Career
He first came to prominence with the publication of his Songe d"Automne Waltz (1908) which fast became a hit. The piece is in a minor key. The melody is in a relatively low tenor register.
The following year he repeated this success with his Visions of Salome Waltz (1909) also in the same low-pitched minor-key style.
He was billed by his publishers Ascherberg Hopwood and Crew as the "English Waltz King". His music was immensely popular with dance orchestras of the period together with amateur pianists.
The piano solo sheet music for his waltzes sold in very large quantities in the United Kingdom. He continued primarily with his distinctive waltzes until the start of the WW1 period. He co-wrote the musical Toto with Merlin Morgan (musical director of Daly"s Theatre in London).
After a try-out in Plymouth it opened at London"s Duke of York"s Theatre on 19 April 1916.
Despite good initial reviews it did not take off and was withdrawn after only 77 performances. He continued conducting his own orchestra for a number of years until the early 1920s. During the early 1920s, his orchestras recorded material for the Aeolian Company"s Vocalion Records label in London.
He had recorded for the Gramophone Company HMV-label in London as early as 1912 previously.
His music was familiar worldwide during its period. "Songe d"Automne" ("Autumn Dream") and "1000 Kisses" were incorporated into Charlie Chaplin"s latter-daysound track added to his The Gold Rush.
In the United States 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 Junior"s Follies of 1910. 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 Lincolnshire orchestras and with which he would undoubtedly been familiar.
After the early 1920s, there was a small trickle of material for many years.
His last composition of any note is his Bohemia - concert waltz for piano (1942) which finishes off his career with a hefty hat-tip to both the waltz and to the piano which effectively made him.