Master of The Queen's Music - Holders of The Post

Holders of The Post

Name Year appointed Year of death Comments Monarch served Monarch's
title
Nicholas Lanier 1625 * Charles I
1660 1666 Charles II
Louis Grabu 1666
Nicholas Staggins 1674
1685 James II
1688 1700 William III and Mary II
John Eccles 1700
1702 Anne
-
1714 George I
1727 1735 George II
Maurice Greene 1735 1755
William Boyce 1755
1760 1779 George III
John Stanley 1779 1786
(Sir) William Parsons 1786
- 1817
William Shield 1817
1820 1829 George IV
Christian Kramer 1829
1830 1834 William IV
Franz Cramer 1834
1837 1848 Victoria
George Frederick Anderson 1848
(Sir) William Cusins 1870 1893
Sir Walter Parratt 1893
1901 Edward VII
1910 George V
- 1924
Sir Edward Elgar 1924 1934
Sir Walford Davies 1934
1936
Edward VIII
1936
1941 George VI
Sir Arnold Bax 1942
1952 1953 Elizabeth II
Sir Arthur Bliss 1953 1975
Malcolm Williamson 1975 2003
Sir Peter Maxwell Davies 2004 incumbent

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Famous quotes containing the words holders of, holders and/or post:

    The doctrine of those who have denied that certainty could be attained at all, has some agreement with my way of proceeding at the first setting out; but they end in being infinitely separated and opposed. For the holders of that doctrine assert simply that nothing can be known; I also assert that not much can be known in nature by the way which is now in use. But then they go on to destroy the authority of the senses and understanding; whereas I proceed to devise helps for the same.
    Francis Bacon (1560–1626)

    Their holders have always seemed to me like a woman who should undertake at a state fair to run a sewing machine, under pretense of advertising it, while she had never spent an hour in learning its use.
    Jane Grey Swisshelm (1815–1884)

    A demanding stranger arrived one morning in a small town and asked a boy on the sidewalk of the main street, “Boy, where’s the post office?”
    “I don’t know.”
    “Well, then, where might the drugstore be?”
    “I don’t know.”
    “How about a good cheap hotel?”
    “I don’t know.”
    “Say, boy, you don’t know much, do you?”
    “No, sir, I sure don’t. But I ain’t lost.”
    William Harmon (b. 1938)