Archibald Joyce
50 top tracks
Archibald Joyce
50 top tracks
Albums

Joyce: Toto / Dreams of You / A Thousand Kisses
Archibald Joyce
Old Waltzes
Archibald Joyce

British Light Music
Archibald Joyce
Autumn: Classical Music for a New Season
Archibald Joyce
Salon To Swing
Archibald Joyce

Archibald Joyce
Archibald Joyce

Archibald Joyce: Caravan Suite
Archibald Joyce
Vintage Tv And Radio Classics
Archibald Joyce
Toto / Dreams of You / A Thousand Kisses (RTE Concert Orchestra feat. conductor: Andrew Penny)
Archibald Joyce
Yes, M'Lord! Charming Souvenirs Inspired By Downton Abbey
Archibald Joyce
The Art Deco Cafe
Archibald Joyce

Elizabethan Serenade
Archibald Joyce
Biography
Archibald Joyce (25 May 1873–22 March 1963, age 89) conducted a salon orchestra in Great Britain in the Edwardian era that was so fashionable for balls and dances that he was known as the "English Waltz King",[1] conducting "the first modern dance band in Britain"[2] His most familiar waltzes are "Dreaming",[3] "Songe d'Automne" ("Autumn Dream") and "A Thousand Kisses", which Charlie Chaplin incorporated into the sound track he added to his silent classic The Gold Rush. <a href="https://www.last...Read more on Last.fm
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Archibald Joyce (25 May 1873–22 March 1963, age 89) conducted a salon orchestra in Great Britain in the Edwardian era that was so fashionable for balls and dances that he was known as the "English Waltz King",[1] conducting "the first modern dance band in Britain"[2] His most familiar waltzes are "Dreaming",[3] "Songe d'Automne" ("Autumn Dream") and "A Thousand Kisses", which Charlie Chaplin incorporated into the sound track he added to his silent classic The Gold Rush.[4] A conventional method of gaining public exposure for a song was to arrange to have it included a revue: in this way Joyce's "Vision of Salome" (1909) was included in Florenz Ziegfeld Jr's Follies of 1910.[5] Archibald Joyce recorded for His Master's Voice in 1912.
Harold Bride's recollection that the orchestra was playing "Autumn" as the Titanic foundered in 1912 has led to speculation by Walter Lord that he was in fact referring to "Songe d'Automne", which was part of the repertory of the White Star Line orchestras and with which he would undoubtedly been familiar.[6] <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Archibald+Joyce">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.