A Dictionary of Music and Musicians/Jones, John

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JONES, John, organist of the Middle Temple Nov. 24, 1749; of the Charterhouse (following Dr. Pepusch) July 2, 1753; and of St. Paul's Cathedral Dec. 25, 1755. He died, in possession of these three seats, Feb. 17, 1796. He published 'Sixty Chants Single and Double' (1785) in the vulgar florid taste of that time. One of these was sung at George III.'s state visit to S. Paul's April 23, 1789, and at many of the annual meetings of the Charity Children. At that of 1791 Haydn heard it, and noted it in his diary as follows (with a material improvement in the taste of the fourth line):

{ \time 4/4 \key e \major \relative b' { b1 gis2 e b1\fermata | gis'2. a4 b2 cis4 dis e2 fis \grace { e4 } dis1\fermata | e1 cis2 a fis1\fermata | dis'1 e2 cis4 fis e2 dis e1\fermata \bar "||" } }
'No music has for a long time affected me so much as this innocent and reverential strain.'
[ G. ]