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The Gender of Subscribers to Eighteenth-Century Music Publications

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2019

Simon D. I. Fleming*
Affiliation:
Queen Elizabeth Sixth Form College, Darlington, UK Music Department,Durham University, Durham, UK
*
*Corresponding author. Email: s.d.i.fleming@durham.ac.uk
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Abstract

One of the most important and valuable resources available to researchers of eighteenth-century social history are the lists of subscribers that were attached to a wide variety of publications. Yet, the study of this type of resource remains one of the areas most neglected by academics. These lists shed considerable light on the nature of those who subscribed to music, including their social status, place of employment, residence, and musical interests. They naturally also provide details as to the gender of individual subscribers.

As expected, subscribers to most musical publications were male, but the situation changed considerably as the century progressed, with more females subscribing to the latest works by the early nineteenth century. There was also a marked difference in the proportion of male and female subscribers between works issued in the capital cities of London and Edinburgh and those written for different genres. Female subscribers also appear on lists to works that they would not ordinarily be permitted to play. Ultimately, a broad analysis of a large number of subscription lists not only provides a greater insight into the social and economic changes that took place in Britain over the course of the eighteenth century, but also reveals the types of music that were favoured by the members of each gender.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2019 The Royal Musical Association

For many reading this paper, it will no doubt come as a surprise to learn that the study of music subscription lists remains one of the most significant untouched areas in musicological research. This is in spite of the fact that most academics who write about eighteenth-century British music will regularly refer to these lists in their writings, and there are several papers and book chapters that specifically focus on this area.Footnote 1 Most authors will, however, only deal with a small handful of these lists and, as such, a wider study is long overdue. Due to the potential that subscription lists have to offer, I made a decision in 2010 to undertake a project that involves the location and indexing of every subscription list attached to a music-related publication issued in Britain before 1820. Then, in 2013, I came into contact with Martin Perkins of the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire. He had envisaged a similar project and it made sense to combine our efforts. With the assistance of the catalogue of subscription lists compiled by Peter Wallis, and the British Library's music subscription list card index, we have been able to produce a list of around 750 works issued by subscription, although hitherto unknown examples continue to emerge on a regular basis.Footnote 2 It is our intention that these lists will ultimately be searchable through an online database. At the time of writing we have been able to acquire 557 lists, all of which have been included in the research for this article, the second in a series relating to our project. A great deal of work remains to be done but it is clear that these lists are an incredibly valuable resource for both musicologists and those interested in British social history.Footnote 3

In deciding which lists to include in the subscription list project, it was agreed that we needed to be as broad as possible and encompass everything associated with music. As a result, this study not only incorporates musical works, but also volumes that may contain no music notation whatsoever. This includes books of songs, poetry, psalms, libretti to ballad operas, and autobiographies, as well as essays on music, dancing and music theory. There are also books that have at first glance no relationship to music, such as The History and Antiquities of Doncaster (1804), written by that town's organist, Edward Miller (1735–1807).Footnote 4 Another is Harriet English's Conversations and Amusing Tales (1799), which, even though it has little to do with music, included a printed score to the song ‘Address to the British Fair’, set to music by Samuel Webbe (1740–1816).Footnote 5 There has also been a decision to focus on works issued in Britain rather than on the continent. This was primarily done for practical reasons, although it was agreed that a few works that contained music composed by British musicians, but published on mainland Europe, should be included. Likewise, the project also incorporates several books published in other English-speaking communities outside Britain, including the United States, which until 1776 had been under British rule, some from Ireland, and one example from British India; these areas have not been covered extensively.

One important area for discussion that revealed itself as the subscription-list project proceeded was the issue of gender, and how the proportion of subscribers changed between works issued at different times, in different places and across different musical genres. In terms of this article, there was little decision making as to which lists to include. The primary reason for any particular list's inclusion was accessibility. The first port of call was my own collection, housed at Durham University's Palace Green Library, as well as those held at other libraries in relatively close proximity. They included Durham Cathedral's Dean and Chapter Library and the university libraries of Edinburgh, Nottingham, Leeds and Glasgow. I also availed myself of numerous trips to London to consult items held by the British Library and in the Gerald Coke Handel Collection at the Foundling Museum. The internet has also made accessing a significant number of lists relatively easy. Other copies or transcripts of lists were kindly provided by fellow academics or by dealers in antiquarian music.

Analysing the lists

Although one might have expected it to be a relatively easy task to count the subscribers in any given list by their gender, this endeavour has been, to a degree, something of a minefield. (This data is presented in Appendix B). The biggest issue has been inconsistency between individual lists. Even the way lists are organized can differ considerably. Most lists tend to be grouped into sections by the first initial of a surname, although there are examples, such as James Fishar's Twelve New Country Dances (c.1780), where the names appear to be in the order in which subscriptions were received.Footnote 6 Important subscribers, particularly royalty, are not included in the main body of a list but appear at its head. Within each section, the subscribers are not normally listed alphabetically; aristocrats appear first, followed by the other subscribers and not normally in alphabetical order. Even the importance of individual members of a family is reflected in the lists, with the head of the household appearing first, followed by his wife and then children. In some lists it is evident that a few names were received late. These were sometimes added to the list by hand (Figure 1) or incorporated into a second issue.Footnote 7 In some cases, gaps were deliberately left in a list so that extra names might be added to the plates for a second volume. In such instances, the name of an aristocrat could potentially appear below the name of a person of more humble stature. This is particularly evident in Samuel Arnold's (1740–1802) edition of Handel's works, issued from 1789, in which there were so many changes to the plates over the course of publication that the engraving of an entirely new list became a necessity. Another method was to group subscribers by the place they lived, as can be seen in that attached to Charles Dibdin's (1745–1814) Musical Tour (1788); this is presumably due to the way subscriptions were received with agents in each town forwarding their lists of subscribers to the author.Footnote 8 Furthermore, in cases where a significant number of subscribers were received after the subscription list was produced, a list of extra subscribers was sometimes added at the end; an example can be found in Richard Neale's A Pocket Companion for Gentlemen and Ladies (1724).Footnote 9

Figure 1. Second page of the subscription list to the ‘Dedication Copy’ of John Pixell's (1725–84) Odes, Cantatas, Songs &c … . Opera Seconda (1775), which contains a number of manuscript additions in the composer's hand.

Note: GB-DRu: Fleming 367(c). All images are taken from the prints in the author's collection, held by Durham University's Palace Green Library. The Dedication Copy is discussed in Simon Fleming, ‘John Pixell: An 18th-century Vicar and Composer’, The Musical Times, 154 (2013), 71–83.

The gender of a subscriber in these lists is principally determined by their title, as in most cases a Christian name is not provided. Female subscribers tend to be given the title of ‘Mrs’ or ‘Miss’, with ‘Miss’ without a Christian name referring to the eldest or only unmarried daughter.Footnote 10 Occasionally ‘Signora’ or ‘Madame’ is also used. For members of the aristocracy, the possible titles include ‘Lady’, ‘Duchess’ or ‘Dutchess’, ‘Countess’, ‘Viscountess’, ‘Baroness’, ‘Marchioness’ or even ‘Princess’. For men, there are the equivalents of the aristocratic titles; other male titles include ‘Mr’, ‘Master’, ‘Reverend’, ‘Captain’, ‘Colonel’ or ‘Doctor’, with gentlemen having the additional title of ‘Esquire’ or ‘Gent’. In some lists, a long dash symbol, ‘–’, is given. There appears to be several reasons as to why this symbol is used. It could be that the subscriber wanted their name omitted from the list, either in full or part, and this was put in its place. Alternatively, it could be that the name of the subscriber, which would have been taken down in handwritten form, was illegible.Footnote 11 However, this could also be used as a shorthand to avoid the need to duplicate a common title between consecutive subscribers. In most cases though, it would seem that any anonymous or wholly illegible subscribers were simply omitted.Footnote 12 Occasionally the absence of a title has made it impossible to determine the gender of a particular subscriber, such as when the subscriber is simply recorded by their initials or is simply described as ‘unknown’ or ‘anonymous’, presumably as the name was indecipherable. In these rare instances, the subscribers have been added to the ‘other’ category in Appendix B.

There are instances where two people, such as partners or siblings, jointly subscribed to a single copy of a work. On these occasions, only the first subscriber has been counted. In instances where two subscribers jointly subscribed to two or more copies but as a single entry in the list, both subscribers have been counted individually.Footnote 13 If the subscription list has manuscript additions, these names have been included in the count without comment (Figure 1). Music publishers, booksellers and instrument makers, as they tend to appear in these lists as individuals, have been included in the numbers of individual subscribers but only counted once even if they were in a partnership.Footnote 14

The third or ‘other’ category is essentially formed of non-individual or institutional subscribers. This includes musical societies, cathedral deans and chapters (Figure 2), churches, choirs, concert groups, schools and colleges at both Oxford and Cambridge. Occasionally the entry would additionally include the name of the person who sent in the subscription and, in such instances, the name has been ignored.

Figure 2. First page of the subscription list to Maurice Greene's (1696–1755) Forty Select Anthems in Score, vol. 1 (1743), which includes 24 cathedral deans and chapters amongst the subscribers.

Note: GB-DRu: Fleming 487.

Publication by subscription

The issue of works by subscription was a common means of publication in eighteenth-century Britain although, certainly in regards to music publishing, it was a method that grew considerably in popularity as the eighteenth century progressed.Footnote 15 Evidence of this can be seen in the data where, of the publications recorded in Appendix B, the average year of publication is 1779 and the median year is 1786. The year with the most items issued by subscription was 1790 although, in reality, it is unlikely that this is the modal year, as since most items are not dated, the majority of dates are editorial and only approximate.Footnote 16 In England, the earliest known book produced by subscription was John Minsheu's (1560–1627) Ductor in Linguas from 1617; by the end of the seventeenth century, this method of publication had become a familiar concept, although it was still something of a rarity in music.Footnote 17 The earliest music-related work so far identified, for which a subscription list survives, is Thomas Mace's (c.1613–c.1706) Musick's Monument (1676), also the only work in this study from the seventeenth century.Footnote 18 Publishing by subscription was also not irreconcilable with individual patronage, where a work would be dedicated to a person of note in the hope of eliciting a financial reward. Some works, such as James Brooks’ (1760–1809) Twelve English Ballads (c.1805), employed both methods; in his case, the dedicatee was Prince Adolphus (1774–1850), the Duke of Cambridge and son of George III (Figure 3).Footnote 19 Issuing works by subscription was of clear benefit to composers, authors and editors who wished to undertake publication themselves, but did not have the means to finance such an expensive undertaking. Through subscription, it was possible to sell enough copies in advance to meet the costs involved in engraving the plates, undertaking any typesetting and the actual printing. Often, the title page would indicate as to who had undertaken the project through the addition of the phrase ‘for the author’ or something to that effect (Figure 3). However, such a marking in itself does not necessarily mean that a work was published by subscription and could instead mean that the composer or editor financed the publication themselves.Footnote 20

Figure 3. Title page to James Brooks’ Twelve English Ballads (c.1805), published and printed by the composer.

Those who paid to subscribe would often receive a discount on the intended sale price, and their name would be included in a list that was attached to the work. The title page to Brook's Twelve English Ballads, for instance, indicates that copies were 1s 6d cheaper for subscribers, but the inclusion of this information here is unusual, particularly since one would have expected the subscription process to have been largely complete by the time the printing of the title page was undertaken; it could be that Brooks had hoped to generate more subscribers for future publications by indicating that he offered a discount. Thomas Clark (c.1775–1859), in his A Sett of Psalm & Hymn Tunes (c.1800), advertised the second volume at the end of the first volume's subscription list; he reported that subscribers would receive a shilling off the full price (Figure 4).Footnote 21 There were various reasons as to why any individual might chose to subscribe. Naturally, many would have known the author personally and it is no surprise that, in the average list, a good number of the subscribers lived in the immediate vicinity of the composer's hometown or city. It is unsurprising, too, that a good number were professional musicians, some of whom subscribed reciprocally; others, particularly unmarried females, were probably pupils.Footnote 22 Further subscribers may have come into contact with the composer at the time a subscription was being taken, while some would have heard about the subscription through a notice, such as a printed handbill or a newspaper advertisement. The following example is typical:

To be published by Subscription,

Figure 4. Second page of the subscription list to Thomas Clark's A Sett of Psalm & Hymn Tunes (c.1800).

A COLLECTION of SACRED MUSIC, as used in

the Chapel of the KING of SARDINIA, in London.

Composed by SAMUEL WEBBE.

Subscriptions (10s. 6d. each) received at Longman and

Broderip's Music Warehouses, Cheapside and

Haymarket, and my Mr. Carpue, Duke-street, Lincoln's-

Inn-Fields.

*** To be delivered at Easter, after which, the Price will

be Twelve Shillings.Footnote 23

For some subscribers, particularly those in the upper classes, the presence of a list enabled them to demonstrate their patronage of the arts, and some would certainly have subscribed for outward show. This would to a degree also apply to the newly arrived members of the middle class; their inclusion would not only indicate their rise in affluence and social status, given that subscribing to new music was an expensive activity, but also provide them with a means by which their names might appear alongside those from the upper echelons of British society. For some, the music would almost certainly have been of less importance than the appearance of their name on the list; such subscribers may not even have minded if the music was of poor quality. A significant number of the clergy, who as well as being university-educated, were often capable musicians and drawn towards musical pursuits as amateurs, also tended to subscribe. Moreover, given the high incomes that many clergy received, they could afford to subscribe to the latest published works; some, such as William Felton (1715–69), were additionally active as composers and had their music published.Footnote 24

Gender and music in circa eighteenth-century Britain

Public music making was, during the long eighteenth century, a largely male-dominated activity. Professional musicians were, more often than not, men, and it was members of this gender that were primarily involved in concert promotion, theatre management and cathedral music.Footnote 25 Most female musicians, especially those of an upper or middling social status, had to be content with making music at home or in that of an acquaintance. There were of course exceptions to this rule, such as female organists or theatrical singers, but female performers often appear to have given up public music making once they were married.Footnote 26 Civic musicians, such as the town waits, were always, as far as current research indicates, male; this was also largely true of other town musicians, including the ‘blind fiddlers’. Again, there were exceptions, such as the female blind fiddler who perished in a fire in Mitchelstown, Ireland, in 1816.Footnote 27 However, her low social status would have meant that she would not have been bound by the norms that governed more polite society. Instruments such as the violin, flute, recorder, oboe, bassoon and cello were then seen, according to the lawyer Roger North (1653–1734), as more appropriate for men, as were thorough-bass instruments such as the organ, harpsichord and double bass.Footnote 28 Others, such as the physician John Berkenhout (1726–91), viewed the harpsichord as a more effeminate instrument and advised his son against its performance in public.Footnote 29

Suitable instruments for women, again according to North, were keyboard instruments such as the harpsichord or spinet, and stringed instruments such as the guitar or lute.Footnote 30 In the second half of the century the piano became the keyboard instrument of choice for most women.Footnote 31 The organ in some instances was also an acceptable instrument for a female to play and, for a few, it was a skill from which they might derive an income. Ann Howgill (bap. 1775), daughter of the Whitehaven organist William, was appointed organist at Staindrop Church, County Durham, in 1793 and then Penrith in 1797.Footnote 32 Other well-known female organists include Ann Valentine (bap. 1762–1842) of Leicester, and Mary Hudson (d.1801) and Theophania Cecil (1782–1879) of London.Footnote 33 Women were, as a rule, prohibited from playing instruments that involved blowing or were held in slightly awkward or unsightly ways. Richard Leppert pointed out that the flute had phallic associations and, as such, was viewed as an improper instrument for a woman, although they could still play the flageolet.Footnote 34 The common prejudices at the time are evident in the writings of the dancing master, John Essex (c.1680–1744), who said that:

The Harpsichord, Spinet, Lute and Base Violin, are Instruments most agreeable to the LADIES: There are some others that really are unbecoming the Fair Sex; as the Flute, Violin, and Hautboy; the last of which is too Manlike, and would look indecent in a Woman's Mouth; and the Flute is very improper, as taking away too much of the Juices, which are otherwise more necessary employ'd, to promote the Appetite, and assist Digestion.Footnote 35

Members of the upper classes would have learnt music in their youth, principally through private tuition, although again it was different between the genders. For boys, music was of little importance to their education; they tended to be taught in areas such as mathematics, languages, geography, history and the Classics. If they did study music, it was usually as an optional extra. For upper-class ladies, who had few opportunities outside the home, their education tended to have a focus on languages, needlework, music and dancing.Footnote 36 Many held music as a particularly important attribute for a lady. As Essex observed: ‘Musick is certainly a very great Accomplishment to the LADIES; it refines the Taste, polishes the Mind; and is an Entertainment, without other Views, that preserves them from the Rust of Idleness, the most pernicious Enemy to Virtue.’Footnote 37 Mary Granville (1700–88), who became Mrs Delaney, echoed this when she wrote: ‘There is, I think, no accomplishment so great for a lady as music, for it tunes the mind.’Footnote 38

For many parents, music became an important asset to their daughter's future.Footnote 39 Understandably, music developed into a passion for some, but for others, it was a means by which they might entice a husband. Existing evidence suggests that such women usually gave up music once they were married.Footnote 40 For the middling classes, music was an attribute to be admired and adopted in the hope that it would raise their social standing. Allatson Burgh (1769–1856) observed in the early nineteenth century that:

In the modern System of Female Education, this fascinating accomplishment is very generally considered, as an indispensable requisite; and the Daughters of Mechanics, even in humble stations, would fancy themselves extremely ill-treated, were they debarred the Indulgence of a piano-forte … . Music is not only a harmless amusement; but, if properly directed, capable of being eminently beneficial to his fair Countrywomen. In many instances, it may be the means of preventing that vacuity of mind, which is too frequently the parent of libertinism; of precluding the intrusion of idle and dangerous imaginations; and, more particularly, among the Daughters of ease and opulence, by occupying a considerable portion of time, may prove an antidote to the poison insidiously administered by the innumerable licentious Novels, which are hourly sapping the foundations of every moral and religious principle.Footnote 41

However, what the more widespread production of domestic music did was to make a pastime that had been largely restricted to the upper echelons of society, ordinary. Richard Lovell Edgeworth (1744–1817), and his daughter Maria (1768–1849), observed at the dawn of the nineteenth century that:

Every young lady (and every young woman is now a young lady) has some pretensions to accomplishments. She draws a little; or she plays a little; or she speaks French a little … . Stop at any good inn on the London roads, and you will probably find that the landlady's daughter can shew you some of her own framed drawing, can play a tune upon her spinnet, or support a dialogue in French … .accomplishments [that] have lost much of the value which they acquired from opinion, since they have become common … . In a wealthy mercantile nation there is nothing which can be bought for money, that will long continue to be an envied distinction.Footnote 42

That being said, many of the aspiring middle classes would have found it difficult to pay for private music tuition for their daughters. If they could afford to send their daughters to a boarding school, then they would have received the opportunity to learn music; these lessons, however, tended to be done in groups, which restricted the amount of time a teacher could spend with each student. Edward Miller, who had undertaken some of this type of teaching himself, observed that such girls ‘seldom make any great progress in Music’. He found that ‘the shortness of time a Master can allow to each Scholar, where there are numbers to be taught’ detrimental, since ‘a Master cannot allow a sufficient time to each Scholar for compleating [sic] these purposes; if, while he is engaged with one only, all the rest are unemployed.’Footnote 43 As a result, one suspects that those who learnt music in this manner would have only developed a very rudimentary level of skill and that, consequently, the quality of music produced in the average household could not have risen particularly high.

