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WALLACE, WILLIAM VINCENT (1812-1865), musical composer,
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son of William Wallace, bandmaster in the army, was born at Waterford,
Ireland, on 11 March 1812. Both parents were Irish. He showed talent as an
organist at Waterford, and as a violinist at Dublin, where he played in a
theatre orchestra. At 17 he appeared on the concert platform as a solo
violinist. In 1831 he married Isabella Kelly, having previously become a Roman
Catholic, and in 1834 he played a concerto of his own composition at a Dublin
concert. He went to Australia in 1835 for the sake of his health, gave concerts
at Hobart, and going on to Sydney arrived there on 12 January 1836. In February
he gave two concerts and appeared as a soloist on the violin, also accompanying
all the songs on the piano. He was the first important musician to appear in
Australia. He was still in Sydney about the end of 1837, subsequently travelled
in Australia and New Zealand and went to South America. He and his wife parted
about the time of Wallace's coming to Australia and they did not live together
again. Wallace had many adventures during his travels but in 1840-1 settled in
North America. He was a member of the Philharmonic Society at New York about
this time, and a little later was conductor at an Italian opera season in
Mexico. In 1844 he toured Germany and Holland, found his way to London in March
1845, gave a concert in May, and in November his opera Maritana was
produced at the Drury Lane Theatre with much success. Another opera, Matilda
of Hungary, now forgotten, was brought out in 1847, and in 1849 he was with
a concert party in South America. He was giving concerts in the United States in
1850 with success, but lost his savings by the failure of a pianoforte company
in which he was interested at New York. During the eighteen-fifties his
instrumental compositions were in much favour in London, and in 1860 his opera
Lurline was very successful at Covent Garden. The Amber Witch and
other operas followed, but his health was failing, and having been sent to the
Pyrenees he died there on 12 October 1865. He was buried in Kensal Green
Cemetery, London. His wife survived until 1900; his son, Vincent Wallace, died
in 1909.
Wallace had a gift for melody and was a most prolific composer. It has
sometimes been stated that he wrote the music for Maritana while he was
in Sydney, but no evidence for this is available and it appears to have been
unlikely.
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