Albert Campbell (singer)

Albert Charles Campbell (August 17, 1872[1] – January 25, 1947) was an American popular music singer who recorded between the late 1890s and the 1920s.

He was born in Brooklyn, New York, and while in his teens worked for the music publishers Edward B.

The group was the most commercially successful of the acoustic era, and at the peak of their popularity, between about 1911 and 1917, also featured tenor Henry Burr, baritone Arthur Collins, and bass John Meyer.

[5][7] Campbell and Burr, together with John Meyer and Frank Croxton, continued to perform and record as the Peerless Quartet with some success until 1925, when the group disbanded.

Campbell then formed a duo with Jack Kaufman;[8] They recorded on Harmony, Edison, Grey Gull, Cameo/Romeo, Perfect, and Gennett/Challenge, sometimes as "Murphy and Shea", "Collins and Reynolds", or "Wheeler and Morse".

Campbell ( c. 1900 )