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God Save the King

"God Save the King" (alternatively "God Save the Queen" when the monarch is female) is the de facto national anthem of the United Kingdom and the British Crown Dependencies,[1][2] one of two national anthems of New Zealand since 1977, and the royal anthem of most Commonwealth realms. The author of the tune is unknown and it may originate in plainchant, but an attribution to the composer John Bull has sometimes been made.

God Save the King
Publication of an early version in The Gentleman's Magazine, October 1745. The title, on the contents page, is given as "God save our lord the king: A new song set for two voices".

National or royal anthem of the
United Kingdom
Also known as"God Save the Queen"
(when the monarch is female)
MusicUnknown
AdoptedSeptember 1745; 277 years ago (1745-09)
Audio sample
"God Save the King"

In countries not part of the British Empire, the tune of "God Save the King" has provided the basis for various patriotic songs, though still generally connected with royal ceremony.[3] The melody continues to be used for the national anthem of Liechtenstein, "Oben am jungen Rhein", and the royal anthem of Norway, "Kongesangen". The melody is used for the American patriotic song "My Country, 'Tis of Thee" (also known as "America"). The melody was also used for the national anthem "Heil dir im Siegerkranz" of the German Empire from 1871 to 1918 and as "The Prayer of Russians", the imperial anthem of Russia from 1816 to 1833. In Switzerland, it is known as "Rufst du, mein Vaterland".

Beyond its first verse, which is consistent, "God Save the King" has many historic and extant versions. Since its first publication, different verses have been added and taken away and, even today, different publications include various selections of verses in various orders.[4] In general, only one verse is sung. Sometimes two verses are sung and, on certain occasions, three.[1]

The entire composition is the musical salute for the monarch and royal consort,[5] while other members of the royal family who are entitled to royal salute (such as the Prince of Wales, along with his spouse) receive just the first six bars. The first six bars also form all or part of the viceregal salute in some Commonwealth realms other than the UK (e.g., in Canada, governors general and lieutenant governors at official events are saluted with the first six bars of "God Save the King" followed by the first four and last four bars of "O Canada"), as well as the salute given to governors of British overseas territories.

History

In The Oxford Companion to Music, Percy Scholes points out the similarities to an early plainsong melody, although the rhythm is very distinctly that of a galliard,[6] and he gives examples of several such dance tunes that bear a striking resemblance to "God Save the King". Scholes quotes a keyboard piece by John Bull (1619) which has some similarities to the modern tune, depending on the placing of accidentals which at that time were unwritten in certain cases and left to the discretion of the player (see musica ficta). He also points to several pieces by Henry Purcell, one of which includes the opening notes of the modern tune, setting the words "God Save the King". Nineteenth-century scholars and commentators mention the widespread belief that an old Scots carol, "Remember O Thou Man", was the source of the tune.[7][8]

The first published version that resembles the present song appeared in 1744, with no title but the heading "For two voices", in an anthology originally named Harmonia Britannia but changed after only a few copies had been printed to Thesaurus Musicus.[9] When the Jacobite pretender Charles Edward Stuart led the the 1745 rising, the song spread among those loyal to King George II. The tune published in The Gentleman's Magazine in 1745 departs from that used today at several points, one as early as the first bar, but is otherwise clearly a strong relative of the contemporary anthem. It was recorded as being sung in London theatres in 1745, with, for example, Thomas Arne writing a setting of the tune for the Drury Lane Theatre.

Scholes' analysis includes mention of "untenable" and "doubtful" claims, as well as "an American misattribution". Some of these are:

  • James Oswald was a possible author of the Thesaurus Musicus, so may have played a part in the history of the song, but is not a strong enough candidate to be cited as the composer of the tune.
  • Henry Carey: Scholes refutes this attribution: first on the grounds that Carey himself never made such a claim; second, when the claim was made by Carey's son (in 1795), it was in support of a request for a pension from the British Government; and third, the younger Carey claimed that his father, who died in 1743, had written parts of the song in 1745. It has also been claimed that the work was first publicly performed by Carey during a dinner in 1740 in honour of Admiral Edward "Grog" Vernon, who had captured the Spanish harbour of Porto Bello (then in the Viceroyalty of New Granada, now in Panama) during the War of Jenkins' Ear.

Scholes recommends the attribution "traditional" or "traditional; earliest known version by John Bull (1562–1628)". The English Hymnal (musical editor Ralph Vaughan Williams) gives no attribution, stating merely "17th or 18th cent."[10]

Original lyrics

The lyrics as published in the Gentleman's Magazine in October, 1745 ran:

God save great George our king,
Long live our noble king,
God save the king.
Send him victorious,
Happy and glorious,
Long to reign over us,
God save the king.

O Lord our God arise,
Scatter his enemies,
And make them fall;
Confound their politics,
Frustrate their knavish tricks,
On him our hope we fix,
O save us all.