Overall subscribers before 1820

When the data in appendices A and B is examined, the total number of subscribers in the 557 lists is 116,310. Of these, 87,549 were male and 26,815 female, with 1,946 in the other or institutional category. This data is presented as a pie chart in Figure 5.

Figure 5. Subscribers to all works examined in Appendix B.

The first observation to make is that publishing by subscription was an endeavour that primarily targeted individual subscribers. If it had been aimed at institutional subscribers, it is unlikely that publishing by subscription would have been a success, given that only 1.7% of subscribers fall into the ‘other’ category. This chart also strongly indicates that music subscription was, throughout the time period examined, a predominantly male-dominated activity, with 75.3% of subscribers being of this gender and 23.1% female.Footnote 44 This data will, to some degree, be influenced by the situation at home, where the eldest male most likely controlled the purse strings and would have presumably paid for the subscription even if the music were intended for a female family member.Footnote 45 When the data is broken down into 20-year periods in time, starting from 1720, a general trend is revealed; the data in the earliest two groupings from 1680 has been omitted as these are unlikely to be representative, given that only one work from each time period was examined (Figures 6–10).Footnote 46

Figure 6. Subscribers 1721–40.

Figure 7. Subscribers 1741–60.

Figure 8. Subscribers 1761–80.

Figure 9. Subscribers 1781–1800.

Figure 10. Subscribers 1801–20.

It is evident from this series of pie charts that music subscription before 1820 was overwhelmingly male-dominated but, towards the end of the eighteenth century, the proportion of female subscribers increased so that, by the early nineteenth century, 28.4% of subscribers were members of this gender. This will be, to a degree, representative of changes in society during this period, with an increasing number of women having the financial freedom to subscribe under their own names. However, this data suggests that music subscription may have been more progressive in terms of gender equality than other types of subscription. Leonore Davidoff and Catherine Hall examined the extant subscription lists of the societies based in Birmingham between 1780 and 1850 to find that ‘at most women constituted 10 per cent of the subscribers’.Footnote 47 Six works included in Appendix B were published in Birmingham and, when their attached lists are viewed as a whole, 20.1% of the subscribers were female. Of these, the highest proportion of female subscribers was to James Lyndon's Six Solo's for a Violin (1751), where 40% of his subscribers were of this gender.Footnote 48

Those in the ‘other’ category remained only a tiny proportion of the total subscribers, with a marginal increase in the number of these subscribers from the 1740s through to the end of the century, which dropped slightly at the start of the nineteenth.

Sacred and secular music

Of the lists examined, 26.6% were attached to works primarily intended for sacred purposes, – whether that was collections of hymns, psalm-tunes, anthems or organ voluntaries – although, naturally, much of this music could also be performed in a secular environment.Footnote 49 That means that the majority of works published, 73.4%, were intended for secular use. This will again be representative of wider trends and indicates that there was a greater demand for secular music than sacred. However, the data also suggests that publication by subscription may have been more commonly employed for the publication of sacred music as, when one examines William Smith and Charles Humphries’ catalogue of the publications issued by John Walsh between 1721 and 1766, of the 1,564 numbered items, only 45 (2.9%) were intended for sacred purposes.Footnote 50 The subscription data also indicates that secular music was more popular than sacred music with female subscribers, attracting a higher proportion (25.7% against 15.7%). Sacred music did, however, attract more institutional subscriptions, particularly from cathedral deans and chapters and choral groups (3.6% sacred against 1% secular).

Subscribers to works by Handel

Of all the composers represented, it was Handel whose music was most commonly issued by subscription. Appendix B contains 57 items associated with this composer, including arrangements of his music by others and William Coxe's (1748–1828) book of Anecdotes (1799).Footnote 51 This is far higher than the ten items that David Hunter and Rose Mason identified, although they primarily limited their research to publications issued during Handel's lifetime.Footnote 52 The 57 items constitute 10% of the total lists examined. What is perhaps most interesting is that Handel did not take responsibility for issuing the works himself. The only work by him published ‘for the author’ is his 1740 set of Twelve Grand Concertos. Apparently, his publishers were happy enough to take responsibility for the publication of his works themselves, perhaps assuming that Handel was a well-known and highly regarded composer whose music was going to sell. However, the numbers of his subscribers do not indicate this at first glance. The average number of subscribers per list comes out at 209 while, for Handel, this works out as 187. When one only examines those lists issued in his lifetime, then the average number of subscribers is 104. These lists were issued between 1725 and 1740 and when all the lists from the same period are examined, the average comes to 189. So, the question is: why did Handel's music attract so few subscribers? Much of this could have been due to the way in which members of the public purchased Handel's music, where significantly more copies would be purchased after publication. Customers could come across the score or set of parts in a shop and, either having already heard the music at a concert, or being aware of the esteem in which the composer was held, would purchase a copy. The publication by subscription could have been a tactic employed by the publishers John Cluer and John Walsh to sell extra copies to those who were more interested in having their names included in the list than in the music itself.Footnote 53 Handel's music did grow in popularity after his death, with the average number of subscribers in the posthumous lists being 213. This figure includes the collections of his music produced by John Clarke-Whitfield (1770–1836), the second edition of which had an impressive 730 subscribers. When we examine the breakdown by gender, overall it reveals that Handel was more popular with a male audience, with 80.4% of subscribers being of this gender. This is only slightly above the total percentage of male subscribers before 1820 (75.3%).

When comparing the percentage of subscribers from before and after Handel's death, the breakdown between genders remains largely static, with 16% of subscribers being female, increasing to 17.2% after 1759. For Arnold's edition of Handel's music, 22% of subscribers were female, which can be accounted for in the general trends at the time, although it is important to note that a significant number of women continued to have an interest in Handel's music 30 years after the composer's death; this indicates that some women's taste in music was not merely driven by the fashion for what was new.

Subscribers by country

When the subscriptions are broken down by country some interesting trends emerge. Firstly, that there were proportionally more institutional subscribers to works issued in England.Footnote 54 Only one of the works issued in America had any institutional subscribers, and the sole work from India examined had none. This was presumably due to the situation in these countries, where there would have been far fewer formal organizations than in Britain, and certainly few that saw a benefit in subscribing to any of the works examined.Footnote 55 Some foreign-based groups did, however, subscribe to musical works published in Britain; for instance, a musical society based in New York subscribed to Capel Bond's (c.1730–90) Six Anthems in Score (1769).Footnote 56 The proportion of female subscribers is largely the same in England (23.3%) and Ireland (22.2%), with a reduction for both America (6.4%) and India (15.4%).Footnote 57 Scotland overall had a similar proportion of subscribers to England and Ireland (22.2%) but, as this research only includes 26 works issued in this country, small changes to the selection produces a markedly different figure. For instance, if we exclude the works issued in Scotland that contain no music notation, then the proportion of female subscribers increases to 36.1%.

If we look at those works issued in the capital cities of England and Scotland, the disparity in the proportion of subscribers is more evident. London was, at this time, one of Europe's most important centres for music production, so it is unsurprising that 424 (76%) of the works examined in this study indicate that they were published in this city.Footnote 58 Of the total number of subscriptions taken, 70% were to a London-published work. The 23.7% of female subscribers discovered across all the London-published works is not dissimilar to England as a whole (23.3%).

In Scotland's capital city of Edinburgh, the proportion of subscribers is markedly different to London, where 36.1% of subscribers were female. Much of this will have been due to differences, both socially and culturally, with more females having the means and freedom to subscribe. It also indicates that music in this city may have been an art more strongly associated with women and that it was one area where female patronage was particularly acceptable.

The differences between the Enlightenment culture in England and Scotland has already been discussed by Rosalind Carr, who observed that Scottish Enlightenment had a ‘specific national character’, evidence of which can be seen in the ‘different character of women's involvement’.Footnote 59 Nevertheless, Carr also observed that ‘Scottish intellectual culture was still manifestly male’. She went on to assert that:

Women were involved in informal, tea-party intellectual conversation, but they were excluded from intellectual clubs and their contribution to print culture was negligible … . Only in the early 1800s did female writers such as Elizabeth Hamilton orientate themselves towards the Scottish capital, and this orientation suggests a major cultural shift as Scotland entered the nineteenth century … . [Nevertheless,] time spent in Edinburgh or London participating in the social circuits of visiting, balls, and promenading was deemed to be an essential component of the education of elite young Scotswomen.Footnote 60

Carr did note, however, that from 1775 women were permitted to attend the debates of the Edinburgh Pantheon Society, and could even vote upon each meeting's discussion; she also observed that, from the 1790s, there was ‘increased female involvement in intellectual associational culture’.Footnote 61 This change in the position of women in Edinburgh society is also event in several music works, issued there in the final decade of the eighteenth century, which received considerably more female subscribers than male.

John Watlen, Natale Corri and John Valentine

The two sets of The Celebrated Circus Tunes (1791 and 1798) produced by the music publisher and composer John Watlen (c.1764–1833), received together 329 subscribers, of which an impressive 76.9% were female.Footnote 62 Watlen was well established in Edinburgh, where he had his own shop from which he could promote his forthcoming publications to potential subscribers, and was active as a music teacher; no doubt many of the unmarried females were pupils.Footnote 63 If we examine a breakdown of female subscribers to his first set of circus tunes, it is apparent that the majority (70%) of his female subscribers gave their title as ‘Miss’ (112 subscribers). This perhaps gives some indication of not only how large Watlen's teaching practice was, but also that, in the 1790s, domestic music production was booming among Edinburgh's young ladies, some of whom presumably were not only aspiring to rise socially, but also wanted to imitate the fashion for music south of the border (Figure 11).

Figure 11. Titles of Female Subscribers to John Watlen's The Celebrated Circus Tunes (1791).

Note: This data is based on the titles as given in the lists, whether this is Mrs, Miss or an aristocratic title. In reality some of those with aristocratic titles would have been married, others not, while some of those who are titled ‘Miss’ would have been from aristocratic families.

Watlen's subscribers were by no means limited to Scotland, and his lists include several from the North-East of England. One of the most notable of these is the organist of Durham Cathedral, Thomas Ebdon (1738–1811), who subscribed to the second collection. At this time, Edinburgh had grown significantly as an important centre for the publication of music; evidence of this can be seen in Frank Kidson's book on music publishers where, of the 36 Edinburgh-based printers and publishers he mentions, 17 (47%) were active in the 1780s and 1790s, as opposed to two (6%) before 1750.Footnote 64 Among the list of musicians from Newcastle and Durham to have works published in Edinburgh at around this time, and mostly by Watlen, we find Ebdon, the Durham Cathedral lay-clerks John Friend and Charles Stanley, and the Newcastle organists Thomas Hawdon (c.1765–93) and Thomas Thompson (1777–1830).Footnote 65

Watlen, given his occupation, would have been astutely aware of what sold well, and aimed his circus music specifically at the amateur keyboard market. There was clearly a vogue for circus-related music at this time, presumably as a result of the establishment, in 1790, of the Edinburgh Equestrian Circus, an adjunct of both the London-based Sadler's Wells and Royal Circus.Footnote 66 The pieces in Watlen's collection are relatively simple and suitable for a keyboardist of limited skill; they make use of typical left-hand devices such as the Alberti bass, broken chord figurations and parallel octaves. Much of the melodic material is based upon traditional Scottish music and it is certainly possible that the right-hand part could be played on an instrument such as the flute or violin. Walten was himself a prolific publisher of traditional Scottish music, or music that he composed in that style, which he arranged for piano.

Further evidence of this wider shift in the position of Edinburgh-based women as musical patrons can also be seen in the published works of Natale Corri (1765–1822), the younger brother of Domenico (1746–1825). He, like Watlen, was involved in music publication through his family firm Corri & Co., a business that had close connections with the London-based firm of the same name.Footnote 67 He also taught music, with the Irish tenor and theatre manager, Michael Kelly (1762–1826), referring to him as ‘the first singing master in Edinburgh’.Footnote 68 For Corri's Op 1 Three Sonatas, for the Piano Forte of Harpsichord, an astounding 91% of his subscribers were female.Footnote 69 This will again reflect his teaching practice, which primarily focused on the musical education of unmarried women; those titled ‘Miss’ accounted for 84% (103) of his subscribers (Figure 12).

Figure 12. Titles of the Female Subscribers to Natale Corri's Three Sonatas, op. 1 (c.1790).

As Watlen's and Corri's collections were published at around the same time, and are both primarily intended for performance on a keyboard instrument, one would expect some individual subscribers to appear on both lists, which they clearly do. However, due to the lack of information provided in the lists it is impossible to determine an exact number of those who subscribed to both works, although the number could potentially be as high as 30. This would mean that around 9% of Watlen's subscribers also subscribed to Corri; for Corri, it could have been 22% of his subscribers who also subscribed to Watlen. This indicates that both musicians had their own circles from which they might solicit subscriptions but, naturally, as they were both located in Edinburgh, there was some crossover between the two. However, this data also indicates who the most prominent music publisher was and who appears to have had the largest teaching practice.Footnote 70

At the other end of the spectrum was the Leicester-based musician, John Valentine (1730–91). He, like his Edinburgh counterparts, was active in music tuition, but the breakdown of his subscribers by gender paints a very different picture, where only 1.9% of his subscribers were female.Footnote 71 This indicates that Valentine's teaching practice, unlike that of his Edinburgh counterparts, was dominated by male students.Footnote 72 On the one side, it is no surprise that his Eight Easy Symphonies (1782) had no female subscribers.Footnote 73 The instruments they employ, and the fact that such works were intended for public performance, made them unsuitable for women. However, one might have expected some of his female supporters to have subscribed as purely a supportive measure or for outward show, which they clearly did not. For his other two works, his Thirty Psalm Tunes (1784) had only one female subscriber, and for his sole theatrical work, The Epithalamium in the Tragedy of Isabella (c.1765), only 4.7% of his subscribers were female.Footnote 74 Ultimately, many of Valentine's subscribers may have come from any male-only clubs in which he was involved, such as local music societies or the freemasons, but the subscription lists attached to his works even stand in stark contrast to the other London-published works of this period.Footnote 75

Music for strings

Given what we have already observed in relation to Valentine's symphonies, one might have expected orchestral works, such as concerti grossi, to have had few or no female subscribers. However, such an observation would be inaccurate, as a substantial 16% of subscribers to such works were women. The resistance to women playing stringed instruments has already been discussed; however, some are known to have played the violin in private. Elizabeth Ford reported on two female violinists, Lady Sophia Hope (d.1813) and Elizabeth Rose of Kilravock (1708–89).Footnote 76 The judge, historian and antiquary, Cosmo Innes (1798–1874), said of the latter:

She sung the airs of her own country, and she had learnt to take a part in catches and glees to make up the party with her father and brother. The same motive led her to study the violin, which she played admirably, handling it like male artists, supported against her shoulder.Footnote 77

Women could also have played the harpsichord part, although it was unlikely that they would have done so in public. However, some women were able to play a thorough bass, including Grisie, the eldest daughter of Lady Grisell of Mellerstain House, Berwickshire.Footnote 78 In addition, the 25.2% of female subscribers to George Jackson's A Treatise on Practical Thorough BassOp. 5 (1791) suggests that a significant number of women did indeed learn to play a figured bass.Footnote 79

The nature of concertos meant that it was usually possible to play them as quartets, and they were certainly known to have been played this way in the nineteenth century.Footnote 80 The Newcastle composer, Charles Avison (1709–70), in an attempt to increase sales, indicated that his op. 9 concertos (1766) were performable as concertos, quartets or keyboard solos, and he included a partially completed keyboard part to facilitate this. Avison was a prolific composer of concerti grossi, issuing six sets of six or more, including his set of Twelve Concerto's…done from the two Books of Lessons…by Sigr Domenico Scarlatti (1744). When the subscribers to these six works are compared, an average of 15.9% of his subscribers were female, which is comparable to the overall proportion for concerti grossi (16%). This is a slight increase on the proportion received for his op. 2, where 8.2% were female; this had risen by the time of his op. 4, where 19.2% were members of this gender.

Given that by including a realized keyboard part Avison was making his op. 9 concertos more suitable for the female domestic performer, one might have expected him to receive an increase in the number of this type of subscriber. Although Avison did receive, when compared with the op. 4, an extra 55 subscribers, the list to book 2 records that still only 19% of the total were female, indicating that the inclusion of a partially realized keyboard part did not make much of an impact. This could possibly be why Avison returned to a more standard thorough-bass part for his 1769 op. 10 concertos.

