John William Ivimey (12 September 1868 – 16 April 1961) was an English organist and composer who specialized in comic operas. He also worked as director of music in schools and churches.
Born at Stratford, Essex, Ivimey was one of the nine children of Joseph Ivimey and Emma Stevens. He was educated at Herne Bay College and the Guildhall School of Music.[2] His grandfather, another John Ivimey (1790–1874), was a younger brother of Joseph Ivimey (1773–1834) a Particular Baptist minister and historian, both being sons of Charles Ivimey, tailor, of Ringwood, Hampshire. He was a cousin of the New Zealand rugby footballer Fred Ivimey (1880–1961).
Career
Ivimey was only twenty when he was appointed as assistant to Alan Gray at Wellington College in 1888.[3]
While composing about twenty comic operas, as well as a symphony, a grand opera, cantatas and other songs, and much organ music, Ivimey was successively organist at St Peter's, Norbiton, and St Paul's, Onslow Square. He also wrote articles for magazines and journals and edited hymn books and books of songs.[2]
In 1892, his first operetta, Fairy Genesta, was produced at Surbiton, and he appeared in it himself. A reviewer praised both his work and his performance: "Laughing Mrs Cooper, pretty Miss Inez Roe, indefatigable Mr Orlebar, droll Mr Trouncer, and droller Mr Ivimey, in one night winning more renown (in Surbiton) than John Gilpin in his famous ride, or many a heaven-sent genius after years of patient toil."[4]
In August 1933, Ivimey was appointed by Arthur Buxton as organist and director of music at All Souls, Langham Place.[6] His last musical engagement was as organist at Llandaff Cathedral.[2] In 1935, he published Boys and Music, his reminiscences of working in schools.[2]
Private life
In 1893, Ivimey married firstly Mabel Caroline Cancellor, at Hampstead.[7] Their daughter Edith Frances was born in 1894, in Wandsworth, and their son Alan Victor J. R. Ivimey in Fulham in 1900.[8]
His first wife died in Surrey in 1947, aged 78.[9] Later the same year, Ivimey married secondly Irene Glew, at Wells.[10]
Ivimey died on 16 April 1961, living in retirement at Hillside, Bath Road, Marlborough, Wiltshire, leaving a widow, Irene Ivimey.[11]
Works
Fairy Genesta (operetta, produced at Surbiton, 1892)[12]
Y'lang Y'lang (operetta, produced at Surbiton, 1893)[12]
The Red Rider (operetta, produced at St George's Hall, London, 1894)[12]
Marie Tanner (burletta, produced at Cardiff, 1897, words by Broughton Black, Poland Henry, music by Ivimey)[12]
^ abBernard Rainbow, Music and the English Public School (1990), p. 249
^Clement Scott, Bernard Edward Joseph Capes, Charles Eglington, Theatre, Vol. 19 (1892), p. 260
^Proceedings of the Musical Association, Vol. 48 (Musical Association of Great Britain, 1922), p. vii: "Ivimey, John W., Esq., Mus.D., Oxon., F.R.C.O., A.R.C.M. (Marlborough)"
^"Music Appointment". Cheltenham Chronicle and Gloucestershire Graphic. 19 August 1933. p. 6. Retrieved 15 December 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
^"Ivimey John William & Cancellor Mabel Caroline" in Register of Marriages for Hampstead Registration District, vol. 1a (1893), p, 1367
^"Ivimey Edith Frances" in Register of Births for Wandsworth Registration District, vol. 1d (1894), p. 625; "Ivimey Alan Victor J R" in Register of Births for Fulham Registration District, vol. 1a (1900), p. 308
^"Ivimey Mabel C 78" in Register of Deaths for Surrey N.E. Registration District, vol. 5g (1947), p. 803
^"Ivimey John W & Glew Irene" in Register of Marriages for Wells Registration District, vol. 7c (1947), p. 726
^"Ivimey John William of Hillside Bath Road Marlborough Wiltshire died 16 April 1961" in Probate Index for 1961 at probatesearch.service.gov.uk, accessed 27 April 2019