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William Southcombe Lloyd Webber

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William Southcombe Lloyd Webber Famous memorial

Birth
London, City of London, Greater London, England
Death
29 Oct 1982 (aged 68)
London, City of London, Greater London, England
Burial
Golders Green, London Borough of Barnet, Greater London, England Add to Map
Plot
Section 3-T
Memorial ID
View Source
Composer. The father of Andrew and Julian Lloyd Webber, he was born into a poor London family in 1914, the son of a self-employed plumber, his father was a keen organ 'buff' who spent what little spare money he had travelling to hear various organs in and around London. Often he would take his son with him, and before long, William started to play the organ himself and developed an interest that bordered on being an obsession. 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 composition with Ralph Vaughan Williams and gained his FRCO diploma at nineteen. Parallel to his activities as an organist, he began to compose, and several interesting works date from this early period including the 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. During the war he had married Jean Hermione Johnstone, a violinist and pianist. From 1945 to the mid-1950s William Lloyd Webber wrote music in many different forms: vocal and instrumental, choral and organ, chamber and orchestral. 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 Rachmaninov, Sibelius and 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. 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'. Following his funeral and cremation at Golders Green Crematorium, his ashes were scattered on Section 3-T of The Lawns of Remembrance.
Composer. The father of Andrew and Julian Lloyd Webber, he was born into a poor London family in 1914, the son of a self-employed plumber, his father was a keen organ 'buff' who spent what little spare money he had travelling to hear various organs in and around London. Often he would take his son with him, and before long, William started to play the organ himself and developed an interest that bordered on being an obsession. 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 composition with Ralph Vaughan Williams and gained his FRCO diploma at nineteen. Parallel to his activities as an organist, he began to compose, and several interesting works date from this early period including the 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. During the war he had married Jean Hermione Johnstone, a violinist and pianist. From 1945 to the mid-1950s William Lloyd Webber wrote music in many different forms: vocal and instrumental, choral and organ, chamber and orchestral. 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 Rachmaninov, Sibelius and 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. 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'. Following his funeral and cremation at Golders Green Crematorium, his ashes were scattered on Section 3-T of The Lawns of Remembrance.

Bio by: Kieran Smith


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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Originally Created by: Kieran Smith
  • Added: Jan 4, 2006
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/12879378/william_southcombe-lloyd_webber: accessed ), memorial page for William Southcombe Lloyd Webber (11 Mar 1914–29 Oct 1982), Find a Grave Memorial ID 12879378, citing Golders Green Crematorium, Golders Green, London Borough of Barnet, Greater London, England; Maintained by Find a Grave.