Keyboard concertos, like concerti grossi, were also intended for orchestral performance, but they tended to be arranged with a self-sufficient keyboard part, enabling their performance either as keyboard solos, or with one or more of the accompanying string parts. Such works understandably attracted more female subscribers, with 34.9% overall being female. Avison's only published keyboard concerto, the 1742 Two Concertos, did not come close to this, where a mere 11.8% were female.Footnote 81 Nevertheless, other composers did much better at appealing to female subscribers. The proportion of female subscribers to the two sets of keyboard concertos by the organist at Bath Abbey, Thomas Chilcot (c1707–1766), is 30.1%. However, this figure should not be taken at face value, as even if Chilcot did attract more subscriptions from women, he was not able to attract anywhere near as many subscribers in total for his first set (101) as Avison did for his op. 9 (253).Footnote 82

The trio sonata, although clearly more suitable for domestic performance than the concerto, was again string dominated, and, as such, primarily aimed at the male subscriber. Only 11.6% of the subscribers to such works were female, so less than what was typical for the string concerto (16%). Given that the type of instruments employed are the same as the concerto grosso, the use of strings cannot account for this difference. A possible reason could be the way in which subscribers were made aware of such works. Women who attended concerts would hear concertos performed and, if they knew the composer, may have decided to support them through subscription. There is some evidence of this in the lists themselves, such as in Avison's op. 4.Footnote 83 When one examines the non-aristocratic female subscribers who gave a place of residence, it is striking that most lived relatively close to Newcastle. Male subscribers could be located much further afield and this implies that it was they who responded to published advertisements. By implication this means that many female subscribers to Avison's concertos may not have utilized the music themselves.Footnote 84 Trio sonatas, which were primarily intended for domestic use, would have not have been as frequently performed at concerts, and certainly not in the lead-up to publication, which could account for the drop in the proportion of female subscribers.

Keyboard music

In terms of keyboard music, there was a substantial number of publications produced, aimed at those who wanted to perform such works domestically. There were essentially two types of keyboard sonata in this period: there are those that were issued with accompaniments and those that had none. Nevertheless, even when accompaniments were provided, the keyboard part was usually self-sufficient and could be performed on its own. The accompaniments themselves tended to be fairly simple and intended for performers with only a rudimentary skill. As expected, this genre was more popular with females, who account for 46.7% of the subscribers, than some of the genres previously discussed. With sonatas for solo keyboard, the proportion of female subscribers is higher still, achieving 49.4%. Given Michael Cole's observation that, in c.1765, around ‘eighty percent of [pianoforte] players were female’, the subscription list data indicates that a significant number of men did indeed subscribe on behalf of a female relative.Footnote 85 This data, however, only includes works that were entitled ‘sonatas’, while this term was interchangeable with ‘lessons’. Prior to 1756, all published keyboard sonatas in Britain were called lessons, irrespective of whether they were intended for tuition or not. Sets of lessons for keyboard had been published as far back as the seventeenth century, for example, those in Matthew Locke's 1673 collection, Melothesia: or, Certain General Rules for Playing upon a Continued-Bass.Footnote 86 Avison was the first British composer, in 1756 with his op. 5, to refer to his published keyboard works as ‘sonatas’. Curiously though, works called ‘lessons’ tended to attract proportionally fewer female subscribers (43.2%).

The organist of St Mary's, Nottingham, Samuel Wise, issued a set of keyboard works entitled Six Lessons for the Harpsichord in around 1763.Footnote 87 His six lessons are essentially multi-movement sonatas that incorporate a range of dances, including the allemande, courante, gavotte and jig; in this sense these are not too dissimilar from Locke's much earlier examples. The difficulty ranges from simple two-part textures through to the more challenging crossing of hands and demi-semi quaver runs. The range of different techniques employed indicates that this set was primarily put together as an aid to develop keyboardist technique and presumably would have been used by Wise as part of his teaching activities. However, as pieces of music for performance they are rather insipid. Wise's set attracted a higher proportion of female subscribers, with 118 (60%) being of this gender. Of the female subscribers, 100 (51% of the total) were unmarried. Many of them would have been Wise's students and would have purchased a copy for their own use. One of the married subscribers was Mrs Mary Gawthern, who most probably purchased a copy for the use of her daughter, Margaret.Footnote 88 It is also interesting that around a third of Wise's male subscribers (33%) were professional musicians, which gives some indication as to not only how well connected he was, but also to how few men might have bought this set for their personal improvement or pleasure.Footnote 89 Others, who presumably did not subscribe to use the music themselves, include the booksellers Daniel Fox of Derby and Mr Ward of Nottingham, and the Nottingham-based printer and publisher Samuel Creswell. It was not unusual for those in the book trade to appear in subscription lists, and they frequently purchased more than one copy of any individual work.Footnote 90 Their subscription, as well as demonstrating their support for the arts, could also be a way of advertising their business. In addition, any copies subscribed to would have been purchased at a discount and could then be sold on at full price in their shops.

Another popular genre of keyboard music was the organ voluntary. Although such works were, by their very nature, intended for use in church, the absence of pedals on British organs of this period meant that such pieces were playable on a variety of keyboard instruments and in both sacred and secular environments. In addition, such works could be very secular in style and, one wonders, given the more austere type of worship that was prevalent in the eighteenth century, if some examples were ever viewed as suitable for religious purposes.Footnote 91 Given that voluntaries could be played at home, one might have expected such works to attract a relatively high proportion of female subscribers, but only 27.3% were members of this gender, indicating that this genre was more closely associated with the male performer than other forms of keyboard music.

Ignace Pleyel

One distinct anomaly in the London-originated subscription lists is that to the arrangement of Ignaz Pleyel's (1757–1831) Three Celebrated Trios, produced by the harpist, John Elouis (1758–1833).Footnote 92 Although arranged as harp sonatas they, for the most part, are performable on a keyboard instrument. Of the subscribers, 91.2% were female. There are several reasons as to why this work might have received such a high proportion of female subscribers. Firstly, that the majority of subscribers, one assumes, were his female students. Secondly, that the harp was a predominantly feminine instrument, which would account for the low number of male subscribers (five in total). Such a view is supported by another collection of harp music, a Notturno & Quintetto, for the Harp … . Op. 14, by Marie Marin that attracted 142 subscribers, of which 72.5% were female.Footnote 93 A third possibility is that Pleyel's music was particularly popular with female amateurs. One cannot deny that Pleyel's music was held in particularly high esteem during the 1790s. As Rita Benton observed, the ‘most telling evidence of the appeal [of Pleyel] … lies in the thousands of manuscript copies that filled the shelves of archives, libraries, churches, castles and private homes and in the thousands of editions produced in Europe and North America.’Footnote 94 However, there is some evidence that the popularity of Pleyel's keyboard works lay with the female music-buying public, while his string music was more popular with men. The catalogue of the music assembled by Henry, the Tenth Earl of Exeter (1754–1804), contains two sets of string quartets by Pleyel, but none of his keyboard music. The one keyboard sonata by Pleyel in the Burghley House collection belonged to Isabella (1803–79), wife of Brownlaw, the Second Marquess of Exeter (1795–1867).Footnote 95 There is also a substantial amount of Pleyel's keyboard music in the collection at Tatton Park in Cheshire that once belonged to Elizabeth Egerton (1777–1853), and in the collections that belonged to Jane Austen (1775–1817) and Tryphena Wynne Pendarves (1780–1873).Footnote 96 Further research into the ownership of Pleyel's music may shed more light onto this matter, but this last point raises an interesting possibility, particularly when the ratio of subscribers to Handel's music is taken into account: certain composers could be more popular with women than men and vice versa.

Music and dance tutors

Given that most women learnt the rudiments of music as part of their schooling, one might expect that, unless they wished to push their musical knowledge above a basic level, few women would subscribe to music tutors. Edward Miller, writing in 1771, observed that there was a ‘great deficiency of Ladies in general with regard to the grammatical part of Music’ but thought: ‘Perhaps it is not necessary for them to enter into the Minutæ of the Science.’Footnote 97 Leppert also pointed out that, for men, the purchase of a book of lessons could be a means by which a gentleman might avoid dependence on a socially inferior music master while, for women, it might help reduce the need to spend money on a teacher.Footnote 98 However, such works were clearly more successful with men, who account for 83.6% of subscribers.Footnote 99

Given the resistance there was to female string players, it comes as no surprise to find that no ladies subscribed to John Gunn's (c.1765–c.1824) The Theory and Practice of Fingering the Violoncello (c.1790).Footnote 100 One may have expected a few female subscribers, purely as a supportive measure, or purchases on behalf of another family member, but it is possible, given the way a cello was held, that women did not want to be associated with what was then viewed as a distinctly masculine instrument. Nevertheless, there was an appreciable number of female subscribers to works advertised as being for the cello, such as the 21.5% who subscribed to Giacob Cervetto's Twelve Solos (1748).Footnote 101 Michael Talbot did wonder as to whether ‘one or two of them [Cervetto's subscribers] played the cello’, but thought that the majority probably subscribed for other reasons.Footnote 102

Tutors were also available for those who wanted to learn how to dance, a pastime favoured by both genders. As well as the health benefits of this activity, it also helped in the development of a good posture, greater social confidence, and the acquisition of a more assured bearing in any social situation.Footnote 103 It was also an important social pastime, with people attending balls and assemblies to see the great and good of local society, and to be seen themselves. Judith Milbanke (1751–1822) of Seaham Hall, County Durham, often recorded in her letters the events she had attended and whom she met. In July 1779, she attended the Durham race week, for which she wrote:

I danced a good deal at both Balls, at the first with Sir John Eden, at the second with Mr. Gowland: I made Count Yeo dance a Minuet to the entertainment of the whole Room by betting him a Guinea he would not which alas! I was obliged to pay! [Sir Ralph] Milbanke danced Minuets without end, and one night opened the Ball with the beauteous Countess of Strathmore.Footnote 104

Girls were taught to dance at an early age, and often at schools in groups.Footnote 105 Men, even though dancing was an important social activity, did not, so it is not surprising that most subscribers were male (57%). However, this does not provide a complete picture as Pemberton's 1711 instructor had no female subscribers, Tomlinson's 1735 primer had 112 male subscribers and 57 female, while Gallini's c.1770 primer had 218 female subscribers and only 195 male. When placed as a series of pie charts, the results give a clear indication that, as the eighteenth century progressed, books on dancing became increasingly popular with female subscribers (Figures 13–15).

Figure 13. Subscribers to E. Pemberton's An Essay for the Further Improvement of Dancing (1711).

Note: Viewed on ECCO.

Figure 14. Subscribers to Kellom Tomlinson's The Art of Dancing (1735).

Note: Viewed on ECCO.

Figure 15. Subscribers to Giovanni-Andrea Gallini's Critical Observations on the Art of Dancing (c.1770).

Note: Viewed on ECCO.

This trend is probably representative of changes in society over the course of the century. Early on, most women would have learnt dancing as part of their education and had little need of a printed tutor, although it is certainly possible that a father might have subscribed under his own name when the book was intended for the use of a daughter. For men, dancing, as Leppert observed, increasingly became a required skill, although there were those who never learnt how to dance as a child, as the activity was frowned upon by a parent, and would have need for such a book.Footnote 106 Nevertheless, dancing became an activity enjoyed by all, a trend that ultimately blurred the distinction between the classes.Footnote 107 Events such as balls and assemblies became increasingly commonplace over the course of the eighteenth century and musical events, such as concerts, often concluded with a ball; there were also standalone balls, timed to coincide with important local events, such as race week.Footnote 108 Another factor in the growth in the number of female subscribers could have been the rise of the expanding middle classes, where presumably some of the women would have needed to learn how to dance, having not received a private education.

Vocal music

Given the association of cathedral music with male choirs, one would naturally expect there to be few female subscribers to such works, and this is certainly true of the two important collections of Cathedral Music by Boyce and Arnold. Only 4.6% of their subscribers were female, which is considerably less than the 17.4% in the ‘other’ category, the latter primarily made up of cathedral deans and chapters who purchased this music for the use of their choirs. When we examine Boyce's set more closely, in becomes apparent that the first edition did not appeal to women at all, as it attracted a single female subscriber, Miss Mary Ann Chase, who only subscribed to the first volume.Footnote 109 The poor reception greatly disappointed Boyce, who then decided against the publication of his own anthems, although his widow ultimately issued two collections in 1780 and 1790.Footnote 110

There was in England at this time a movement that aimed to, as Stanley Sadie put it, ‘retain the “ancient” style’ of music.Footnote 111 Two of the most notable groups associated with the performance of old music were The Academy of Ancient Music and The Madrigal Society. There were also some prominent musicians researching the music of the past, including Johann Christoph Pepusch, Charles Burney, John Hawkins, Maurice Greene and Boyce. Some composers even attempted to adopt the manner of the past, producing works such as madrigals.Footnote 112 However, the majority of those interested in the music of the past were male, with little interest in this area shown by women. Nevertheless, as time went on, it is clear that a small but increasing number of women did cultivate an interest in old music, including Elizabeth Egerton, whose brother presented to her a four-volume set of anthems, odes and other works by Henry Purcell, which had been transcribed by Philip Hayes between 1781 and 1785, and had formerly belonged to Samuel Arnold.Footnote 113 The 1788 reissue of Boyce's Cathedral Music was far more successful than the first edition, having more than three times the number of subscribers, of which an appreciable 8.9% were female.Footnote 114 Arnold's collection of Cathedral Music attracted a small number of female subscribers (4.1%), while the 1801 collection of Thomas Morley's Canzonets and Madrigals attracted 238 subscribers, of which 36 (15.1%) were female.Footnote 115

When we look at anthems in general, there are proportionally more female subscribers, but again the percentage is low, only 15.6%. However, this increase from the sets of Cathedral Music by Boyce and Arnold was probably because it was easier to convince a potential subscriber to purchase a copy of newly composed music, rather than an edition of old works. Collections of hymns and psalms attracted a slightly lower proportion of female subscribers (15.1%), presumably as most church choirs, like those in cathedrals, were often formed from men and boys.Footnote 116 Even Edward Miller's landmark collection, The Psalms of David (1790), which attracted 2,603 subscribers, had only 386 that were female (14.8%).Footnote 117 This indicates quite clearly that even simple parochial music was more popular with men.Footnote 118

Even if men more commonly subscribed to sacred and ancient vocal music, singing was an activity, much like dancing, that was popular with both genders. Collections of secular vocal music, however, still tended to attract more male subscribers, but a greater proportion were female, equating to 24.9%. However, this does not paint the full picture, as there was a considerable difference in the ratio of subscribers between individual collections. It perhaps comes as no surprise, given that it was published in Edinburgh, that Natale Corri's A Set of Six Italian Songs (1791) attracted a high proportion of female subscribers, in this case 87.4%.Footnote 119 For the London-published collection of songs by Ann Hodges, 56.8% of subscribers were female.Footnote 120 The music in this volume was harmonized by Nicolas-Joseph Hüllmandel and published by him for ‘the Benefit of Her Orphan Children’; it no doubt attracted a significant number of subscribers, including Queen Charlotte, the wife of George III, who wished to contribute to and be publicly associated with a charitable cause. In contrast to these, Broderick's Medley, which despite its title is a book of words, attracted no female subscribers.Footnote 121 Its target audience was the Freemasons, which could account for the lack of women, although some collections of music intended for use in masonic circles, such as Thomas Hale's Social Harmony (1763) and William Riley's Fraternal Melody (1773), did appeal to a few members of this gender (respectively 2.6% and 1.1%).Footnote 122

Another popular form of vocal music in the second half of the eighteenth century was the glee. This type of music is largely associated with club activity, where it would have been performed by men and, as expected, the majority of subscribers to such works were indeed male. Nevertheless, there were a significant number of female subscribers, accounting for 22.1% of the total.Footnote 123 Although women would not, as a rule, have performed such works in public, they are known to have done so in private.Footnote 124 For example, Mary Noel (1776–1802), in a letter from 1784, wrote: ‘We have spent the week pleasantly − in good truth we are as merry as so many Beggars in a Barn. Diana rides with me, we eat, drink & sing Catches & Glees.’Footnote 125 John Marsh (1752–1828) also reported on how he had accompanied the performance of a glee in 1794, sung by, among others, ‘Mrs S. Heming’.Footnote 126 The music books assembled in the early nineteenth century by Elizabeth Egerton, and Lydia Acland of Killerton House, Devon, contain large numbers of glees, catches and canons, including songs normally associated with more masculine topics, such as naval battles,Footnote 127 as does a volume of music that once belonged to Harriet Capell (c.1735–1821), the Countess of Essex. It contains, amongst other works, glees by John Percy (Figure 16) and Richard Stevens, and a catch by the Earl of Mornington.Footnote 128

Figure 16. Copy of a Glee by John Percy that belonged to Harriet Capell, the Countess of Essex.

Note: GB-DRu: Fleming b.38(a).

Glees were even composed by female musicians, including Maria Hester Park (1760–1813) whose op. 3 A Set of Glees (c.1790) was dedicated to Mary Bertie (c.1730–93), the Duchess of Ancaster.Footnote 129 Surprisingly, she had more female subscribers than male. Of the 131 subscribers, 57.3% were female and, of these female subscribers, 36% had aristocratic titles, 28% were titled ‘Mrs’, and 36% ‘Miss’. Although some of these subscribers would no doubt have subscribed for reasons not to do with the music, these figures would indicate that the performance of glees by female amateurs took place on all levels of society and whether a woman was married or not did not necessarily have an impact. Even for Park herself, being married did not mean that she had to leave music behind. Her 1785 op. 1 set of Sonatas for the Harpsichord were published under her maiden name of Reynolds, and she continued to issue music in the early nineteenth century, including A Divertimento for the Piano Forte, in around 1801 (Figure 17).Footnote 130

Figure 17. Titles of Female Subscribers to Maria Hester Park's A Set of Glees, op. 3 (c.1790).

