Master of the Queen's Music
Master of the Queen's Music (or Master of the King's Music) is a post in the Royal Household of the Sovereign of the United Kingdom. The holder of the post originally served the monarch of England.
The post is roughly comparable to that of Poet Laureate. It is given to people eminent in the field of classical music; they have almost always been composers (George Frederick Anderson was one exception; he was a violinist who is not known to have ever composed any music). Duties are not clearly stated, though it is generally expected the holder of the post will write music to commemorate important royal events, such as coronations, birthdays, anniversaries, marriages and deaths, and to accompany other ceremonial occasions. The individual may also act as the Sovereign’s adviser in musical matters.
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The King's Musick
As early as the fourteenth century, minstrels known as the ‘King's Minstrels’ or the ‘King's Musick’ received royal patronage. They wore the livery of the King and exercised some control of other musicians. During the reign of Henry VI, a Royal Commission regulated encroachments from other musicians on their preserves, and in 1469 Edward VI granted them a Guild charter. The charter stated that "no Minstrel of our Kingdom ... shall henceforth in any way practise or publicly exercise the art or occupation within our Kingdom aforesaid, unless he belong to the said Brotherhood or Guild". This led to legal difficulties between the Westminster Minstrels and the City Company, chartered by London in 1604 to perform in the city and three miles outside it. The King's Minstrels requested and received a charter from the king in 1635 to "have the survey, scrutinie, correction and government of all and singular the musicians within the kingdome of England".
The first Masters of the King's Musick
The first appointed Master of the King's Musick would be the only one to seriously attempt to rule all of the musicians in the kingdom as a guild. This was Nicholas Lanier for whom the title was created in 1626 by Charles I of England as Master of the King's Musick (the k after Music was dropped during Edward Elgar's appointment). At that time the holder of the post took charge of the monarch's private band, a responsibility which continued until the band was dissolved in 1901.
The Master received an emolument. At the time of George III it was £200 a year for leading the band and composing birthday odes. If minuets were composed for court dances, an additional £100 was added. Additional payments were made for any music copying done for the court.
Two of the early Masters, Louis Grabu and Nicholas Staggins, were more courtiers than musicians, and composers such as Henry Purcell were called on for the music such as Purcell's 'Welcome Song to His Majesty at His Return from Newmarket' (1682). During the reign of composer John Eccles as Master of the King's Musick, George Frideric Handel supplied the Ode for the Birthday of Queen Anne (1713).
Appointments of Edward Elgar and Walford Davies
In 1924 with the appointment of Edward Elgar, often considered the greatest British composer of his generation, the position became akin to that of Music Laureate. The title might now be given to composers or academics of proved attainment, signifying an endorsement of national achievements. Most of Elgar's "royal music" was behind him by then – the Imperial March (1897), the first four Pomp and Circumstance Marches (1901–1907) and the Coronation Ode (1901). The Pageant of Empire was performed a few weeks after he was appointed Master, although composed before the appointment. He did compose the fifth Pomp and Circumstance March (1930) and the Nursery Suite in 1931 dedicated to "their Royal Highnesses Princess Elizabeth and Margaret Rose". Elgar used his appointment to track down the original instruments in Edward VII's band and to ensure the music library was well ordered. When Elgar was made an Honorary Life Member of the Worshipful Company of Musicians in 1931 (descendants of the City Company of London), this healed the ancient feud between the London and Westminster musicians.
Elgar's successor, Sir Walford Davies, a popular broadcaster, was the first Master of the King's Music to be well known to the public by this title.
Current appointment
Sir Peter Maxwell Davies was appointed in March 2004 for a ten-year period, unlike previous appointments, which were for life.
Records
The longest-serving Master of the King's Music was John Eccles, who served for 35 years, from 1700 until his death in 1735. He is also the only one to have served four monarchs (King William III, Queen Anne, King George I and King George II).
Three monarchs have had four different Masters during their reign: King George III, Queen Victoria and Queen Elizabeth II (currently reigning, and the incumbent, Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, is due to leave the post in 2014).
The monarchs who had the same Master of the King's Music throughout their reign were: King Charles I (Nicholas Lanier), King James II (Nicholas Staggins), Queen Anne and King George I (John Eccles), King Edward VII (Sir Walter Parratt) and King Edward VIII (Sir Walford Davies).
Holders of the post
Name | Year appointed | Year of death | Comments | Monarch served | Monarch's title |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nicholas Lanier | 1625 | * | * The post was abolished in 1649 when the monarchy was overthrown, and reinstituted in 1660. ([1]) | Charles I | King/Queen of England |
1660 | 1666 | Charles II (d. 1685) | |||
Louis Grabu | 1666 | (after 1693) | Grabu seems to have fallen foul of the Test Act, passed in spring 1673 and enforced on 18 November, which banned all Catholics from court.[citation needed] | ||
Nicholas Staggins | 1674 | Staggins died on 13 June 1700.[1] | |||
1685 | James II (Glorious Revolution 1688) | ||||
1688 | 1700 | William III and Mary II (joint monarchs; Mary d. 1694; William d. 1702) | |||
John Eccles | 1700 | The longest-serving Master of the King's Musick (35 years) and the only one who served 4 monarchs. | |||
1702 | Anne (d. 1714) | ||||
- | King/Queen of Great Britain (from 1707) |
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1714 | George I (d. 1727) | ||||
1727 | 1735 | George II (d. 1760) | |||
Maurice Greene | 1735 | 1755 | |||
William Boyce | 1755 | ||||
1760 | 1779 | George III (d. 1820) | |||
John Stanley | 1779 | 1786 | |||
(Sir) William Parsons | 1786 | ||||
- | 1817 | King/Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (from 1801) |
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William Shield | 1817 | ||||
1820 | 1829 | George IV (d. 1830) | |||
Christian Kramer | 1829 | ||||
1830 | 1834 | William IV (d. 1837) | |||
Franz Cramer | 1834 | No relation to his predecessor. | |||
1837 | 1848 | Queen Victoria (d. 1901) | |||
George Frederick Anderson | 1848 | (1876) | Anderson left the post in 1870. | ||
(Sir) William Cusins | 1870 | 1893 | Knighted 1892; the only Master of the Queen's Musick to be knighted during his term of office. | ||
Sir Walter Parratt | 1893 | [2] | |||
1901 | Edward VII (d. 1910) | ||||
1910 | George V (d. 1936) | ||||
- | 1924 | King/Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (from 1922) |
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Sir Edward Elgar | 1924 | 1934 | The title of the office was changed from Master of the King's Musick to Master of the King's Music during Elgar's tenure. | ||
Sir Walford Davies | 1934 | ||||
1936 (January) |
Edward VIII (abd. Dec 1936) |
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1936 (December) |
1941 | George VI (d. 1952) | |||
Sir Arnold Bax | 1942 | ||||
1952 | 1953 | Elizabeth II | |||
Sir Arthur Bliss | 1953 | 1975 | |||
Malcolm Williamson | 1975 | 2003 | |||
Sir Peter Maxwell Davies | 2004 | incumbent | Davies was appointed for a ten-year period, the first not to be appointed for life. He is due to leave the post in 2014. |
References
- Cudworth, Charles. “Masters of the Musick” The Musical Times, Vol. 107, No. 1482 (Aug., 1966), pp. 676–677.
- Duck, Leonard. “Masters of the Sovereign's Music” The Musical Times, Vol. 94, No. 1324 (Jun., 1953), pp. 255–258.
- Roper, E. Stanley. "Music at the English Chapels Royal c. 1135, Present Day" Proceedings of the Musical Association, 54th Sess., (1927–1928), pp. 19–33.