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William Parsons (composer and musician)

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Not to be confused with William Parsons (composer and copyist). English composer

SirWilliam Parsons
NationalityBritish
OccupationMusic Composer

Sir William Parsons (1745/6–1817) was an English composer and musician who was Master of the King's Musick under George III between 1786 and 1817.

Originally a chorister at Westminster Abbey as a pupil of Benjamin Cooke, he developed a reputation as a fine tenor, but was passed over for another musician at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden and thus went to Europe to seek employment. Returning to England, he was an assistant director at the George Frideric Handel commemorations in Westminster Abbey and the Pantheon in 1784, and composed a number of anthems for royal usage. He was an assistant director of the festival with many other prominent English composers at the time, such as Thomas Sanders Dupuis, Samuel Arnold, and his teacher, Benjamin Cooke. He gained a doctorate in music at Oxford University in 1790. In his spare time, he acted as a magistrate for the jurisdiction near his house in Portman Square.

He was knighted by the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, John Jeffreys Pratt, second Earl Camden in 1795, thus becoming the first British musician honoured with a knighthood. An unremarkable composer and musician, he gained the title more through tutoring the king's family and his contacts than any merit, being a friend of several members of the royal family and composers such as Joseph Haydn. Few of his compositions survive.

References

  1. ^ Tim Eggington (2014). The Advancement of Music in the Enlightenment England. Boydell Press. ISBN 9781843839064.
  2. ^ L. M. Middleton, "Parsons, Sir William (1745/6–1817)", rev. David J. Golby, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004) accessed 28 April 2011
  3. ^ Thomas Busby, Concert Room and Orchestra Anecdotes of Music and Musicians Volume 1 (1825) 235
Court offices
Preceded byJohn Stanley Master of the King's Musick
1786–1817
Succeeded byWilliam Shield


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