Music for flute

The flute, as has already been observed, was viewed as a particularly unsuitable instrument for a woman, although, like the violin, ladies are known to have played this instrument in private. Ford, for instance, reported on Susanna Montgomerie (1690–1780), Lady Rachel Binning (1696–1773) and Lady Catherine Gairlies (d.1786), all of whom played the flute or recorder.Footnote 131 In December 1735 Alexander Baillie published his Airs for the Flute with a Thorough Bass for the Harpsichord, which he dedicated to Lady Gairlies. The dedication to this work indicates that she had studied the recorder for some time:

The following Airs have been composed by a Gentleman for your Ladyship's Use when you began to practice the Flute a Beque [Bec]; I thought I could not chuse a better Subject for my First Essay as an Engraver of Musick than these Airs; as well because they were made for Beginners on the Flute & Harpsichord, as that they were composed by a Gentleman who first put a Pencil in my Hand and then an Engraver. But chiefly because they were originally made for your Ladyship's Use which gives me so fair a Handle to send them into the World under the Protection of your Ladyship's Name.Footnote 132

Other closet flautists include Marianne Davies (c.1744–c.1818), the daughter of an Irish musician, and Anne Lister (1791–1814) of Shibden Hall, today best known for her intimate relationships with other women.Footnote 133 Although only 11.2% of subscribers to music advertised for the flute were women, their subscription indicates that some might have played this instrument in private. The issue, however, in assuming this is that such works were laid out on two staves, with the solo instrument on the treble stave and the keyboard part, with a figured bass, on the lower stave. As such, it is possible to play these works as keyboard solos. However, if the public generally viewed these as playable as keyboard solos, the question arises as to why the proportion of female subscribers is so much lower than what was seen with the set of keyboard lessons and sonatas. In terms of individual collections, Alexander Munro's A Collection Of the Best Scots Tunes Fited to the German Flute (1732), perhaps understandably, had no female subscribers, while Alessandro Besozzi's (1702–93) Six Solos for the German-Flute, Hautboy or Violin (1759) had 15 (6% of subscribers).Footnote 134 These subscribers come from different social strata and include aristocracy, married and unmarried women. Sadly, it has been impossible to ascertain if any of these subscribers played one of these instruments.

Other permutations of the data

Of all the lists examined, 20 (3.6%) were attached to works by female composers or authors, indicating just how much music publication in the eighteenth century was male dominated. Unsurprisingly, this music includes genres that were more popular with female performers, such as keyboard lessons, sonatas and concertos, along with songs and music for harp. There is also the 1809 set of Twelve Voluntaries by Theophania Cecil that attracted a higher proportion of female subscribers (45.5%) than was typically associated with this genre (27.3%).Footnote 135

Given what we have already observed in relation to books on music theory and the collections of Cathedral Music by Boyce and Arnold, one would anticipate that Charles Burney's (1726–1814) A General History of Music (1776) would receive a low proportion of female subscribers. This turns out be the situation: only 15.1% of subscribers were of this gender.Footnote 136 However, the autobiography of a practising musician and Polish immigrant, Joseph Boruwlaski (1739–1837), attracted more female subscribers, with the average proportion of female subscribers over the three editions of his memoirs being 29.5%. This is far higher than the 8.5% that Charles Dibdin attracted for his 1788 Musical Tour. Clearly the personal accounts of a musician were also, as a rule, more popular with male subscribers.

Conclusion

The material contained in subscription lists issued over the long eighteenth century has, before now, not been analysed in any great depth; nevertheless, the importance of this data and what it can reveal is more than evident from this study. This research has given an important insight into what types of music were popular with the music-buying public, and the changes in society that took place over the course of that century. It is obvious that the publication of music was a male-dominated activity, and it was members of this gender that primarily subscribed to the latest publications. However, a closer perusal of the data reveals that there were clear changes in the patterns of subscription over the course of the century, with an increasing proportion of female subscribers. There are, furthermore, distinct differences in the patterns of subscription, depending on in which country or city the music was issued. This not only reflects the way in which music was viewed by the population in these areas, but also the teaching practices and wider networking of the composers involved.

Women tended to have a preference for secular music rather than sacred, with the most popular genres for them being composed for the keyboard, a class of instrument that society thought particularly suitable for a lady. However, women also subscribed to works intended for inappropriate instruments, such as the violin, flute or cello, or for works primarily intended for public performance. Many of these subscriptions may have been taken out in support of the composer, for the benefit of a male family member, or for outward show, but it is intriguing that some of these women may have been involved with the performance of such works in private. Vocal music was performable by members of both genders, and even the music chiefly associated with male-only music clubs, such as glees, was performed by women. There was also little distinction between the classes; glees were equally performable by members of the aristocracy, gentry and middling classes.

There is, in addition, the realization that individual composers could have been more popular with a particular gender. Handel, for instance, was more popular with male subscribers, while there are indications that Pleyel's keyboard music may have been more popular with women. In addition, men had a stronger interest in old music, and it was they who sought to advance their musical understanding through the purchase of a primer. Dancing tutors, given the association of this activity with important social events, attracted an appreciable number of subscribers from both genders, although such works enticed a higher proportion of female subscribers later in the century; this again reflects broader changes in society.

The effort required to analyse a significant number of subscription lists has certainly been considerable, but the importance of these documents in our understanding of British society and the changes that took place during the Georgian period cannot be understated. They are a hugely valuable resource which, when linked with other types of documents such as diaries and advertisements, provides us with a far greater insight into the patterns of musical activity in eighteenth-century Britain than has ever been seen before.

ORCID

Simon D. I. Fleming http://orcid.org/0000-0001-7043-6908

Acknowledgments

I am grateful for the assistance of staff at the British Library, the Foundling Museum, the National Library of Scotland, the Royal Academy of Music, the Henry Watson Music Library, Manchester, the university libraries of Durham, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Leeds, Nottingham and Oxford, and the Dean and Chapter Library at Durham Cathedral. Thanks are also due to Travis and Emery, and Otto Haas, antiquarian music specialists. Individual thanks are due to Amélie Addison, Kim Baston, Michael Cole, Colin Coleman, Gordon Dixon, David Griffiths, Simon Heighes, Elias Mazzucco, Martin Perkins, Andrew Pink, Timothy Rishton and Michael Talbot, most of whom provided me with copies of lists used in this study. I also wish to extend my additional gratitude to Michael Talbot, who provided me with feedback on an early version of this article. Online resources used to source lists include the British Library website, Google Books, Eighteenth Century Collections Online, the Internet Archive, the National Library of Scotland website, the Hathi Trust and IMSLP.

Appendices

Appendix A. The percentage of subscribers (male/female/other-institutional) to each category and list discussed in this study, given to one decimal place.

CategoryMen%Women%Institutional/Other%
Subscribers to all works75.323.11.7
Subscribers before 170098.31.70
Subscribers 1701-172010000
Subscribers 1721-174082.116.91
Subscribers 1741-176080.217.92
Subscribers 1761-178077.520.22.2
Subscribers 1781-180073.3251.7
Subscribers 1801-182070.428.41.2
Subscribers to works issued in Birmingham79.120.10.7
Subscribers to James Lyndon's Six Solo's (1751)60400
Subscribers to Sacred Works80.715.73.6
Subscribers to Secular Works73.325.71
Subscribers to works by Handel80.4172.5
Subscribers to Handel's Works Issued in the Composer's Lifetime81.4162.5
Subscribers to Handel's Works Issued Posthumously80.317.22.5
Subscribers to Samuel Arnold's Edition of Handel's Works76.2221.7
Subscribers to Works Issued in England74.823.31.9
Subscribers to Works Issued in Scotland77.522.20.3
Subscribers to Works Issued in Ireland77.522.20.3
Subscribers to Works Issued in America92.46.41.3
Subscribers to Works Issued in India84.615.40
Subscribers to Works Issued in London74.323.72
Subscribers to Works Issued in Edinburgh63.336.10.6
Subscribers to John Watlen's Two Books of Circus Tunes (1791 & 1798)23.176.90
Subscribers to Natale Corri's Three Sonatas, Op 1 (c.1790)9910
Subscribers to Works by John Valentine93.41.94.7
Subscribers to John Valentine'sThe Epithalamium in the Tragedy of Isabella (c.1765)94.74.70.6
Subscribers to String Concertos79.1164.8
Subscribers to George Jackson's A Treatise on Practical Thorough Bass….Op. 5 (1791)74.825.20
Subscribers to Charles Avison's Concertos8015.94.1
Subscribers to Charles Avison's Six Concertos, Op 2 (1740)87.18.24.7
Subscribers to Charles Avison's Eight Concertos, Op 4 (1755)75.819.25
Subscribers to Charles Avison's Twelve Concertos, Op 9, Book 2 (1767)76.7194.3
Subscribers to Keyboard Concertos63.534.91.6
Subscribers to Charles Avison's Two Concertos (1742)82.611.85.6
Subscribers to Thomas Chilcot's Keyboard Concertos (1756 & 1765)67.630.12.3
Subscribers to Trio Sonatas86.411.62
Subscribers to Accompanied Keyboard Sonatas5346.70.3
Subscribers to Sonatas for Solo Keyboard50.649.40
Subscribers to Lessons for Solo Keyboard56.743.20.1
Subscribers to Samuel Wise's Six Lessons for the Harpsichord (c.1765)40600
Subscribers to John Elouis’ Arrangement of Three Celebrated Trios by Ignace Pleyel (1800)8.891.20
Subscribers to Marie Marin's Notturno & Quintetto, for the Harp….Op. 14 (1801)27.572.50
Subscribers to Organ Voluntaries72.527.30.2
Subscribers to Music Tutors83.616.20.2
Subscribers to John Gunn's The Theory and Practice of Fingering the Violoncello (c.1790)98.801.2
Subscribers to Giacob Cervetto's Twelve Solos for a Violoncello (1748)78.521.50
Subscribers to Music Advertised for the Cello90100.1
Subscribers to Dance Tutors57430
Subscribers to E. Pemberton's An Essay for the Further Improvement of Dancing (1711)10000
Subscribers to Kellom Tomlinson's The Art of Dancing (1735)66.333.70
Subscribers to Giovanni-Andrea Gallini's Critical Observations on the Art of Dancing (c.1770)47.252.80
Subscribers to William Boyce's and Samuel Arnold's Collections of Cathedral Music784.617.4
Subscribers to the First Edition of Boyce's Cathedral Music (1760, 1768 & 1773)680.331.7
Subscribers to the 1788 Reissue of Boyce's Cathedral Music838.98.1
Subscribers to Samuel Arnold's Cathedral Music (1790)82.74.113.2
Subscribers to Thomas Morley's Canzonets and Madrigals (1801)83.215.11.7
Subscribers to Collections of Anthems79.415.65
Subscribers to Collections of Psalms and Hymns82.515.12.5
Subscribers to Edward Miller's The Psalms of David (1790)81.314.83.9
Subscribers to Sacred Vocal Music81.314.83.9
Subscribers to Secular Vocal Music74.524.90.6
Subscribers to Collections of Songs6930.50.4
Subscribers to Natale Corri's A Set of Six Italian Songs (1791)12.687.40
Subscribers to Ann Hodges’ Collection of Songs (1798)42.956.80.2
Subscribers to Broderick's Medley (c.1780)10000
Subscribers to Thomas Hale's Social Harmony (1763)942.63.5
Subsribers to William Riley's Fraternal Melody (1773)98.61.10.4
Subscribers to Glees77.221.11.7
Subscribers to Maria Hester Park's A Set of Glees, op. 3 (c.1790)42.757.30
Subscribers to Music Advertised for the Flute88.611.20.2
Subscribers to Alexander Munro's A Collection Of the Best Scots Tunes Fited to the German Flute (1732)10000
Subscribers to Alessandro Besozzi's Six Solos for the German-Flute, Hautboy or Violin (1759)9460
Subscribers to Works Produced by Female Composers and Authors56.143.50.5
Subscribers to Theophania Cecil's Twelve Voluntaries (1809)54.545.50
Subscribers to Charles Burney's A General History of Music (1776), volume 183.215.11.8
Subscribers to Joseph Boruwlaski's Three Autobiographies (1788, 1792 & 1820)70.329.50.2
Subscribers to Charles Dibdin's Musical Tour (1788)90.88.50.7

Appendix B. The numbers of subscribers to every work examined in this study.

