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Alfred Arthur

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Alfred Arthur

Birth
Pittsburgh, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
20 Nov 1918 (aged 74)
Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, USA
Burial
Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, USA GPS-Latitude: 41.4913129, Longitude: -81.6426549
Plot
Section 53 Lot 28 Grave 2
Memorial ID
View Source
A noted tenor, cornetist, conductor, educator, composer, and compiler. Born in Pittsburgh on 8 October 1844 and received his early training in Ashland, OH, and at the Boston Music School. Following further education in Europe and service in the Civil War (1861-1865), he moved to Cleveland in 1871. He was active as a choral conductor, most notably with the Cleveland Vocal Society which he found in 1873 and conducted through 29 seasons. He also conducted a short series of purely orchestral concerts at Brainard's Piano Rooms in 1872, which mark a real beginning for orchestral music in Cleveland. These programs included vocal solos, waltzes, and other light pieces of Strauss, along with overtures and parts or all of symphonies by Hayden, Beethoven, and Mendelssohn.

As an educator he founded the Cleveland School of Music (inc. 1875), to which he gave considerable attention and which continued under the management of Arthur's son until his death in 1938. As a composer, Arthur wrote a number of songs and 3 operas, The water Carrier (1878, The Roundheads and Cavaliers (1878), and Adaline (1879), none of them published. He authored several technical studies and compiled 2 hymnals, The evangelical Hymnal and The Spirit of Praise, as well as a popular choral collection. Brainard's Choir Anthems (1879).
A noted tenor, cornetist, conductor, educator, composer, and compiler. Born in Pittsburgh on 8 October 1844 and received his early training in Ashland, OH, and at the Boston Music School. Following further education in Europe and service in the Civil War (1861-1865), he moved to Cleveland in 1871. He was active as a choral conductor, most notably with the Cleveland Vocal Society which he found in 1873 and conducted through 29 seasons. He also conducted a short series of purely orchestral concerts at Brainard's Piano Rooms in 1872, which mark a real beginning for orchestral music in Cleveland. These programs included vocal solos, waltzes, and other light pieces of Strauss, along with overtures and parts or all of symphonies by Hayden, Beethoven, and Mendelssohn.

As an educator he founded the Cleveland School of Music (inc. 1875), to which he gave considerable attention and which continued under the management of Arthur's son until his death in 1938. As a composer, Arthur wrote a number of songs and 3 operas, The water Carrier (1878, The Roundheads and Cavaliers (1878), and Adaline (1879), none of them published. He authored several technical studies and compiled 2 hymnals, The evangelical Hymnal and The Spirit of Praise, as well as a popular choral collection. Brainard's Choir Anthems (1879).


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