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seville love song by william fullerton jr albert garzon piano newburgh ny
William Fullerton, Jr. (1854-1888) was an American-born composer who was active in London's musical and theatrical world when his life was cut short by tuberculosis at the age of 34. He was the only son of a well-known American trial lawyer, William Fullerton.
Contents
- seville love song by william fullerton jr albert garzon piano newburgh ny
- Up english hearts by william fullerton jr lady of the locket 1885
- Life and Career
- Works
- References
Up english hearts by william fullerton jr lady of the locket 1885
Life and Career
Fullerton was born in the city of Newburgh, New York. His earliest surviving piece, "Silver Strains" was published in 1871, when he was 17. Although not primarily a librettist, in the late 1870s, he provided romantic lyrics for two compositions by prolific composer Rudolph Aronson, who later founded and managed New York City's groundbreaking Casino Theatre. Fullerton left the United States to study music in Leipzig, and then settled in London, where he lived openly with another man, Percy Anderson, a talented painter with aristocratic connections. Anderson's sumptuous rooms became a gathering place for the musical and dramatic world.
During his London period, he wrote and published a variety of popular compositions, several of which were dedicated to members of the Royal Family and their circle. "May-be-so!", published in New York in 1880, was dedicated to the "Duchesse of Westminster". The ailing Lady Constance (she died the same year) was wife of Hugh Grosvenor, 1st Duke of Westminster. "In a Dream", published in 1881 (a song in the German "lieder" tradition, based on a poem by Heinrich Heine), was dedicated to Lady Agneta Montagu. Lady Montagu was a daughter of Charles Yorke, 4th Earl of Hardwicke and a bridesmaid to Alexandra of Denmark (later Queen Alexandra).
An 1882 piece, "White Lilies Waltz," was dedicated to Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany, a favorite son of Queen Victoria who died from hemophilia in 1885.
"Grand March Heroic: Tel-el-kebir", also published in 1882, celebrated a military victory over Egyptian nationalist forces, in the Battle of Tel el-Kebir, which secured British control over the Suez Canal.
Fullerton had a theatrical success with an operetta, "The Lady of the Locket", a costly spectacle that opened in London's Empire Theatre in March 1885. The costumes for the production were produced by his friend, Percy Anderson. "Lady of the Locket" launched Anderson's career as a leading costume designer for decades to come, as well as the career of a mutual friend, the great baritone Hayden Coffin.
Musical conductor Jimmy Glover later claimed, probably in jest, that the writer (Henry Hamilton) and Willie Fullerton had insisted that certain choral parts be sung by "real guardsmen", and that he had rehearsed 16 soldiers for weeks, only to have them called away to serve in Egypt. Critics sniffed at the light music, but the public came, and the run lasted from early March until late July, when the heat became too much for the crowds.
Following this success, another light opera, "Waldemar: Robber of the Rhine" was expected to be produced at London's Prince of Wales Theatre, with plans for an opening in New York as well, but Fullerton fell ill and died from what was described as "consumption", on August 25, 1888. A memorial in the London Times mourned the loss of "our Billy", a remarkable tribute to a young American from Newburgh, NY.
Following his death, Fullerton's works were largely forgotten and many are now apparently lost. There has been some confusion arising from his having published separately in the U.S. as William Fullerton, Jr., but without "Jr." in the U.K. (where he was usually known as "Willie"). A Fullerton piece entitled "Spanish Serenade", with lyrics by writer Charles Hamilton Aidé, was recently located in the Library of Congress in an 1890 edition entitled "Choice English Songs".
He was closely attended in his final illness by Percy Anderson, who arranged for Fullerton's burial in Crondall Burying Ground, All Saints Church, Hampshire, United Kingdom. Anderson died 40 years later, in 1928, and was buried, at his own request, in the same cemetery.