Composer/Editor/AuthorTitlePublisherYearTotalMaleFemaleOther/Institutional
Charles AbelSix Sonatas for the Harpsichord….Opera IILondon, for the author176010579260
Thomas AdamsSix Voluntaries for the OrganLondon, for the author1820?7652240
John AddisonSix Sonatas or Duets….Opera PrimaLondon?1772909000
John AlcockHarmonia FestiLichfield, for the author1791197152414
John AlcockSix and Twenty Select Anthems in ScoreLichfield?17718160219
John AlcockSix Concerto'sLondon, for the author1750279174978
John AlcockThe Pious Soul's Heavenly ExerciseLichfield, for the author1756150128220
John AlcockTwelve English SongsLondon, for the author17433542381151
An AmateurOdes, Songs, and MarchesLondon, for the author18073301691610
Giovanni AndrouxSix Trios for Two German Flutes or Two ViolinsLondon, George Terry1760?245219260
J. AngierSix HymnsLondon, for the author1795?172141310
Giorgio AntoniottoL'Arte Armonica….Vol. 1London, John Johnson17601079890
Attilio AriostiAlla Maesta di GiorgioLondon?1728?7616521090
Samuel ArnoldCathedral Music….Volume the FirstLondon, for the editor1790126104517
Samuel ArnoldCathedral Music….Volume the SecondLondon, for the editor179011898515
Samuel ArnoldCathedral Music….Volume the ThirdLondon, for the editor1790126104517
Samuel AshbyMiscellaneous Poems….Address to Music and PoesyLondon, William Miller1794461379802
Luffman AtterburyA Collection of Twelve Glees, Rounds &c.London, George Goulding1790?11694202
Charles AvisonEight Concertos….Opera QuartaLondon, John Johnson17551981503810
Charles AvisonSix Concertos….Opera SecundaNewcastle, Joseph Barber1740170149147
Charles AvisonSix Concertos….Opera TerzaLondon, John Johnson1751174136335
Charles AvisonTwelve Concerto's…done from the two Books of Lessons…by Sigr Domenico ScarlattiLondon, for the author1744151125206
Charles AvisonTwelve Concertos….Opera Nona [Book 1 - Issue 1]London, for the author1766209168329
Charles AvisonTwelve Concertos….Opera Nona [Book 1 - Issue 2]London, for the author17662291843510
Charles AvisonTwelve Concertos….Opera Nona [Book 2]London, for the author17662531944811
Charles AvisonTwo Concertos the First for an Organ or HarpsichordNewcastle, Joseph Barber1742144119178
Edmund AyrtonAn AnthemLondon, for the author178816516203
Johann Christian BachFour sonatas…adapted…by John Christian LutherLondon, for the Proprietor178514470722
Johann Sebastian BachS. Wesley and C. Horn's New And correct Edition of the Preludes and Fugues of…Bach. Book 1st [Issue 2]London, for the editors1808?152118340
Charles BarbandtSix Sonatas for Two Violins, two German Flutes or two Hautboys….Opera ILondon?175210586190
Robert BarberSix Sonatas….Opera PrimaLondon, for the author1775?9779180
R F J BardouleauA Collection of Sacred MusicLondon, for the author1819126113121
Francesco BarsantiConcerti Grossi….Opera TerzaEdinburgh, for the author1743?139118138
Francesco BarsantiNove Overture a Quatro Due Violini, Viola e BassoLondon?174511810774
Francesco BarsantiSei Antifone…Opa QuintaLondon?1750?827804
Morris BarfordBarford's Collection of Rondos, Airs, Marches, Songs….Book. IICambridge, Morris Barford1795?387321660
Cecilia BarthelemonThree Sonatas….Opera PrimaLondon, for the author17913401791610
Maria BarthelemonSix English and Italian SongsLondon, for the author1786211144670
Maria BarthelemonThree Hymns, and Three Anthems….Op. 3London, for the author17952951801141
John BarwickHarmonia Cantica DivinaLondon, for the author1783?28328003
William BatesSix Sonata's for Two Violins with a Thorough BassLondon, for the author1750?176160160
William BealeA First Book of Madrigals, Gless, &c.London, for the author18154835121
Daniel BeardenThe Inscription Songs & Ode to CharityLondon, Longman & Broderip1788174121530
James BeattieEssays. On the nature and immutability of TruthEdinburgh, William Creech1776476380897
James BeattieEssays. On the nature and immutability of Truth [same list as 1776 edition]Edinburgh, for the author1777476380897
John BeckwithSix Anthems in ScoreLondon, for the author1785?857663
John BeckwithSix VoluntariesLondon, for the author1780140119210
John BeckwithThe First Verse of every Psalm of DavidLondon, for the author18081911304615
Daniel BelknapThe Evangelical HarmonyBoston [USA], Isaac Thomas & Ebenezer Andrews180011911720
Sanders BennetSix GleesOxford, for the author1802?6742250
Anton BemetzriederMusic made Easy to every CapacityLondon, R. Ayre & J. Moore177811697172
Charles BennettTwelve Songs and a CantataLondon, for the author1765?8360230
John BennettTen VoluntariesLondon, for the author1750?228175530
Mr BensonLove and MoneyLondon, John Wallis1798?198163314
George BergSix Concertos….Opera PrimaLondon, for the author175511795193
Alessandro BesozziSix Solos for the German-Flute, Hautboy or ViolinLondon, Edmund Chapman1759248233150
George BickhamThe Musical Entertainer…Vol. ILondon, for the editor1737548520280
William BirdThe Oriental MiscellanyCalcutta [India], Joseph Cooper1789260220400
Henry BishopTwelve Original GleesLondon, for the author1812?6444200
Benjamin BlakeA Miscellaneous Collection of Vocal Music….Op.6London, for the author1814163621010
Jonas BlewittTen Voluntaries….Op. 2.London, for the author17961019740
Isaac BloomfieldSix AnthemsLondon, for the author1805?12992370
Mr BoltonThe Opera MiscellanyLondon, John Brown1730?11595200
Capel BondSix Anthems in ScoreLondon, for the author17692181673120
Capel BondSix Concertos in Seven PartsLondon, for the author1766129981912
Hugh BondTwelve Hymns and Four AnthemsLondon, for the author1776?162139203
Giovanni BononciniCantate e DuettiLondon1721236192440
Francesco BorosiniOne Hunderd CanticiLondon, John Simpson17465132190
Joseph BoruwlaskiA Second Edition of the Memoirs of the Celebrated DwarfBirmingham, John Thompson1792329249800
Joseph BoruwlaskiMemoirs of Joseph BoruwlaskiDurham, Francis Humble1820292195952
Joseph BoruwlaskiMemoirs of the Celebrated DwarfLondon17884393011380
John BowieA Collection of Strathspey Reels & Country DancesEdinburgh, for the author1786?310215950
William BoyceA Collection of Anthems and a Short ServiceLondon, for the author's widow17904838010
William BoyceCathedral Music….Volume the FirstLondon, for the editor176011374138
William BoyceCathedral Music….Volume the First [Reissue]London, John Ashley17884053363633
William BoyceCathedral Music….Volume the SecondLondon, for the editor176812284038
William BoyceCathedral Music….Volume the ThirdLondon, for the editor177312888040
William BoyceFifteen Anthems together with a Te Deum, and JubilateLondon, for the author's widow and family1780168135330
William BoyceSolomon. A SerenataLondon, for the author17432682015512
William BoyceTwelve SonatasLondon, for the author17674864204818
Ralph BradshawTwenty Four Psalm or Hymn TunesLondon, for the author18201149699
William BrocasA Favorite Air and Polonaise for the FluteDublin, Isaac Willis1820?453780
Brother BroderickBroderick's Medley, or, a Compleat Collection of SongsLondon, for the editor1780?12412400
John & Robert BroderipPortions of the PsalmsBath, for the author1798165117453
Robert BroderipA Miscellaneous Collection of Vocal Music….Op.IXLondon, for the author179117483892
James BrooksA Second Sett, of Twelve GleesLondon, for the author1798?139115222
James BrooksTwelve English Ballads….Opera 5London, for the author1805?15197540
J. C. BrownA Collection of Original Sacred MusicLondon, for the author18186048111
Thomas BrownA Collection of Songs and a CantataLondon, for the author17749579151
William BrownThree RondosPhiladelphia [USA], for the author178710759480
David BruguierKrommer's Grand Symphony in D, Arranged as a Duet for Two Performers on the Piano ForteLondon, Mitchell1820?219821370
Cornelius BryanSix Songs….Op 2London, Broderip & Wilkinson18014834140
John BuckenhamThe Psalm-Singer's Devout ExerciseLondon, for the author174113613033
Adrien BueeThree SonatasLondon, for the author17996329340
Henry BurgessA Collection of English Songs and CantatasLondon, John Walsh1749126104220
Henry BurgessSix Concertos, for the Organ and HarpsicordLondon, John Walsh17437863141
William BurgissEight Anthems, Twelve Psalm Tunes, and Gloria PatriLondon, for the author180810783177
William BurgissThree Anthems, Two Psalm Tunes, and a Funeral PieceLondon, Goulding, D'Almaine, Potter & Co1810?9778118
Charles BurneyA General History of Music, from the Earliest Ages to the Present Period….Volume the FirstLondon, for the author177685671212915
John CamidgeSix Easy Lessons for the HarpsichordYork, for the author176311965531
Matthew CamidgeCathedral MusicLondon, for the author18061661223410
Matthew CamidgeThree Sonatas, for the Piano ForteLondon, Preston & Son17939629670
Henry CareySix CantatasLondon1732237189471
Henry CareyThe Dramatick WorksLondon, S. Gilbert1743251160910
Henry CareyThe Musical Century….Vol. ILondon, for the author1737217153640
Henry CareyThe Musical Century….Vol. I….The Second EditionLondon, for the author1740215151640
Henry CareyThe Musical Century….Vol. IILondon, for the author1740295211840
William CarnabySix Canzonetts, for Two VoicesLondon, for the author179411081290
William CarnabySix SongsLondon, for the author181010155460
John CarrThe Grove or Rural HarmonyLondon, for the author1760?12311760
Richard CarterSix Solos For the Use of young Practioners on the Violin of Harpsichord….Opera PrimaLondon, William Smith1750?11877410
John CassonEight Favorite Airs with VariationsLondon, for the author179314382610
Robert CatchpoleA Choice Collection of Church Music, for the Use of Country ChoirsBury, for the author176121620961
Giuseppe CattaneiVI Sonate a Violino e Basso…Opera SecondaLondon, for the author1765?5733240
Theophania CecilTwelve VoluntariesLondon, for the author180912367560
Giacob CervettoSix Sonatas or Trios for Three VioloncellosLondon, John Walsh1745?575250
Giacob CervettoTwelve Solos for a VioloncelloLondon, for the author1748135106290
George ChardA Collection of Twelve GleesLondon, for the author1811159127311
George ChardSix Favorite SongsLondon, for the author179510169320
William ChetwoodA General History of the StageDublin, for the author1749390332580
Thomas ChilcotSix Concertos for the HarpsichordLondon, John Johnson175610166332
Thomas ChilcotSix Concertos for the Harpsichord….Opera SecondaBath?, for the author17657251192
Thomas ChilcotSix Suites of LessonsLondon, William Smith17348472120
Thomas ChilcotTwelve English SongsLondon, John Johnson1744278236384
Carlo ClariSei Madrigali….Parte PrimaLondon?1767175144283
Edward ClarkA New AnthemNorwich, for the author1770?178137401
Edward ClarkSix Easy Hymns or AnthemsLondon, for the author1767?10659461
Jeremiah ClarkEight Songs with Instrumental Parts….Opera SecondaLondon, for the author1775?408348591
Jeremiah ClarkEight Songs with the Instrumental PartsLondon, for the author1763?433380512
Jeremiah ClarkSix Sonata's….Opera TerzaLondon, for the author1779228165621
Jeremiah ClarkTen Songs….Op. IVLondon, for the author1791334243901
Thomas ClarkA Sett of Psalm & Hymn TunesLondon, for the author1800?10910621
Jasper ClarkeA Cantata and Five English SongsLondon, for the author176010788163
John ClarkeA Miscellaneous Volume of Morning and Evening Services….Vol. 2London, for the author18056846715
John ClarkeA Morning and Evening Service with Six Anthems….Vol. 1London, for the author18009470915
John ClarkeEight Glees….Op: 4'Dublin, Gough179812257632
John ClarkeThree Sonatas, for the Piano Forte or Harpsichord….Op. ILondon, for the author17899567280
Philip CoganThree Sonatas for the Piano Forte….Op: 7Dublin, Edmund Lee1795?204771270
William ColeA Morning and Evening ServiceLondon, for the author1793797900
William ColeThe Psalmodists ExerciseLondon, for the author1766?737102
Thomas CollinsA Collection of Anthems and PsalmsNuneaton, John Baraclough1790?14813648
Benjamin CookeCollin's Ode on the PassionsLondon, for the author1784153124263
Benjamin CookeNine Glees and Two Duets….Opera VLondon, for the editor1795246150897
Benjamin CookeThe Morning Hymn, taken from the Fifth Book of Milton's Paradise LostLondon, Welcker1773149108401
James CoombsA Te Deum and JubilateLondon, for the author1800?544842
James CoombsEight CanzonetsLondon, for the author1807?13576590
Arcangelo CorelliFour Trios, Selected from Corelli's Concertos Adapted for the PIano Forte….By Osmond SafferyLondon, Goulding, Phipps & D'Almaine1803?9128621
Joseph CorfeThe Beauties of Handel….Vol. IILondon, for the author18042921831090
Joseph CorfeTwelve GleesLondon1791216169416
Domenico CorriA Select Collection of the Most Admired Songs, Duets, &c.Edinburgh, John Corri1779?228911352
Domenico CorriThe Singers Preceptor or Corris Treatise on Vocal MusicLondon, Mr Silvester18108465453010
Natale CorriA Selection of German, French & Italian DuettinosLondon, Corri, Dussek & Co179612333900
Natale CorriA Set of Six Italian SongsEdinburgh, for the arranger179110313900
Natale CorriThree Sonatas….Op. 1stEdinburgh, Corri & Sutherland1790?134121220
William CoxeAnecdotes of George Frederick Handel, and John Christopher SmithLondon, William Bulmer1799241188512
Miles CoyleSix Lessons for the HarpsichordLondon, John Preston1785?14673730
William CrispDivine Harmony: or, the Psalm-Singer instructedLondon, for the author175513012460
William CroftMusica Sacra: or, Select Anthems in Score….Vol. ILondon, John Walsh1724?15514627
John CromptonThe Psalm Singer's AssistantLondon, for the author177826725980
William CrotchTen AnthemsCambridge?1798978179
Richard CudmoreTwelve Select Pieces of Poetry, on Sacred Subjects, or the Voice & Piano ForteLondon, for the author1804403190
Angus CummingA Collection of Strathspey, or Old Highland ReelsEdinburgh1780361286750
Benjamin CurzonsDivine HarmonyLondon, for the author1787918812
William DaleSix Divertimenti….Opera PrimaLondon, for the author1783?9763340
William DaleSix Sonatas for the Harpsichord or Piano-Forte with AccompanimentLondon, for the author178310670360
John DanbyDanby's First Book of Catches, Canons and GleesLondon, J. Bland178511199102
John DanbyDanby's Posthumous GleesLondon, R. Jaubert1798274231385
John DanbyDanby's Second Book of Catches, Canons, & GleesLondon, for the author1789118104113
John DavySix Quartetts for Voices….Opera PrimaLondon, for the author1790?10884231
John DayTwelve Songs and Elegies….Op. IILondon, for the author17916942270
Charles DenbyThree Duetts for the Piano Forte & German Flute, or Violin….Op. 3London, for the proprietor1790?9552430
M DengleThree Songs and Three Favorite Airs for the Pedal Harp or Piano ForteLondon, Thomas Cahusac1805?9911880
R DensonA Collection of New and Favourite English and French SongsThe Hague, R. Denson17495646100
Lieutenant General DicksonVol: 1 One Hundred Airs…Arranged…By Alex[ande]r Munro KinlochLondon, for Kinloch1816?4102301800
Charles DibdinA Collection of English Songs and CantatasLondon, for the author1761989620
Charles DibdinThe Musical TourSheffield, for the author1788458416393
Thomas DibdinThe DirectorLondon, William Savage1807122105170
William DinsleyThree Sonatas for the Piano Forte or HarpsichordLondon, for the author1795183761070
William DixonA Collection of Glees and RoundCambridge, for the editor179613112335
William DixonMoralitiesCambridge, for the author1800?898720
William DixonPsalmodia ChristianaLondon, Preston1814232214117
Joseph DormanThe Curiosity: Or, the Gentleman and Lady's General LibraryYork, Alexander Staples1738168139263
Daniel DowA Collection of Ancient Scots MusicEdinburgh, for the author1778143127151
George DrummondSix Double FuguesLondon, Birchall18189031590
Archibald DuffA Collection of Strathspey ReelsEdinburgh, for the author1794149120290
Thomas DupuisOrgan Part to the Cathedral MusicLondon, Smart1797736175
Thomas DupuisSix Concertos for the Organ….Opera PrimaLondon, for the author176014998510
Richard EastcottSix Sonatas….Opera PrimaLondon, Welcker1773218164540
Richard EastcottSketches of the Origin, Progress and Effects of Music [1st and 2nd editions have identical lists]Bath, S Hazard1793195135600
Richard EastcottThe Harmony of the MusesLondon, for the author1790?14887610
Thomas EbdonA Second Volume, of Sacred MusicLondon, for the author1810?2101296516
Thomas EbdonSacred MusicLondon, for the author1790?42229110625
Thomas EbdonSix Glees….Op. IIILondon, for the author17952271151111
Thomas EbdonSix Sonata's for the Harpsichord, Piano Forte and OrganLondon, for the author1772?212129830
Georg Heinrich EgestorfA Practical Dissertation on the Science of SingingLondon, for the author1816433760
John ElouisA Second Volume of a Selection of Favorite Scots SongsLondon, Robert Birchall1807249811662
Harriet EnglishConversations and Amusing TalesLondon, for the author17992941181760
William EvanceA favorite ConcertoLondon, Longman & Broderip1784?14882642
Charles EvansSix GleesLondon, for the author181117917072
Joseph EyreEight Sonatas in Three PartsLondon, for the author1765467383822
Samuel FelstedJonah an OratorioLondon, for the author1775243192510
William FeltonSix Concerto's for the Organ or HarpsichordLondon, John Johnson1744162138213
William FeltonSix Concerto's for the Organ or Harpsichord….Opera SettimaLondon, John Johnson1758?12793304
Giacomo FerrariCapi D'OperaLondon, for the author180113355780
Giacomo FerrariSix Notturni Two Rondos, and a DuettLondon, for the author1797?9318750
William de FeschVIII Concerto's in seven parts….Opera the TenthLondon?1741978674
William de FeschX Sonatas for Two German Flutes or, Two ViolinsLondon, for the author173312611862
Michael FestingEight Concerto's….Opera QuintaLondon, William Smith1739154134515
Michael FestingSix Solo's for a Violin….Opera SettimaLondon, William Smith1744220183316
Michael FestingSix Sonata's for Two Violins….Opera SestaLondon, William Smith17421821611011
Michael FestingTwelve Concerto's….Opera TerzaLondon, for the author1734172147718
Michael FestingTwelve Solo's for a Violin….Opera PrimaLondon, for the author1730150139101
W. FiggA First Collection of Four AnthemsLondon, for the author180210489123
James FisharTwelve New Country DancesLondon, for the author1780?11138730
George FitchThe Country ChoristerLondon, for the author1799?27826945
William FlacktonSix Sonatas for Two Violins and a Violoncello or a HarpsichordLondon, for the author1758137113222
William FlacktonThe ChaceLondon, for the author1743207179226
John FlemingPsalms Selected For the Use of St. Peter's Church, DroghedaDrogheda, John Fleming17775725320
Jean-François de La FondA New System of MusicLondon, for the author172515915360
James FordyceA Collection of Hymns and Sacred PoemsAberdeen, for the publisher1787192018141060
Margaret ForrestSix Sonatas for the Harpsichord or Piano Forte with Accompaniments….Op. 1London, for the author1780?5001933061
Theodosius ForrestWays to Kill Care. A Collection of Original Songs….by Young D'UrfeyLondon, for the author1761122104180
John FosterSacred MusicYork, Samuel Knapton1800?3172622332
Peter FraserThe Delightfull Musical Companion for Gentlemen and Ladies….Vol. ILondon, Peter Fraser1725?185154310
John FreethThe Political Songster…The Sixth EditionBirmingham, for the author179039639600
Johann GalliardThe Hymn of Adam and EveLondon?1728244170740
Giovanni-Andrea GalliniCritical Observations on the Art of DancingLondon, for the author1770?4131952180
Elisabetta de GambariniLessons for the Harpsichord Intermix'd with Italian and English Songs….Opera 2London, for the author1748161128330
Joseph GanthonyAn Anthem for Christmas-DayLondon, for the author177420519762
William GardinerSacred Melodies from Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven….Vol. 1London, for the author1812327253695
John GarthSix Sonatas….Opera SecondaLondon, for the author1768261163962
John GayPoems on Several OccasionsDublin, S. Powell172911010640
Francesco GeminianiConcerti Grossi…Composti delli sei soli della prima parte dell'Opera quinta d' Arcangelo CorelliLondon, William Smith & John Barrett1726156140133
Joseph GibbsEight Solos For a Violin with a Thorough BassLondon, for the author1746159138192
Jean Claude GillierRecueil D'Airs FrançoisLondon, Thomas Edlin1723696090
Giovanni GiornovichiTwo Violin ConcertosLondon, Longman & Broderip17918323600
Thomas GladwinEight Lessons for the Harpsichord or OrganLondon, for the author17658337460
William GoodeAn Entire New Version of the Book of Psalms….Vol. IILondon, for the author1811360304560
Neil GowA Second Collection of Strathspey ReelsEdinburgh, for the author1788?6245031201
Maurice GreeneForty Select Anthems in Score….Volume FirstLondon, John Walsh1743134911330
George GriffinOde to CharityLondon, for the author182017981971
George GuestSixteen Pieces or Voluntaries….Op. 3London, for the author179913460740
Barnabus GunnTwo Cantata's and Six SongsGloucester, R. Raikes1736465376872
John GunnThe Theory and Practice of Fingering the VioloncelloLondon, for the author1790?16216002
Charles HagueA Collection of Songs Moral, Sentimental, Instructive, and AmusingLondon, Preston18055703771912
Charles HagueA Second Collection of Glees, Rounds, & CanonsCambridge, for the editor1800156127263
Charles HagueAn Anthem in ScoreLondon, for the author1794152122300
Charles HagueThe Ode as Performed in the Senate-House at CambridgeLondon, for the author1811201165351
Thomas HaleSocial HarmonyLondon?17635435101419
Thomas Douglas HalleyTwelve Hymns appropriate to Charity SermonsLondon, for the author1813168134340
George F. HandelA Second Set of Six Concertos [Arnold Edition][London]1789323249686
George F. HandelAdmetusLondon, John Cluer1727574881
George F. HandelAlexanderLondon, John Cluer1726807091
George F. HandelAlexanders Feast, An Ode on Saint Cecilia's Day [Arnold Edition][London]1789362275816
George F. HandelAlexander's Feast or the Power of Musick [first issue]London, John Walsh173812490286
George F. HandelAlexander's Feast or the Power of Musick [second issue]London, John Walsh173812591286
George F. HandelAnthem. For the Coronation of George IID [Arnold Edition][London]1789325251686
George F. HandelAnthem, In Score, Composed at Cannons, For his Grace the Duke of Chandos [Arnold Edition][London]1789362273836
George F. HandelArminiusLondon, John Walsh173710995113
George F. HandelAtalanta [First Issue]London, John Walsh1736142119212
George F. HandelAtalanta [Second Issue]London, John Walsh1736155132212
George F. HandelAthalia [Arnold Edition][London]1789381285906
George F. HandelBelshazzarLondon, H. Wright1784787017
George F. HandelCoronation and Funeral Anthems…Arranged…by Dr John ClarkeLondon, Button & Whitaker18106284801462
George F. HandelDeborahLondon, Wright & Co1784706136
George F. HandelDeborah [Arnold Edition][London]1789325250687
George F. HandelEight Anthems….With an accompaniment…by William Sexton…and John PageLondon, for the editors1808?197157364
George F. HandelEighteen Songs…Adapted…By Henry HardyLondon, for the editor1800?675890
George F. HandelEstherLondon, Wright & Co1783686026
George F. HandelFaramondo [First and second issues have the same list]London, John Walsh1738?7665101
George F. HandelGiulio Cesare [Arnold Edition][London]1789382289876
George F. HandelIsrael in EgyptLondon, William Randall17701801561311
George F. HandelIsrael in Egypt [Arnold Edition][London]1789333258696
George F. HandelJephthaLondon, William Randall1770?161138149
George F. HandelJephthaLondon, Wright & Co1786?161138149
George F. HandelJosephLondon, H. Wright1785736517
George F. HandelJoshuaLondon, H. Wright1790?161138149
