Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-r5fsc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-04T10:18:58.211Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Some Early London Concerts and Music Clubs, 1670–1720

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 1957

Get access

Extract

The growth of the public concert was, perhaps, one of the most important factors which influenced the course of music in England towards the close of the seventeenth century. A number of music clubs were in existence before the Restoration as we know from Pepys and Anthony à Wood, but these, one gathers, were principally for the mutual delight of their mainly amateur participants. Cromwell, too, invited the members of the House of Commons to hear ‘rare music’ at Whitehall in 1657, but this was a State rather than a public occasion. The public concert, as we understand the term, did not come into existence until after the Restoration, when social conditions were established which were conducive to its success. The centralization of social life in London which followed the resumption of Court activities there created a large new audience, eager for all forms of entertainment. The influence of the King's personal preferences has perhaps been overstressed, but it cannot be denied that his hedonistic inclinations set a pattern of behaviour which was only too readily followed by London society. The theatres, closed during the greater part of the Commonwealth period, flourished once again, and in 1672 John Banister established a series of public concerts at Whitefriars which became the model for many similar ventures, at York Buildings and elsewhere.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Musical Association, 1957

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Scholes, P. A., The Puritans and Music, London, 1934, p. 49.Google Scholar

2 North, R., Essay Of Musicall Ayre, Brit. Mus. Add. MS 32536, f.75.Google Scholar

3 Mattheson, J., Das neu-eröffnete Orchestre, Hamburg, 1713.Google Scholar

4 Abroad the earliest concerts were those of the Concert Spirituel, 1725. In general, court music was much more extensively cultivated and took the place of the public concert until well into the eighteenth century (see A. B. Yorke-Long, Music at Court, London, 1954). In England neither William and Mary nor Queen Anne, apart from maintaining the royal band, shewed much interest in music; this, together with the much greater population of London than that of the European capitals, created better opportunities for free-lancing musicians in London than elsewhere.Google Scholar

5 Hist. MSS Comm., 8th Report, App. Pt. I.Google Scholar

6 Further details are given by H. A. Scott, ‘London's First Concert Room’, Music and Letters, XVIII, No. 4, Oct. 1937.Google Scholar

7 Daily Courant, 24 Feb., 1719.Google Scholar

8 Tatler, 14 Sept., 1710.Google Scholar

9 Summers, M., The Restoration Theatre, London, 1934.Google Scholar

10 North, R., Of Musicall Ayre, f.76.Google Scholar

11 North, R., Autobiography, ed. Jessop, London, 1887.Google Scholar

12 North, R., Of Musicall Ayre, f.89.Google Scholar

13 e.g. Select Lessons for the Violin, Walsh, London, 1702, contains ‘a Florish or Prelude in every Key’.Google Scholar

14 North, R., Memoirs of Musick, ed. Rimbault, London, 1846, p. 114.Google Scholar

15 British Apollo, 31 Aug., 1709.Google Scholar

16 see The Hatton Correspondence, Camden Society, London, 1878, II, p. 245.Google Scholar

17 Cal. of State Papers (Dom.) 1689–90.Google Scholar

18 The Humours and Conversations of the Town, London, 1693.Google Scholar

19 Swift, J., Journal to Stella, ed. Williams, Oxford, 1948, I, p. 327.Google Scholar

20 see also E. Preussner, Die musikalischen Reisen des Herrn von Uffenbach, Kassel, 1949, p. 15.Google Scholar

21 S. de Sorbière, Relation d'un Voyage en Angleterre, Paris, 1664.Google Scholar

22 Bedford, A., The Great Abuse of Musick, London, 1711, p. 176.Google Scholar

23 Fitzgerald, P., A New History of the English Stage, London, 1882, I, p. 431.Google Scholar

24 An Epilogue for the Theatre Royal’, Diverting Post, 16 Jun., 1705.Google Scholar

25 Accounts of this event are given by W. Congreve, in a letter to Joseph Keally (The Complete Works of William Congreve, ed. Summers, London, 1923, I), and by T. Brown (Letters from the Dead to the Living, London, 1702, p. 104).Google Scholar

26 The New State of Europe, 30 Dec., 1701.Google Scholar

27 E. Ward (?), A Step to the Bath with a Character of the place, London, 1700.Google Scholar

28 Ward, E., A Walk to Islington with a Description of Mew Tunbridge-Wells and Sadler's Musick-House, London, 1699.Google Scholar

29 Monsieur Voiture, Familiar and Courtly Letters, trans. Dryden etc., London, 1700, p. 171.Google Scholar

30 Locke, J., Some thoughts concerning Education, London, 1693.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

31 Details of Playford's musical societies are in Post Boy: 7, 21, 28, Sep.; 22 Oct.; 2, 14 Nov.; 1700.Google Scholar

32 Ward, E., A Compleat and Humorous Account of all the Remarkable Clubs and Societies in the Cities of London and Westminster, London, 1745.Google Scholar

33 In an MS volume belonging to Mr. Thurston Dart.Google Scholar

34 The Wheel of Fortune, or Nothing for a Penny, London, 1698.Google Scholar

35 Post Boy, 14 May, 1700.Google Scholar