from Henry VIII/ Country dance from Nell Gwyn
Material: Shellac
Record Label: RCA Victor
Catalog Number: 35530
Genre: Military, Hymns & Marches, Classical
Speed: 78 RPM
Record Size: 12"
Language: English
Style: Banda, Big Band & Swing, Brass, Ceremonial, Character Piece, Dixieland, Educational, Fanfare, France & Belgium, Germany & Austria, Instrumental, Marching, Military Music, Music Hall, National Anthem/Patriotic, North American Music, Overture, Pipe & Drum, Symphonic, Symphony, Traditional Country, Traditional Folk, Western European Music, American Folk, Deutsche Volksmusik, Film Score/Soundtrack, German music, Instructional, Northern European music