George F. HandelJoshua [first issue]London, William Randall1773?161138149
George F. HandelJoshua [second issue]London, William Randall1774?1921661313
George F. HandelJoshua [Arnold Edition][London]1789367279826
George F. HandelJudas MacchabausLondon, William Randall1769148128128
George F. HandelJudas MacchabausLondon, H. Wright1785?148127138
George F. HandelJustinLondon, John Walsh173710591131
George F. HandelMessiah A Sacred OratorioLondon, James Peck181317817440
George F. HandelMessiah an Oratorio in Score [6 issues, 5 seen, all with the same list]London, Randall & Abell1767928282
George F. HandelMessiah an Oratorio in ScoreLondon, H. Wright1785?928282
George F. HandelRodelinda [first issue]London, John Cluer1725?12090291
George F. HandelRodelinda [second issue]London, John Cluer1725?12191291
George F. HandelSaulLondon, William Randall17731911641413
George F. HandelScipioLondon, John Cluer1726585161
George F. HandelSolomonLondon, H. Wright1787?797117
George F. HandelSusannaLondon, Wright & Co1784696036
George F. HandelThe MessiahBoston, [USA], James Loring181613113100
George F. HandelThe Occasional OratorioLondon, Wright & Co1784696036
George F. HandelThe Vocal Works…by G. F. Handel, Arranged…by Dr John Clarke….Vol. V [same list in vol. 6]London, Button, Whitaker & Beadnell1819?7305641642
George F. HandelTheodoraLondon, H. Wright1787787017
George F. HandelThirteen Celebrated Italian DuetsLondon, William Randall177710993151
George F. HandelTwelve Anthems…selected from the sacred Oratorios of Mr Handel…by Hugh BondLondon, for the editor1789?7664111
George F. HandelTwelve Grand Concertos in Seven PartsLondon, for the author1740106861010
Elizabeth HardinSix Lessons for the HarpsichordLondon, for the author1770?14071690
Henry HargraveFive ConcertosLondon, for the author1765?221173444
Thomas HarringtonTwenty-Four Country DancesLondon, Longman & Broderip179712021990
George Frederick HarrisAn Ode, For Three Voices. A Tribute to the Memory of…King George the ThirdLondon, for the author1820?160128311
Joseph HarrisEight SongsLondon, for the author1767?173139340
Joseph MacDonald HarrisSix Favorite AirsLondon, for the author18078768190
W HarrodSelect Psalms of David, in the Old Version, Set to Music in Two PartsStamford, W Harrod17898457261
Matthias HawdonAn Ode on the King of PrussiaLondon, John Johnson1760?148111352
William HawesSix Favorite AirsLondon, for the author1810?8368150
William HawesSix GleesLondon, Robert Birchall1805?9068211
Joseph HaydnA Selection of Original Scots Songs….The Harmony by Haydn….Vol. IILondon, William Napier1792396309852
Philip HayesSix Concertos…for the Organ, Harpsichord, or Forte-PianoLondon, for the author1769276212613
William HayesCathedral MusicLondon?1795?1511151125
Williiam HayesSix CantatasLondon, for the author1748316259525
Williiam HayesTwelve Arietts or Ballads, and Two CantatasOxford1735537454794
William HayesVocal and Instrumental Musick, in Three PartsOxford, for the author17421049473
John HebdenSix Concertos….Opera IIaLondon, for the author1745148129613
Musgrave HeighingtonSix Select Odes of Anacreon in Greek And Six of Horace in Latin Set to MusickLondon, for the author174416115371
Peter HellendallTwo GleesCambridge, for the author1785?179163142
Peter Hellendall Snr & JnrA Collection of Psalms for the Use of Parish ChurchesCambridge, for the editor17944073593216
Charles HempleSacred MelodiesLondon, Clementi & Company181213871652
John HeringTwelve Hymns in Four PartsLondon, for the author1796161114452
Henry HeronTen VolentariesLondon, for the author1765?16292700
James HewettAn Introduction to SingingLondon, for the author1765198184140
John HillA New Book of PsalmodyLondon, John Johnson1760?1029750
John HindleA Collection of SongsLondon, for the author17923051951091
William HineHarmonia Sacra GlocestriensisLondon?1731?235182485
Ann HodgesSongs…Harmonized and Published by Mr HullmandelLondon?17989063895152
Henry HolcombeSix Solos for a Violin and Thorough Bass….Opera PrimaLondon, William Smith1745208141670
Smollet HoldenA Collection of Quick and Slow Marches Troops &cDublin, B. Cooke1795?242183590
Samuel HolyokeHarmonia AmericanaBoston [USA], Isaac Thomas & Ebeneezer Andrews179113012640
Samuel HolyokeThe Columbian RepositoryExeter [USA], Henry Ranlet180921620961
William HodsonFourteen Songs with a GleeGreenwich, for the author1785?10648580
F E HorsleySix Spanish AirsLondon, for the author1815?4451612831
John HowgateSacred MusicManchester, for the author1810?186162240
William HowgillAn Original Anthem & Two Voluntaries for the Organ or Piano ForteLondon, for the author1800174132393
Robert HudsonThe MyrtleLondon, for the author1755?163135280
John HughesPoems on Several Occasions….Volume the FirstLondon, J. Tonson & J Watts1735350271790
John [Johann] HummelThree Sonatas for the Piano-Forte or Harpsichord with Accompaniments….Op. IIILondon, for the author1792197136610
John HumphriesXII Sonatas, for Two Violins; with a Through Bass….Opera PrimaLondon, for the author1734979331
J. HuttenesSix English CanzonetsLondon, for the author17979222700
John IrelandThree Grand Sonatas…With an Accompaniment for a Violin Obligato….Opera 1stLondon, Goulding, Phipps & D'Almaine1805?9562330
Tomás de IriarteMusic, A Didactic Poem, In Five Cantos. Translated from the Spanish….by John BelfourLondon, William Miller180719819260
George JacksonA Treatise on Practical Thorough Bass….Op. 5London, for the author1791155116390
James JacksonSix Voluntaries, for the Organ or HarpsichordLondon, for the author1775?6229330
Thomas JacksonTwelve Psalm TunesLondon, Thomas Straight1780?150204379
William JacksonAnthems and Church Services…Edited…By…James PaddonExeter, for the editor1819155119289
William JacksonEight Sonatas….Opera XLondon, for the author1773218166520
Benjamin JacobDr Watts' Divine & Moral SongsLondon, for the author1810?178102760
Benjamin JacobNational PsalmodyLondon, for the author1815?326256619
Louis JansenThree Sonatas…..Op. 1London, for the author1793148331150
Samuel JarvisSix Songs and a CantataLondon, for the author1764878250
Stephen JarvisTwelve Psalm Tunes, and Eight AnthemsLondon, for the author1816165142167
Catherine JemmatMiscellanies in Prose and VerseLondon, for the author176658737818524
George JenkinsEighteen Airs for two Violins or German Flutes and a BassLondon, for the author1785?112100120
George JenkinsNew Scotch MusicLondon, for the author1791?3721921791
Nicolo JomelliLa PassioneLondon, Robert Bremner1770897784
Edward JonesMusical and Poetical Relicks of the Welsh BardsLondon, for the author1794286184993
John JonesLessons for the Harpsichord….Volume IILondon, for the author17612961371590
John Jeremiah JonesSix Fugues with IntroductionsLondon, for the author1811227167600
William JonesA Treatise on the Art of MusicColchester, for the author1784514470
William JonesTen Church Pieces for the Organ with Four Anthems….Opera IILondon, for the author178910790170
James KentA Morning & Evening Service with Eight Anthems….Vol 2d Revised and arranged by Joseph CorfeLondon, for the editor1794?226181738
James KentTwelve AnthemsLondon, for the author17732451863920
Joseph KeyEight Anthems….Book I….The Second EditionLondon, Purday & Button1805?209191810
T. KilvingtonFourteen Country DancesLondon, for the author1785?13495390
T. KilvingtonTwelve Country DancesLondon, for the author179114492520
J KingSix SongsLondon, Longman & Broderip1786?14580650
Alexander KinlochOne Hundred Airs, (principally Irish) Selected & Composed by Lieut.Gen. Dickson [Vol. 2]London, for the editor1815?4102301800
Augustus KollmannEssay on Practical Musical CompositionLondon, for the author179910390130
William KnappA Sett of New Psalm-Tunes and AnthemsLondon, for the author173816716250
Richard LangdonTen Songs and a CantataLondon, John Johnson1759296236591
Richard LangdonTwelve Songs and Two Cantatas….Opera IVLondon, for the author1769164113501
Christian LatrobeAnthems…performed in the Church of the United BrethrenLondon, for the editor1811164100640
Christian LatrobeSelection of Sacred Music [Vol. 1]London, Robert Birchall1806197148490
Christian LatrobeThe Dawn of GloryLondon, for the author1803202128731
Francis Linley & Joseph HartleyFourteen Country DancesLondon?1790?9768290
Thomas LinleyThe Posthumous Vocal Works….Vol. IILondon, Preston1800?189121644
Charles LockhartAn Epithamamium or Nuptial OdeLondon, for the author177512476480
Charles LockhartFour Songs and a Hunting CantataLondon, for the author1775?146104420
Samuel LongFour Lessons and Two Voluntarys for the Harpsichord or OrganLondon, for the widow1770?15398550
James LyndonSix Solo's for a ViolinBirmingham, Michael Broome175114587580
James LyonUrania[USA]176114113290
Thomas MaceMusick's MonumentLondon, T. Ratcliffe & N. Thompson167630129650
Kenneth MackenzieOrain GhaidhealachDuneadainn, Clo-bhuailt’1792993976170
Robert MackintoshSixty eight New Reels Strathspeys and QuickstepsEdinburgh, for the author17933041871170
Charles MackleanTwelve Solo's or Sonata's for a Violin and Violoncello….Opera PrimaEdinburgh, R. Cooper1737585071
Thomas MaguireTwelve Favorite WaltzesDublin, for the author1815?5831270
John MantelSix Setts of Lessons For the Harpsicord or Organ….Opera PrimaLondon, William Smith1750?534580
Benedetto MarcelloThe First Fifty Psalms Set to Music…adapted to the English Version by John Garth. Vol. ILondon, John Johnson175711886293
Benedetto MarcelloThe First Fifty Psalms Set to Music…adapted to the English Version by John Garth. Vol. IILondon, John Johnson175711688244
Benedetto MarcelloThe First Fifty Psalms Set to Music…adapted to the English Version by John Garth. Vol. IIILondon, John Johnson175712291265
Benedetto MarcelloThe First Fifty Psalms Set to Music…adapted to the English Version by John Garth. Vol. IVLondon, John Johnson175712490286
Benedetto MarcelloThe First Fifty Psalms Set to Music…adapted to the English Version by John Garth. Vol. VLondon, John Johnson175712290275
Benedetto MarcelloThe First Fifty Psalms Set to Music…adapted to the English Version by John Garth. Vol. VILondon, John Johnson175712389295
Benedetto MarcelloThe First Fifty Psalms Set to Music…adapted to the English Version by John Garth. Vol. VIILondon, John Johnson175712287305
Benedetto MarcelloThe First Fifty Psalms Set to Music…adapted to the English Version by John Garth. Vol. VIIILondon, John Johnson175712286306
Marie MarinNotturno & Quintetto, for the Harp….Op. 14London, for the author1801142391030
William MatherSacred MusicLondon, for the author18062091503524
Johann MayerTwelve Songs Six English and Six ItalianLondon, for the author18015227250
Joseph MazzinghiThree Sonatas for the Piano-Forte….Opera QuintaLondon, for the author1790209751340
Malcolm McDonaldA Second Collection of Strathspey ReelsEdinburgh. for the author1789143113300
Patrick McDonaldA Collection of Highland Vocal AirsEdinburgh. for the publisher17848376751593
Duncan McIntyreOrain GhaidhealachDuneadainn, Clo-bhuailt’179014801447330
Joseph McMurdieSacred MusicLondon, for the editor1820182149330
John McVitySelect Psalm and Hymn Tunes….Second EditionDublin, George Bonham178710176250
Edward MillerA Collection of New English Songs and a CantataLondon, John Johnson1755?234183510
Edward MillerDr. Watts's Psalms and HymnsLondon, for the author1802?261193635
Edward MillerElegies. Songs, and an Ode….Opera TerzaLondon, for the author1770?214128833
Edward MillerThe History and Antiquities of DoncasterDoncaster, William Sheardown1804496453403
Edward MillerThe Psalms of David for the Use of Parish ChurchesLondon, William Miller179026032116386101
Thomas MorleyA Plain and Easy Introduction to Practical MusicLondon, William Randall17712362091611
Thomas MorleyThe Canzonets and Madrigals….Arranged…by W. W. Holland, A. M. and W. Cooke, A. BLondon, for the editors1801238198364
Thomas MorleyThe Triumphs of Oriana….Published in Score…by Wm HawesLondon, for the editor181413913162
Antonio MortellariTwelve ArriettsLondon, Henry Holland1791?8827610
Domenico MottaSix Italian SongsLondon?1775?5613430
Domenico MottaSix SongsLondon, for the author1780?12527980
Wolfgang MozartA Concerto By Mozart, Adapted as a Sonata…By D. BruguierLondon, H. Savory1810?11334890
Alexander MunroA Collection Of the Best Scots Tunes Fited to the German FluteParis173211011000
John MurphyA Collection of Irish Airs and Jiggs with VariationsEdinburgh?1810?2871761110
William NapierA Selection of the most Favourite Scots Songs Chiefly PastoralLondon, William Napier1790?4843531292
William NapierMusic. Proposals for Publishing by Subscription, a Complete Collection of the Pastoral Music of Scotland [only know copy defective]London, William Napier1789168133341
James NaresEight Setts of Lessons for the HarpsichordLondon, for the author1747151113380
James NaresTwenty Anthems in ScoreLondon, for the author1778146111233
Richard NealeA Pocket Companion for Gentlemen and LadiesLondon, John Cluer1724466398680
Richard NealeA Pocket Companion for Gentlemen and Ladies [Vol II]London, John Cluer1725392304871
James NewtonPsalmody ImprovedIpswich, for the author1775135125100
Thomas NorrisEight Solo SongsOxford, for William Mathews1795?8062180
Thomas NorrisSix Simphonies….Opera ILondon, for the author17742111881112
Vincent NovelloA Collection of Sacred Music….Vol. 1London, Phipps & Co1811306246600
Mrs G. O'MoranSix BalladsLondon, H. Savory1809184561280
Mark OlivierAn Air with Accomanyments and Four DivertimentisLondon?1790?352870
A Gentleman of OxfordA Cantata and Six SongsLondon, John Johnson1750?456387690
S PachCaroline A Pastoral ElegyLondon, for the author17945122290
John PageA Collection of HymnsLondon, for the editor18045693651959
John PageDivine HarmonyLondon, for the editor1798141122172
John PageFestive HarmonyLondon, for the editor180412110867
John PageHarmonia SacraLondon, for the editor180016515375
Maria Hester ParkA Concerto….Op. VILondon, for the author1795?187481390
Maria Hester ParkA Set of Glees….Op. 3London, for the author1790?13156750
Stephen PaxtonA Collection of Glees Catches &cLondon, for the author178211997202
Francis PeacockFifty Favourite Scotch AirsLondon, for the publisher in Aberdeen1762?165135282
E PembertonAn Essay For the further Improvement of DancingLondon, John Walsh1711585800
Robert PetrieA Third Collection of Strathspey ReelsLondon, for the author1805?5984331650
David PerezMattutino de MortiLondon, Robert Bremner1774183167151
Dodd PerkinsTen SongsLondon, for the author1796307228781
Louis PillottiFour Italian & Two English AriettesLondon, for the author179514366770
George PintoFour Canzonets and a SonataLondon180716993760
George PintoSix CanzonetsBirmingham, Woodward18044531140
George PintoThree Sonatas for the Piano Forte with an Accompaniment for a ViolinLondon, Mrs Sanders180615657990
Thomas PittChurch Music….Volume the FirstLondon?, for the editor1788112881113
Thomas PittChurch Music….Volume the SecondLondon, for the editor17891411101318
John PixellA Collection of Songs, with their Recitatives and SymphoniesBirmingham, for the author1759343251866
John PixellOdes, Cantatas, Songs &c….Opera SecondaBirmingham, for the author1775315232785
Ignace PleyelThree Celebrated Trios of Pleyel Arranged…by J[ohn]. ElouisLondon, for the author1800575520
William PorterTwo AnthemsLondon, for the author1795?13878600
John PrattPsalmodia Cantabrigiensis [Second Edition]London, for the author1809241216214
Jacob PringEight AnthemsLondon, for the author1791554951
Henry PurcellProposals for Publishing by Subscription, I. The following Works of Purcell [Handbill 3]London1790?695991
Henry PurcellProposals for Publishing by Subscription, The Works of Henry Purcell, in Five Classes [Handbill 4]London1790?9072171
Henry PurcellProposals for Publishing by Subscription, The Works of Henry Purcell, in Five Classes [Handbill 5]London1790?9920781
James RadcliffeChurch MusicLondon, for the author18015840126
Ignatius RaimondiSix Grand MarchesLondon, for the author17958351320
Allan RamseyThe Gentle Shepherd, A Scotch Pastoral….Attempted in English by Margaret TurnerLondon, for the author17906884941940
Venanzio RauzziniA Periodical Collection of Vocal Music….Vol: IBath, for the author17972881011870
Eliza ReevesPoems on Various SubjectsLondon, for the author178012983460
Josiah RelphA Miscellany of PoemsGlasgow, for Mr Tomlinson in Wigton17475424261160
Maria Hester ReynoldsSonatas for the HarpsichordLondon?17853091641450
William RileyFraternal MelodyLondon, for the author177356255462
William RileyParochial Music CorrectedLondon, for the author176238737890
Eli RobertsThe Hartford Collection of Classical Church MusicNew-London, [USA], for the compiler18124824551017
G. van RooyenA Selection of Hymns for the Use of the English Presbyterian Church, in RotterdamRotterdam, for the author1790?7760170
Thomas RoseingraveSix CantatasLondon?1735?5844140
Anna RossThe Cottagers; A Comic Opera….The Third EditionLondon, for the author1788351319320
William RussellTwelve VoluntariesLondon, for the author1804227192350
R. S.Eight SongsLondon, Mrs Johnson1763?301227695
P SaizoiSix Sonatas for the HarpsichordLondon, for the author1770?218138791
John SaleA Collection of New GleesLondon, John Johnson1800?215185282
George Sandy et alPsalmody For a Single VoiceYork, W. Blanchard1789178119581
George Sandy et alPsalmody For a Single Voice….The Second EditionYork, W. Blanchard1790190128602
Alessandro ScarlattiThirty Six Arietta'sLondon, for Thomas Vandernan175611086240
Domenico ScarlattiXLII Suites de Pieces Pour le Clavecin….Vol: ILondon, Benjamin Cooke17399376170
Domenico ScarlattiXLII Suites de Pieces Pour le Clavecin….Vol: IILondon, Benjamin Cooke173911495190
John SecondNew Bath DancesLondon, Fentum178910044551
William ShieldA Collection of Favourite Songs….Book 1stLondon, for the author1775?329281480
Thomas ShellTwenty New PsalmsBath, G. Steart1801230181490
Thomas ShoelTwenty-Four Psalm Tunes Two HymnsLondon, for the author1800807109
George SlatterSix Canzonets, a Trio….and a GleeLondon, for the author1815?10760470
William SmethergellSix Concertos for the Harpsichord or Piano ForteLondon, for the author1775?10755520
John SmithA Set of Services, Anthems & Psalm Tunes, for County ChoirsLondon, for the author1748626020
John SmithBook the Second Containing Twelve Anthems and Twelve Psalm Tunes for County ChoirsLavington, for the author1751908307
John Christopher SmithSuites de Pieces pour le Clavecin….Premier VolumeLondon, for the author1732?11181300
John Christopher SmithSuites de Pieces pour le Clavecin….Second VolumeLondon, John Walsh1737?6647190
John Stafford SmithA Collection of English Songs in ScoreLondon, John Bland17791059672
John Stafford SmithMusica Antiqua….Vol. 1London, Preston1812147119271
John SnowVariations for the HarpsichordLondon, John Johnson1760?131115160
Reginald SpofforthSix Glees….Book 1stLondon, for the author1810?13812378
William SteetzA Treatise on the Elements of MusicTiverton, T. Smith181210755520
Stephen StoraceStorace's Collection of Original Harpsichord Music. No. 1London, for the author178814482620
Stephen StoraceThe Favorite Operas of Mahmoud & The Iron ChestLondon, for the author17973571362210
George SurrThree Sonatas….Op. 1London, Culliford, Rolfe & Barrow17968929600
Henry SymondsSix Sets of LessonsLondon, for the author173311645710
William TattersallImproved Psalmody Vol 1London: T Skillern1794463369868
William ThompsonOrpheus Caledonius: or, A Collection of Scots Songs….Vol. I. [1st and 2nd editions have identical lists]London, for the author17334993811171
William ThomsonSix Anthems Performed in Hillsborough ChurchHillsborough, for the author1786364278860
John Ely TipperSacred Music[London], for the author1806?128100253
Henry TolhurstSix Anthems, and Six Psalms…for the use of Country Choirs[London], for the author181312812107
Kellom TomlinsonThe Art of DancingLondon, for the author1735169112570
Robert TopliffA Selection of the most popular Melodies of the Tyne and WearLondon, for the author1815?390307821
Michael ToppingTwelve English Songs for a Voice Violin and HarpsichordLondon, for the author1767?2431381050
John TraversEighteen CanzonetsLondon, for the author1750?16114795
Thomas TremainEight Vocal Duets, and a Overture….Op. VILondon, Thomas Skillern1790?6535291
Thomas TremainHymns and PsalmsLondon, Thomas Skillern1790?625138
Signor TrivellaGrand ConcertoLondon?1800?5119320
Timothy TulipThe Merry MountebankLondon, A. Holbeche173216715890
Elizabeth TurnerA Collection of Songs with SymphoniesLondon, for the author1760356280760
Elizabeth TurnerTwelve Songs with SymphoniesLondon, for the author17504583231350
Peter UrbaniA Select Collection of Original Scotish AirsEdinburgh, Urbani & Liston18043201511690
Peter UrbaniA Selection of Scots Songs….Book 1Edinburgh, for the author17922511041461
Peter UrbaniA Selection of Scots Songs….Book 2Edinburgh, for the author1795?2891051831
Peter UrbaniA Selection of Scots Songs….Book 3Edinburgh, Urbani & Liston1798?10818900
Peter UrbaniA Selection of Scots Songs….Volume. IVEdinburgh, Urbani & Liston1800?155341201
John ValentineEight Easy Symphonies….Op VILondon, for the author1782299287012
John ValentineThe Epithalamium in the Tragedy of IsabellaLondon, for the author1765?341323162
John ValentineThirty Psalm Tunes….Opera 7London, for the author1784239211127
Harriet WainewrightComàla, A Dramatic Poem from OssianLondon, for the author1803230169610
Robert WainwrightSix Sonatas for the Harpsichord or Piano Forte, With an Accompniment for a ViolinLondon, for the author17749359322
William WalondMr Pope's Ode on St Cecilia's DayLondon, for the author1759117104103
William WalondSix Voluntaries for the OrganLondon, John Johnson1752?14613880
John WatlenThe Celebrated Circus TunesEdinburgh, for the author1791204441600
John WatlenThe Celebrated Circus Tunes….Book IIEdinburgh, for the author179812532930
Richard WebbA Collection of MadrigalsLondon, for the editor1808268234304
Samuel WebbeA Third Book of Catches Canons and GleesLondon, Welcker1775?1039274
Samuel Webbe JnrA Book of GleesLiverpool, for the author1807258196602
Samuel Webbe JnrConvito Armonico….Vol. 2Liverpool, for the publisher1808220188311
Samuel Webbe Sen & JnrNinth Book. A Collection of Vocal MusicLondon, for the authors1795?12711962
David WeymanMelodia Sacra [Vol. 1]Dublin, George Allen18167905632207
Samuel WhyteThe Shamrock: or, Hibernian CressesDublin, for the editor17721053971820
John WignellA Collection of Original PiecesLondon, for the author1762402306951
William WilsonTwelve Original Scotch Songs….Op.IIILondon, for the author1792218133850
Samuel WiseSix Concertos for the Organ or HarpsichordLondon, for the author1770?5134143
Samuel WiseSix Lessons for the HarpsichordLondon, for the author1763?198801180
William WoakesA Catechism of MusicHereford, for the author18179358350
Richard WoodwardSongs, Canons and Catches….Opera PrimaLondon, for the author1767140120137
Richard WorganA Set of Sonnets[London, William Parsons]1807187511360
John WrightThe Essex MelodyLondon, for the author1790?828110
Thomas WrightA Concerto for the Harpsichord or Piano ForteLondon, for the author179713759780
Thomas WrightSix SongsNewcastle1785?210179274
Joseph YarrowLove at First Sight: or, the Wit of a Woman. A Ballad Opera of Two ActsYork, Thomas Gent1742334302320
John YoungYoung's Vocal and Instrumental Musical Miscellany [No. 1]Philadelphia [USA], for the author1773?8776110

