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William Lloyd Webber
William Southcombe Lloyd Webber (11 March 1914, London – 29 October
1982, London) was an organist and composer.
Biography
William Lloyd Webber was born into a poor London family in 1914. The
son of a self-employed plumber, he was fortunate, from a musical
point of view, that his father was a keen organ 'buff' who spent
what little money he had traveling to hear various organs in and
around the capital. Often he would take his son with him, and before
long, young William started to play the organ himself and developed
a keen interest that bordered on the obsessional.
By the age of 14, William Lloyd Webber had already become a
well-known organ recitalist, giving frequent performances at many
important churches and cathedrals throughout Great Britain. He won
an organ scholarship to Mercer's School, later winning a further
scholarship to study at the Royal College of Music where he studied
with Ralph Vaughan Williams and gained his FRCO diploma at nineteen.
Because there was already another student at the college with the
name William Webber, William continued to use his second middle name
'Lloyd' from then on as part of his name.
Parallel to his activities as an organist, he began to compose, and
several interesting works date from this early period including
Fantasy Trio of 1936. Although the second world war interrupted his
composition (he was organist and choirmaster at London's All Saints,
Margaret Street throughout the war) its ending marked the beginning
of Lloyd Webber's most prolific years as a composer.
In 1938, he was appointed Organist and choirmaster of All Saints,
later moving to Westminster Central Hall, London, one of the most
significant Methodist churches in the United Kingdom. His first
compositions developed in the 1930s. In 1942 he married the pianist
and violinist Jean Hermione Johnstone. The marriage produced two
sons: composer Andrew (born 1948) and cellist Julian (born 1951).
From 1945 until the mid-1950s, Lloyd Webber composed vocal and
instrumental music, choral and organ works, chamber music and
orchestral works. Works from this period include the oratorio 'St.
Francis of Assisi', the orchestral tone-poem 'Aurora', the Sonatinas
for viola and piano, and flute and piano, and numerous songs, organ
pieces and choral works. But Lloyd Webber's roots were firmly
embedded in the romanticism of such composers as Sergei Rachmaninov,
Jean Sibelius and César Franck, and he became increasingly convinced
that his own music was 'out of step' with the prevailing climate of
the time. Rather than compromise his style, he turned to the
academic side of British musical life - teaching at the Royal
College of Music and, in 1964, accepting the Directorship of the
London College of Music, a post which he held until his death in
1982.
Disillusioned with composition, he wrote virtually nothing for the
next 20 years - until shortly before his death, when a sudden
flowering of creativity produced among a number of works the mass 'Missa
Sanctae Mariae Magdalenae', (available on an ASV CD, DCA961).
William Lloyd Webber was by nature a shy and withdrawn character. He
had an avowed dislike of self-promotion and, rightly or wrongly,
found the 'cut and thrust' approach apparently necessary for the
furtherance of a composer's career complete anathema to him. He had
no time for the trappings of verbosity. He was a man who wasted few
words and, in his music, equally few notes. "Why", he would ask his
pupils, “write six pages when six bars will do?"
William Lloyd Webber's music has recently enjoyed a resurgence and
is heard increasingly in both live and recorded performances. When
'Aurora' was recorded for Philips in 1986 by Lorin Maazel and the
London Philharmonic Orchestra, Edward Greenfield of The Guardian
called it "skillfully and sumptuously scored ... music as sensuous
as any you will find from a British composer".
In 2005, Lloyd Webber's The Divine Compassion was revived by the
Aeolian Singers. This large scale choral work takes 95 minutes to
perform and is based on the account of The Passion of Christ in the
Gospel of John.
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