- William Vincent Wallace
William Vincent Wallace (
March 11 1812 -October 12 1865 ) was an Irishcomposer andmusician .Early life
Wallace was born at Colbeck Street,
Waterford, Ireland . Both parents were Irishcite web |title=Wallace, William Vincent|work=Dictionary of Australian Biography |url=http://gutenberg.net.au/dictbiog/0-dict-biogWa.html#wallace1 |editor=Percival Serle |publisher= Angus and Robertson |year=1949] , his father, ofCounty Mayo , was a regimental bandmaster. Wallace learned to play several instruments as a boy, became a leading violinist inDublin and a fine pianist. Under the tuition of his father he early wrote pieces for the bands and orchestras of his native area. At the age of 18 he was organist of theThurles Roman Catholic Cathedral and taught piano at theUrsuline Convent . He fell in love with a pupil, Isabella Kelly, whose father consented to their marriage in 1831 on condition that Wallace became a Roman Catholic and took the name of Vincent.Career and travels
Restless and adventurous as a young man, Wallace, with his wife and infant son, his sister Elisabeth, a
soprano , and his brother Wellington, aflautist , emigrated in 1835 toAustralia and gave family concerts. The family went toSydney in 1836 and opened the first Australianmusic school . Wallace also imported pianos and gave recitals in Australia under the patronage of General Sir Richard Bourke. Having separated from his wife, he began a roving career. Wallace claimed that from Australia he went toNew Zealand , made a whaling-voyage in the South seas, visited most of the interior provinces ofIndia and spent some time in tiger-hunting, and finally visitedChile ,Peru andArgentina , giving concerts in the large cities of those countries. However, it is suspected that many of these stories were manufactured or embellished. In 1841 Wallace conducted Italian opera in Mexico, and in the early 1840s he made a successful tour of theUnited States and helped to found theNew York Philharmonic Society .He returned to
London in 1845 and made various appearances as a pianist. In November of that year, his opera "Maritana " was performed atDrury Lane with great success and was later presented inVienna , at the Covent Garden and in Australia [ [http://www.musicwithease.com/wallace-maritana.html Information about Maritana] ] . Wallace's sister, Elisabeth, appeared at Covent Garden in the title role in 1848. "Maritana" was followed by "Matilda of Hungary" (1847), "Lurline" (1860), [ [http://www.oldandsold.com/opera/opera-17.shtml Information about "Lurline"] ] "The Amber Witch" (1861), "Love's Triumph" (1862) and "The Desert Flower" (1863) (based on the libretto ofHalévy 's "Jaguarita "). He also published a number of compositions for thepiano .Vincent Wallace was a cultivated man and an accomplished musician, whose work as an operatic composer, at a period by no means encouraging to music in England, has a distinct historical value. Like
Michael William Balfe , he was born an Irishman, and his reputation as one of the few composers known beyond theUnited Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland at that time is naturally coupled with Balfe's.Late life
In 1850, Wallace became an American citizen after a marriage in New York with Helen Stoepel, a pianist. In later years he became almost blind, and he died in poor circumstances at the Château de Bagen, Sauveterre de Comminges, near Barbazon, Haute Garonne, France,Fact|date=August 2008 on
12 October 1865 leaving a widow and two children; he was buried inKensal Green Cemetery , London.References
*1911
External links
* [http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A020517b.htm Wallace, William Vincent (1812 - 1865)] at the "
Australian Dictionary of Biography "
* [http://www.musicwithease.com/wallace-maritana.html Information about Wallace and "Maritana"]
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