References

1 Simon Fleming, ‘Avison and his Subscribers: Musical Networking in Eighteenth-Century Britain’, Royal Musical Association Research Chronicle, 49 (2018), 21–49; David Hunter and Rose Mason, ‘Supporting Handel Through Subscription to Publications: The Lists of Rodelinda and Faramondo Compared’, Notes, 56 (1999), 27–93; Margaret Seares, ‘The Composer and the Subscriber: A Case Study from the 18th Century’, Early Music, 39 (2011), 65–78; Michael Talbot, ‘What Lists of Subscribers Can Tell Us: The Cases of Giacob Basevi Cervetto's Opp. 1 and 2’, De Musica Disserenda, 10 (2014), 121–39; Michael Kassler, ‘The Bachists of 1810: Subscribers to the Wesley/Horn Edition of the “48”’, The English Bach Awakening, ed. Michael Kassler (London, 2016), 315–40.

2 Peter Wallis and Francis Robinson, Book Subscription Lists: A Revised Guide (Newcastle, 1975); Peter Wallis and Ruth Wallis, Book Subscription Lists: Extended Supplement to the Revised Guide (Newcastle, 1996). I am grateful to Elias Mazzucco, who allowed me to view the British Library's card index. I tend to become aware of new lists through a variety of means, but more often than not through online searches. For example, at the time of writing this article, I became aware of a list, hitherto unknown to me, due to its advertisement on the internet auction site eBay. This list was attached to James Brooks, Twelve English Ballads (Figure 3).

3 I would be pleased to hear from anyone who has come across a list not included in Appendix B or is aware of a variant list with a different number of subscriptions.

4 The copy consulted is in the author's collection, known as the ‘Simon D. I. Fleming Music Collection’, held by the Palace Green Library at Durham. The catalogue reference for this book is GB-DRu: Fleming 327. Catalogue references to the copies consulted later in this article are given, without further comment, in subsequent footnotes. A catalogue of the manuscripts in the Simon D. I. Fleming Music Collection can be viewed at http://reed.dur.ac.uk/xtf/view?docId=ark/32150_s1fq977t890.xml&toc.id=.

5 GB-NOu: PZ6.2.E6. This song was referred to in the ‘Twelfth Conversation’. See Harriet English, Conversations and Amusing Tales (London, 1799), 371.

6 GB-Lbl: a.9.b.(4.). For Thomas Maguire's Twelve Favorite Waltzes (Dublin, c.1815), the subscribers were largely grouped by gender with all but one female subscriber (who was a member of the aristocracy) appearing at the end of the list. GB-Lbl: g.352.mm.(22.).

7 This happened with the first and second issues of Charles Avison's op. 9 concertos, book 1, where the first issue has several names added by hand; these names were incorporated into the second issue. In addition, Michael Kassler identified three variant lists that accompanied the first pressing of Samuel Wesley and Charles Frederick Horn's edition of J. S. Bach's Preludes and Fugues, book 1; one has no manuscript additions, the second, six, and a third, eight. See Kassler, ‘The Bachists of 1810’, 316.

8 GB-DRu: Fleming a.38. Although grouping subscribers together by place is not unusual, I have found it to be a rarity in music. Hunter and Mason ‘Supporting Handel Through Subscription to Publications’, 34.

10 This practice is evident from the writings of Jane Austen. For instance, in Sense and Sensibility, the eldest of the Dashwood daughters is referred to as ‘Miss Dashwood’ while her younger sisters are known by their Christian names.

11 Michael Talbot observed that the engraver of the list that was attached to Giacob Cervetto's op. 2 ‘found his copy text hard to decipher, since the names are littered with garbled readings’. Talbot, ‘What Lists of Subscribers Can Tell Us’, 130.

12 Henry Heron added a note to the end of the subscription list to his Ten Volentaries [sic] (London, c.1765) that ‘At the request of many of my Subscribers their names are not Printed’ GB-Lbl: d.210.(2.).

13 For Appendix B, I distinguish between the number of subscribers and the number of subscriptions received. Most authors, in counting the number of subscribers in any individual list, will refer to the latter.

14 Publishers often subscribed to new works to sell in their shops and, for that reason, frequently subscribed to multiple copies. This has previously been observed by Kassler, ‘The Bachists of 1810’, 318.

15 Hugh Reid observed that ‘it wasn't until the eighteenth century … [that] the practice [of issuing works by subscription] really began to grow’. He reported that before 1701, ‘fewer than 100 books [were] published by subscription. By 1801 estimates place the number between 2000 and 3000.’ See Hugh Reid, The Nature and Uses of Eighteenth-Century Book Subscription Lists (Lewiston, 2010), 15.

16 These dates were ascertained with the aid of COPAC. Multi-volume collections, such as John Garth's edition of Marcello's Psalms, were issued over a number of years, but it was the year volume one was published (1757) that appears on all the title pages. In this instance and in others, the given year has been retained.

17 A wide range of books on a diverse range of other subjects was also published by subscription; these include books on mathematics, science and even works of fiction. See, for example, Ruth Wallis and Peter Wallis, ‘Female Philomaths’, Historia Mathematica, 7 (1980), 57–64; P. D. Garside, ‘Jane Austen and Subscription Fiction’, Journal of Eighteenth-Century Studies, 10 (1987), 175–88.

18 GB-DRc: B9.

19 GB-DRu: Fleming 534; Hunter and Mason ‘Supporting Handel Through Subscription to Publications’, 30; Talbot, ‘What Lists of Subscribers Can Tell Us’, 123.

20 This appears to have been the case with Charles Avison's opp. 6 and 8 keyboard sonatas, the publication of which was probably financed by Avison himself. See Fleming, ‘Avison and his Subscribers’, 27–8.

21 GB-DRu: Fleming b.100. Michael Talbot observed that, certainly in regard to music, a discount was often offered to subscribers. He did, however, wonder as to whether the notion of ‘saving money could be regarded as sitting uncomfortably with the idea of patronage’. Talbot, ‘What Lists of Subscribers Can Tell Us’, 123.

22 This has already been observed in the case of Charles Avison where, of the 91 musicians who subscribed to Avison's published works, Avison subscribed to works by 13 of them. See Fleming, ‘Avison and his Subscribers’, 34.

23 Oracle and Public Advertiser, 21 March 1798.

24 This was certainly true in the case of Pixell who, as well as being a minor canon at Durham Cathedral, was also the vicar at Edgbaston, curate of Moseley, Birmingham, and rector of Dalton-le-Dale, Country Durham. With the addition of any extra gifts that he may have received, his combined income would have made Pixell a wealthy man. See Fleming, ‘The Howgill Family’, 74, 76–7.

25 Although rare, there are examples of ladies promoting concerts. Ann Ford, for instance, organized subscription concerts, but very much against her parents’ wishes. Cyril Ehrlich, The Music Profession in Britain Since the Eighteenth Century: A Social History (Oxford, 1985), 7.

26 There were exceptions. For instance, Abigail Gawthern reported on several concerts she attended at which married women sang. The performers she heard included Gertrud Mara, Elizabeth Billington, Angelica Catalani, Mrs Biancha and a Mrs Chapman. Adrian Henstock, ed., The Diary of Abigail Gawthern of Nottingham 1751–1810 (Nottingham, 1980), 93, 98.

27 Stamford Mercury, 1 March 1816.

28 John Wilson, ed., Roger North on Music (London, 1959), 16; Richard Leppert, Music and Image (Cambridge, 1993), 107, 110.

29 John Berkenhout, A Volume of Letters from Dr. Berkenhout to his Son at the University (Cambridge, 1790), 189.

30 Wilson, Roger North on Music, 16; Leppert, Music and Image, 147.

31 Leppert, Music and Image, 147.

32 Simon D. I. Fleming, ‘The Howgill Family: A Dynasty of Musicians from Georgian Whitehaven’, Nineteenth-Century Music Review, 10 (2013), 74.

33 Deborah Rohr, The Careers of British Musicians 1750–1850: A Profession of Artisans (Cambridge, 2001), 88; Donovan Dawe, Organists of the City of London 1666–1850 ([London?] 1983), 112.

34 Leppert, Music and Image, 122, 150.

35 John Essex, The Young Ladies Conduct: or, Rules for Education (London, 1722), 84–5.

36 Leppert, Music and Image, 51.

37 Essex, The Young Ladies Conduct, 85.

38 Augusta Llanover, ed., The Autobiography and Correspondence of Mary Granville, 3 vols (London, 1861), i, 435.

39 Leppert, Music and Image, 29.

40 Leppert, Music and Image, 44; Ian Woodfield, Music of the Raj: A Social and Economic History of Music in Late Eighteenth-Century Anglo-Indian Society (Oxford, 2005), 209.

41 Allatson Burgh, Anecdotes of Music, Historical and Biographical, 3 vols (London, 1814), i, v–vii.

42 Maria Edgeworth and Richard Edgeworth, Practical Education, 3 vols (London, 2nd edn, 1801), iii, 16–18.

43 Edward Miller, Institutes of Music, or Easy Instructions for the Harpsichord (London, [1771]), 1–3.

44 Of the 557 lists examined, in 493 (89%) the majority of subscribers were men and, of them, 19 had no female subscribers at all.

45 There is certainly evidence that the head of a household would subscribe to a local society or group, with their payment covering that of his wife and children. Leonore Davidoff and Catherine Hall, Family Fortunes: Men and Women of the English Middle Class, 1780–1850 (London, 1988), 210, 329, 432. Under common law, on marriage all of a woman's liquid property passed into the ownership of her husband, which made unmarried wealthy women a target for fortune hunters.

46 The fact that most of the publication years given in Appendix B are not given on the work and only approximate makes it difficult to say in any particular year the exact proportion of subscribers there were from each gender. By grouping the data into 20-year blocks, any errors in the dating process are less pronounced.

47 Davidoff and Hall, Family Fortunes, 432.

48 GB-Lbl: f.83.

49 This figure does not include oratorios.

50 William C. Smith and Charles Humphries, A Bibliography of the Musical Works Published by the Firm of John Walsh during the years 1721–1766 (London, 1968).

52 Hunter and Mason, ‘Supporting Handel Through Subscription to Publications’, 7. A few works by Handel, which were reissued by the same or a different publisher, utilized the same subscription lists; this is somewhat surprising as one might have expected the number of subscribers to increase between editions.

53 Hunter and Mason also observed that the number of subscribers Handel received was significantly lower than other contemporary works. Hunter and Mason, ‘Supporting Handel Through Subscription to Publications’, 35.

