Bond Andrews
John Charles Bond-Andrews (14 December 1854 – 27 April 1899) was an English composer, pianist, music arranger, conductor and musician.
Early life
John Charles Bond-Andrews was born in Birkenhead, Cheshire. He was the eldest son of John Stephen Andrews, physician, and Mary Teresa (née Meacock). When he was a boy his mother took him to Europe to be educated in music, he attended the Conservatorium of Music in Leipzig during the Franco-Prussian War. Where in between his music lessons he occasionally wrote poetry. The house where he was staying in with his mother and brother also billeted German soldiers. He studied at the Royal Academy of Music in London and reputedly studied at the Royal Music Academy of Vienna. In 1876 on his return from Europe he gave recitals in Birkenhead, and other cities, he was a success as a pianist in London.
Career
In the 1880s, Bond-Andrews gave minor concerts in the country, which were unsuccessful and in town, that were successful. He was a music tutor to Lady Louisa Ashburton and other minor notable people of the time before joining Albert Chevalier in the 1890s. He composed music to a lot of Chevalier's songs, My Old Dutch for example and many others. He helped arranged tours with Albert Chevalier and accompanied him on the Ireland 1895 tour. He was also an officiated as conductor for other opera companies while on tour, with the Carl Rosa Opera Company among others.
He had taken the popular excerpt from Longfellow's Spanish Student, "My Lady Sleeps", and arranged it for voice and string quartet as well as piano and violin or flute obbligato. This music can still be heard today in a private collection. He had composed Herne's Oak, produced at Liverpool, October 1887 The Rose of Windsor, Accrington, August 1889; an operetta, A Pair of Lunatics in 1892, Quartet in B flat, Trio in D minor, pianoforte and strings, and Sonata in G minor, May Pole suite, and many other pieces for pianoforte.
In 1895, he arranged and composed music for the first act of The Importance of Being Earnest for a music event. On 26 May 1896 he performed for the Prince and Princess of Wales at a gala opening of the West wing of the West London Hospital. While riding on the high of this major success and others Bond-Andrews was struck down by an illness that ended his life in the spring of 1899. He died at the West London Hospital, and is buried with his mother, at Fulham Cemetery, who had died 18 months before.
Personal life
On 28 May 1881 John Charles Bond-Andrews married Ellen Jane Trusty (1864–1927). They had five children, Joseph, Richard, Mary, Henry and Isabelle.
His mother married again in 1874 to Charles deWolfe King, who accompanied Bond-Andrews as a singer at some of the events he attended as a piano player. His mother had Otis Carter Formby King (1876–1944), the inventor.
He was a member of the Savage Club and the New Lyric Club.
Bibliography
- Brown, James D. (1897). British Musical Biography. Birmingham: S.S. Stratton.
- Andrews, J.D.F. (1900). Memoirs of Bond-Andrews. L.& A. Harris.