Background
Stevens was born on 26 October 1876 in Prahran, Melbourne, Australia to Horace Stevens, a dentist and Fanny Stevens (née Gittins), a homemaker.
Stevens was born on 26 October 1876 in Prahran, Melbourne, Australia to Horace Stevens, a dentist and Fanny Stevens (née Gittins), a homemaker.
The choir was being trained in singing for the 1891 opening of Street Paul"s Cathedral. Climbing up the ranks, Stevens became a lay clerk in 1898 and a few years later, as a temporary choirmaster. He resigned from the choir in 1949.
An apprentice to his father, the younger Stevens was also a dentist for twenty years.
He worked as his father"s dental clinic, which was situated in Collins Street, Melbourne. He served on HMAT Medic, A7.
In 1918, Stevens was invalided to England. After performing impromptu at a café in London, he was persuaded by Sir Henry Wood to give up dentistry and take up singing as a career.
In 1919, Stevens made his debut as an opera singer in Elijah with the Queen"s Hall Orchestra, in which he sang the title role.
His performance received positive comment, with Sir Edward Elgar dubbing him as the "best Elijah" of the period. Stevens went on to perform at many major music festivals in the United Kingdom and the United States. He returned to Australia in 1934.
He also appeared with the British National Opera Company as Wotan and other Wagnerian roles.
In his later years, Stevens gave music lessons at the University of Melbourne from 1938 (four years after his return from Britain to Australia) until his death in 1950. On 18 November 1950, Stevens died of an unanticipated coronary occlusion-caused heart attack at his house in South Yarra, Melbourne.
His death was said to have been "sudden". He was cremated at Street Paul"s Cathedral in Melbourne.
One of the houses in Choir Victoria, Stevens, is named after him.