54 It had been the aim of this survey to examine all the countries that came to form the United Kingdom but the paucity of examples from Wales and Ireland have made this difficult, so the focus of this article is on England and Scotland alone.

55 The ‘Musical Choir’ at Dartmouth College subscribed to three copies of Samuel Holyoke's The Columbian Repository (1809).

56 GB-Lbl: H.3033.

57 Ian Woodfield has demonstrated that there was a vibrant music scene in British India, with both private and public concerts public taking place. The author of this book from which the subscription data is derived, William Bird, promoted two series’ of six subscription concerts at Calcutta in 1789. The music performed at these events reflects what was popular in Britain at the time. Woodfield, Music of the Raj, 143–4, 248–9.

58 As this percentage only includes works where London is given on the title page as the place of publication, the proportion is in reality going to be higher. The dominance of London as a British centre for music publication has already been observed by Frank Kidson in British Music Publishers, Printers and Engravers (New York, 1900, 1967 reprint) where, of the 229 pages, 166 (72%) are devoted to London. The second biggest centre for music publication, Edinburgh, only accounts for 24 pages (10%).

59 Rosalind Carr, Gender and Enlightenment Culture in Eighteenth-Century Scotland (Edinburgh, 2014), 6.

60 Ibid., 75–6.

61 Ibid., 86–8, 95.

62 http://ks.imslp.net/files/imglnks/usimg/3/30/IMSLP176915-PMLP311118-Circus_Tunes_reels_strathspeys_nla.aus-vn2696244-p.pdf; GB-Gu: Sp Coll Ca12-x.29. Of the 22 works published in Edinburgh and examined in this study, ten (45%) have more female subscribers then male.

63 Kidson, British Music Publishers, 200–1.

64 Ibid., 177–201.

65 Thomas Ebdon, Rothsay & Caithness Fencibles (Edinburgh, c.1795); John Friend, Hymn for Sunday Morning (Edinburgh, c.1805); Charles Stanley, A Favorite Song on Sir John Jervis's Victory (Edinburgh, c.1797); Thomas Hawdon, A Favorite Rondo (Edinburgh, c.1780); Thomas Thompson, Lira, Lira, La (Edinburgh, c.1797).

66 Kim Baston, ‘Harlequin Highlander: Spectacular Geographies at the Edinburgh Equestrian Circus, 1790–1800’, Early Popular Visual Culture, 12 (2014), 283.

67 The London-based company, an offshoot of that in Edinburgh, was run by Domenico Corri. Kidson, British Music Publishers, 33.

68 Michael Kelly, Reminiscences of Michael Kelly, 2 vols (London: Henry Colburn, 1826), ii, 74; David Johnson, Music and Society in Lowland Scotland in the Eighteenth Century (London, 1972), 58; Peter Ward Jones, Rachel E. Cowgill, J. Bunker Clark, and Nathan Buckner, ‘Corri Family’, Grove Music Online (12 May 2018).

69 GB-Lbl: g.271.f.(1.)

70 Watlen had been a clerk at Corri and Co. before he set up his own business a few doors away from his former employer, and presumably used his position to poach both students and subscribers. Watlen could certainly be underhand in his dealings, as it appears that he had been selling Broadwood pianos, pretending to be an official seller. However, Broadwood already had two official sellers in Edinburgh and had earlier decided not to work with Watlen. Once the issue became public, it was damaging for Watlen, and is probably why he went bankrupt. Caledonian Mercury, 15 February 1798, 20 August 1798, 4 October 1800. See also John Leonard Cranmer, ‘Concert Life and the Music Trade in Edinburgh c.1780–c.1830’ (PhD diss., University of Edinburgh, 1991), 240, 284–5.

72 Valentine's advertisements, however, indicate that he did take both male and female students. See Karl Kroeger, ‘John Valentine: Eighteenth-Century Music Master in the English Midlands’, Notes, 44: 3, 451, 1988.

74 http://hz.imslp.info/files/imglnks/usimg/c/c2/IMSLP372051-PMLP600860-Valentine_30_psalm_tunes_1784.pdf; I am grateful to Martin Perkins who provided me with a copy of the subscription list to Valentine's Epithalamium.

75 Valentine's Eight Easy Symphonies were dedicated to ‘all Junior Performers and Musical Societies’. In addition, among his subscribers can be found various Leicester-based musical groups, including both the choir and catch-club attached to St Margaret's Church and the Musical Society at All Saints. Valentine was probably closely associated with all these organizations.

76 Elizabeth Cary Ford, ‘The Flute in Musical Life in Eighteenth-Century Scotland’ (PhD diss., University of Glasgow, 2016), 71; Helen Goodwill, ‘The Musical Involvement of the Landed Classes in Eastern Scotland, 1685–1760’ (PhD diss., University of Edinburgh, 2000), 45, 58.

77 Cosmo Innes, Sketches of Early Scotch History and Social Progress (Edinburgh, 1861), 483. Roger Williams also believed, after examining the music library at Castle Fraser, near Aberdeen, that Elyza Fraser (1734–1814) and her lifelong companion, Mary Bristow, ‘seemed to have played violin and keyboard’. Certainly their collection contains a good number of keyboard concertos and sonatas with string accompaniments. Roger B. Fraser, Catalogue of the Castle Fraser Music Collection (Aberdeen, 1994), xi, 3–35.

78 Johnson, Music and Society in Lowland Scotland in the Eighteenth Century, 26–7.

79 GB-Lbl: g.302.(1.). I am grateful to Martin Perkins who provided me with a copy of this list.

80 Bury and Norwich Post, 14 April 1847; Simon Fleming, ‘The Myth of the Forgotten Composer: The Posthumous Reputation of Charles Avison’, Early Music, 44 (February 2016), 105–17.

81 GB-DRc: M184.

82 The subscription list to Avison's op. 9, set 2, is at GB-Lbl: g.256.h. I am grateful to Timothy Rishton, who provided me with copies of the subscription lists attached to Chilton's published works. The character of Chilcot's concertos is discussed in Timothy J. Rishton, ‘The Eighteenth-Century British Keyboard Concerto After Handel’, Aspects of Keyboard Music: Essays in Honour of Susi Jeans, ed. Robert Judd (Oxford, 1992), 126–8. See also, Tim Rishton, ‘Chilcot, Thomas’, Grove Music Online, 12 May 2018. http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com.ezphost.dur.ac.uk/grovemusic/view/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo-9781561592630-e-0000005581. The Dean of Durham, Spencer Cowper (1713–44), visited Bath in 1745. He wrote that the ‘best musician they have is Chilcot the Organist, who indeed plays delightfully, and upon one of the finest organs I ever heard’. Edward Hughes, ed., Letters of Spencer Cowper Dean of Durham 1746–74 (Durham, 1956), 42.

83 GB-DRu: Fleming 30.

84 Talbot has already observed that female subscribers to the works produced by Giacob Cervetto may not have utilized this music themselves. Talbot, ‘What Lists of Subscribers Can Tell Us’, 129, 131.

85 Michael Cole, ‘Transition from Harpsichord to Pianoforte – the Important Rôle of Women’, paper given at Kloster Michaelstein in 2002, 1–8. I am grateful to Michael Cole who kindly provided a copy of his paper.

86 Published in London.

87 GB-Lbl: e.5.(5.). Andrew Abbott and John Whittle, The Organs and Organists of St. Mary's Church Nottingham (Nottingham, 1993), 74–6; Henstock, The Diary of Abigail Gawthern of Nottingham 1751 –1810, 27. See also Rosemary Evans, ‘Music in Eighteenth-Century Nottingham’ (MA diss., University of Loughborough, 1983).

88 Henstock, The Diary of Abigail Gawthern of Nottingham 1751 –1810, 13.

89 The list includes the musicians John Alcock, Edmund Ayrton of Southwell, William Boulton of Leicester, William Boyce, John Camidge of York, John Cowper of Lincoln, William Denby of Derby, Mr Doubleday of St Neots, John Garth of Durham, Anthony Greatorex of North-Wingfield, Henry Hargrave of Nottingham, one of the Kirkman family of harpsichord makers, Thomas Layland of Chesterfield, Bailey Marley of Hull, Edward Miller of Doncaster, John Scamardine of Grantham, Francis Sharp of Stamford, the organ builder John Snetzler, Andrew Strother of Grantham, William Tireman of Cambridge, Thomas Vandernan of the Chapel Royal, Mr Vercal and Thomas Weeley of Lincoln, John Wainwright of Manchester and George Wright of Peterborough.

90 Fleming, ‘Avison and his Subscribers’, 31.

91 Several early eighteenth-century writers, including Arthur Bedford (1668–1745), spoke out against the use of secular sounding organ music. This argument was still festering later in the century, as can be seen in the case of the organist at St Mary's, Truro, Charles Bennett, who was regularly reprimanded by the vicar for playing ‘jig voluntaries’. Arthur Bedford, The Great Abuse of Musick (London, 1711), 238; Richard McGrady, Music and Musicians in Early Nineteenth-Century Cornwall (Exeter, 1991), 114. See also Nicholas Temperley, Studies in English Church Music, 1550–1900 (Aldershot, 2009), 203.

92 GB-Lbl: g.198.(5.).

94 Rita Benton, ‘Pleyel (i)’, Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online. Oxford University Press, (accessed May 28, 2017) http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/21940pg1. Komlós described Pleyel as having ‘a somewhat impersonal style, devoid of a strong character; a style that sought to please and to entertain’. Katalin Komlós, Fortepianos and their Music (Oxford, 2001), 101.

95 Gerald Gifford, A Descriptive Catalogue of the Music Collection at Burghley House, Stamford (Aldershot, 2002), 66, 286–7, 419–20. John Marsh also knew Pleyel's quartets. See Brian Robins, ed., The John Marsh Journals: The Life and Times of a Gentleman Composer, 2nd revised edition, vol. 1 (Hillsdale, 2011), 447, 516.

96 Shirley Pargeter, A Catalogue of the Library at Tatton Park, Knutsford, Cheshire (Chester, 1977), 298–9; Ian Gammie and Derek McCulloch, Jane Austen's Music (St Albans, 2013), 17, 20–1; Simon D. I. Fleming, ‘The Music Collection Belonging to Tryphena Wynne Pendarves’, A Handbook for Studies in 18th-Century English Music (London, 2017), xxi, 40–1, 69.

97 Miller, Institutes of Music, 2.

98 Leppert, Music and Image, 68.

99 Musical works, not originally intended for instruction, were also acquired for educational purposes. For instance, Kassler pointed out a Mrs Oom, who purchased multiple copies of Bach's 48 Preludes and Fugues presumably to sell to her students. Kassler, ‘The Bachists of 1810’, 325.

100 GB-Lbl: g.500.(6.).

101 A transcript of this subscription list was kindly provided by Michael Talbot.

102 Talbot, ‘What Lists of Subscribers Can Tell Us’, 129, 131.

103 Leppert, Music and Image, 71.

104 Malcolm Elwin, The Noels and The Milbankes: Their Letters for Twenty-Five Years 1767–1792 (London, 1967), 139. Abigail Gawthern also attended a large number of such events, recording whom she had danced with in her diary. Henstock, The Diary of Abigail Gawthern of Nottingham 1751 –1810, passim.

105 Leppert, Music and Image, 80. For a detailed account of dancing in Bath see Trevor Fawcett, ‘Dance and Teachers of Dance in Eighteenth Century Bath’, Bath History, 2 (1988), 27–48.

106 Leppert, Music and Image, 81.

107 Ibid., 81.

108 See, for example, those held in Stamford, Lincolnshire. Simon Fleming, ‘Music and Concert Promotion in Georgian Stamford’, The Consort, 73 (2017), 61–83.

109 GB-DRc: E66, E67, E69. For more on Boyce's Cathedral Music, see H. Diack Johnstone, ‘The Genesis of Boyce's ‘Cathedral Music’’, Music & Letters, 56 (1975), 26–40.

110 Johnstone, ‘The Genesis of Boyce's “Cathedral Music”’, 32.

111 Stanley Sadie, ‘Music in the Home II’, Music in Britain, The Eighteenth Century, eds. H. Diack Johnston and Roger Fiske (Oxford: Blackwell, 1990), 322–3.

112 Ibid., 322–3; Emanuel Rubin, The English Glee in the Reign of George III (Warren, 2003), 73. Rubin observed that the ‘two leading music clubs in London’, the Noblemen and Gentlemen's Catch Club and the Madrigal Society complemented each other. While ‘the Catch Club sought to generate new English music in the currently popular style … the Madrigal Society held to its mission of preserving the old.’ Nevertheless, he also observed that Tudor madrigals were commonly included in collections of more modern works, such as glees; he found the most popular of these Tudor composers were Thomas Morley, Thomas Ford, John Wilbye and Michael Este. Rubin, The English Glee in the Reign of George III, 72, 98–9.

113 Pargeter, A Catalogue of the Library at Tatton Park, 306.

114 GB-DRu: Fleming 20.

115 GB-DRu: Fleming 185, 187; GB-DRc: Men's Music Library, Copy 7; GB-NOu: Oversize M1579 MOR.

116 Women are known to have sung in some church choirs, such as Ann Howgill at Whitehaven. The choirs of both the Hey and Shaw chapels in Lancashire had also included women since the 1750s, and the Halifax 1766 musical festival used female sopranos rather than boy trebles. See Fleming, ‘The Howgill Family’, 68, and Rachel Cowgill, ‘Disputing Choruses in 1760s Halifax: Joah Bates, William Herschel, and the Messiah Club’, Music in the British Provinces, 1690–1914, eds. Rachel Cowgill and Peter Holman (Aldershot, 2007), 104–5.

117 14.8% is also the proportion of female subscribers for all sacred vocal works examined.

119 GB-Lbl: H.1771.ss.(8.). I am grateful to Martin Perkins, who provided me with a copy of this list.

120 GB-Lbl: R.M.13.e.23.

121 Viewed on ECCO.

122 GB-DRu: Fleming a.76; Fraternal Melody was viewed on ECCO. For more information on female involvement with freemasonry in Britain at this time, see the Journal for Research into Freemasonry and Fraternalism, 4 (2013) which focuses is on ‘Women and Freemasonry’. I am grateful to Andrew Pink for making me aware of this source.

123 For more on the performance of catches and glees see Brian Robins, Catch and Glee Culture in Eighteenth-Century England (Woodbridge, 2006) and Rubin, The English Glee in the Reign of George III.

124 This has already been observed by Robins, Catch and Glee Culture in Eighteenth-Century England, 104, and Rubin, The English Glee in the Reign of George III, 151–6.

125 Elwin, The Noels and The Milbankes, 248.

126 Robins, The John Marsh Journals, 533.

127 Leena Asha Rana, ‘Music and Elite Identity in the English Country House, c.1790–1840’ (PhD diss., University of Southampton, 2012), 210.

128 DRu: Fleming b.38. Glees for performance, at least in part by women, were published in the eighteenth century; one of the earliest collections aimed at the female performer was Samuel Webbe's 1764 collection, The Ladies Catch-Book. See Rubin, The English Glee in the Reign of George III, 154.

129 GB-Lbl: E.207.c.(5.).

130 Published in London.

131 Ford, ‘The Flute in Musical Life in Eighteenth-Century Scotland’, 74–80.

132 Quoted from Ford, ‘The Flute in Musical Life in Eighteenth-Century Scotland’, 79.

133 Ehrlich, The Music Profession in Britain Since the Eighteenth Century, 15; Helena Whitbread, ed., I Know My Own Heart: The Diaries of Anne Lister 1791–1840 (New York, 1992), xxiii, 1, 17, 304–5.

135 GB-Lbl: e.174.k.(1.).

136 GB-DRu: Fleming 9.

Figure 0

Figure 1. Second page of the subscription list to the ‘Dedication Copy’ of John Pixell's (1725–84) Odes, Cantatas, Songs &c … . Opera Seconda (1775), which contains a number of manuscript additions in the composer's hand.Note: GB-DRu: Fleming 367(c). All images are taken from the prints in the author's collection, held by Durham University's Palace Green Library. The Dedication Copy is discussed in Simon Fleming, ‘John Pixell: An 18th-century Vicar and Composer’, The Musical Times, 154 (2013), 71–83.

Figure 1

Figure 2. First page of the subscription list to Maurice Greene's (1696–1755) Forty Select Anthems in Score, vol. 1 (1743), which includes 24 cathedral deans and chapters amongst the subscribers.Note: GB-DRu: Fleming 487.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Title page to James Brooks’ Twelve English Ballads (c.1805), published and printed by the composer.

Figure 3

Figure 4. Second page of the subscription list to Thomas Clark's A Sett of Psalm & Hymn Tunes (c.1800).

Figure 4

Figure 5. Subscribers to all works examined in Appendix B.

Figure 5

Figure 6. Subscribers 1721–40.

Figure 6

Figure 7. Subscribers 1741–60.

Figure 7

Figure 8. Subscribers 1761–80.

Figure 8

Figure 9. Subscribers 1781–1800.

Figure 9

Figure 10. Subscribers 1801–20.

Figure 10

Figure 11. Titles of Female Subscribers to John Watlen's The Celebrated Circus Tunes (1791).Note: This data is based on the titles as given in the lists, whether this is Mrs, Miss or an aristocratic title. In reality some of those with aristocratic titles would have been married, others not, while some of those who are titled ‘Miss’ would have been from aristocratic families.

Figure 11

Figure 12. Titles of the Female Subscribers to Natale Corri's Three Sonatas, op. 1 (c.1790).

Figure 12

Figure 13. Subscribers to E. Pemberton's An Essay for the Further Improvement of Dancing (1711).Note: Viewed on ECCO.

Figure 13

Figure 14. Subscribers to Kellom Tomlinson's The Art of Dancing (1735).Note: Viewed on ECCO.

Figure 14

Figure 15. Subscribers to Giovanni-Andrea Gallini's Critical Observations on the Art of Dancing (c.1770).Note: Viewed on ECCO.

Figure 15

Figure 16. Copy of a Glee by John Percy that belonged to Harriet Capell, the Countess of Essex.Note: GB-DRu: Fleming b.38(a).

Figure 16

Figure 17. Titles of Female Subscribers to Maria Hester Park's A Set of Glees, op. 3 (c.1790).