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  1. William Alwyn CBE (born William Alwyn Smith; 7 November 1905 – 11 September 1985), was an English composer, conductor, and music teacher. Life and music [ edit ] William Alwyn was born William Alwyn Smith in Northampton , England, the son of Ada Tyler (Tompkins) and William James Smith. [3]

    • William Alwyn Smith, 7 November 1905, Northampton, England
    • Nicholas Alwyn
    • 11 September 1985 (aged 79)
    • Joe Alwyn (great-grandson)
  2. Biography. William Alwyn was born in Northampton on the 7 th November 1905, and died in Southwold Suffolk on 11 th September 1985 just two months short of what would have been his eightieth birthday. He began his musical studies in 1920 aged just fifteen studying flute, piano, and composition at London’s Royal Academy of Music where in 1926 ...

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  4. More contemporary composers of interest to Alwyn came to his attention through the performances of Henry Wood. The two men were mutual admirers: Alwyn played in Wood's orchestras and Wood introduced Alwyn to the music of Sibelius, Shostakovich, Prokofiev and Poulenc as well as giving performances of Alwyn's works, for example the 'Five Preludes ...

  5. William Alwyn was born in Northampton, where he showed an early interest in music and began to learn to play the piccolo. At the age of 15 he entered the Royal Academy of Music in London where he studied flute and composition. He was a virtuoso flautist and for a time was a flautist with the London Symphony Orchestra. [3]

  6. by Hubert Culot. (This article first appeared in the British Music Society Journal: Volume 7 1985) 1905. William Alwyn was born in Northampton in 1905. His father was a grocer, and his family totally unmusical, though they all shared a passion for literature and the visual arts. "We all shared father's literary enthusiasm and his less ...

  7. Jun 8, 2018 · William Alwyn was the most successful British example of a composer dividing his creativity between absolute music and film composition. Between 1941 and 1963 he scored almost 80 films, while at the same time producing an extensive catalogue of concert, choral, and chamber works.

  8. British composer William Alwyn (November 7, 1905 - September 11, 1985), born William Alwyn Smith, is what baseball fans like to call a "pheenom". He not only wrote music, he wrote poetry, translated French poetry, and painted, all at a highly impressive level. And he played the flute professionally, joining the London Symphony Orchestra in his ...

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