Thy Choicest gift in store
On George be pleas'd to pour,
Long may he reign;
May he defend our laws,
And ever give us cause,
To say with heart and voice
God save the king.
[11][12]

Use in the United Kingdom

 
The phrase "God Save the King" in use as a rallying cry to the support of the monarch and the UK's forces during the First World War

Like many aspects of British constitutional life, "God Save the King" derives its official status from custom and use, not from Royal Proclamation or Act of Parliament.[citation needed] The variation in the UK of the lyrics to "God Save the King" is the oldest amongst those currently used, and forms the basis on which all other versions used throughout the Commonwealth are formed; though, again, the words have varied over time.

England has no official national anthem of its own; "God Save the King" is treated as the English national anthem when England is represented at sporting events (though there are some exceptions to this rule, such as cricket where "Jerusalem" is used). There is a movement to establish an English national anthem, with Blake and Parry's "Jerusalem" and Elgar's "Land of Hope and Glory" among the top contenders. Wales has a single official national anthem, "Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau" (Land of my Fathers) while Scotland uses unofficial anthems ("Scotland the Brave" was traditionally used until the 1990s, since then, "Flower of Scotland" is more commonly used), these anthems are used formally at state and national ceremonies as well as international sporting events such as football and rugby union matches.[13] On all occasions in Northern Ireland, "God Save the King" is still used as the official anthem.

In 2001, it was claimed that the phrase "No surrender" was occasionally sung in the bridge before "Send her victorious" by England football fans at matches.[14][15]

Since 2003, "God Save the King", considered an all-inclusive anthem for Great Britain and Northern Ireland, as well as other countries within the Commonwealth, has been dropped from the Commonwealth Games. Northern Irish athletes receive their gold medals to the tune of the "Londonderry Air", popularly known as "Danny Boy". In 2006, English winners heard Elgar's "Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1", usually known as "Land of Hope and Glory",[16] but after a poll conducted by the Commonwealth Games Council for England prior to the 2010 Games, "Jerusalem" was adopted as England's new Commonwealth Games anthem. In sports in which the UK competes as one nation, most notably as Great Britain at the Olympics, the anthem is used to represent anyone or any team that comes from the United Kingdom.[13]

Lyrics in the UK

 
Stratford-upon-Avon Town Hall (built 1767), bearing the painted slogan, "God Save the King".

The phrase "God Save the King" is much older than the song, appearing, for instance, several times in the King James Bible.[17] A text based on the 1st Book of Kings Chapter 1: verses 38–40, "And all the people rejoic'd, and said: God save the King! Long live the King! May the King live for ever, Amen", has been sung at every coronation since that of King Edgar in 973.[18] Scholes says that as early as 1545 "God Save the King" was a watchword of the Royal Navy, with the response being "Long to reign over us".[19][20] He also notes that the prayer read in churches on anniversaries of the Gunpowder Plot includes words which might have formed part of the basis for the second verse "Scatter our enemies...assuage their malice and confound their devices".

In 1745, The Gentleman's Magazine published "God save our lord the king: A new song set for two voices", describing it "As sung at both Playhouses" (the Theatres Royal at Drury Lane and Covent Garden).[11] Traditionally, the first performance was thought to have been in 1745, when it was sung in support of King George II, after his defeat at the Battle of Prestonpans by the army of Charles Edward Stuart, son of James Francis Edward Stuart, the Jacobite claimant to the British throne.

It is sometimes claimed that, ironically, the song was originally sung in support of the Jacobite cause: the word "send" in the line "Send him victorious" could imply that the king was absent. However, the Oxford English Dictionary cites examples of "[God] send (a person) safe, victorious, etc." meaning "God grant that he may be safe, etc.". There are also examples of early 18th-century drinking glasses which are inscribed with a version of the words and were apparently intended for drinking the health of King James II and VII.

Scholes acknowledges these possibilities but argues that the same words were probably being used by both Jacobite and Hanoverian supporters and directed at their respective kings.[21]

In 1902, the musician William Hayman Cummings, quoting mid-18th century correspondence between Charles Burney and Sir Joseph Banks, suggested that the words had been based on a Latin verse composed for King James II at the Chapel Royal.

O Deus optime
Salvum nunc facito
Regem nostrum
Sic laeta victoria
Comes et gloria
Salvum iam facito
Tu dominum.
[22]

"God Save the King" performed with each of its three verses.

Standard version in the United Kingdom

God save our gracious King!
Long live our noble King!
God save the King!
Send him victorious,
Happy and glorious,
Long to reign over us:
God save the King!

O Lord our God arise,
Scatter his enemies,
and make them fall:
Confound their politics,
Frustrate their knavish tricks,
On thee our hopes we fix:
God save us all!

Thy choicest gifts in store,
On him be pleased to pour;
Long may he reign:
May he defend our laws,
And ever give us cause,
To sing with heart and voice,
God save the King![23]

When the monarch of the time is female, "King" is replaced with "Queen" and all masculine pronouns are replaced with their feminine equivalents.

There is no definitive version of the lyrics. However, the version consisting of the three above verses has the best claim to be regarded as the "standard" British version (sometimes omitting the second verse) appearing not only in the 1745 Gentleman's Magazine, but also in publications such as The Book of English Songs: From the Sixteenth to the Nineteenth Century (1851),[24] National Hymns: How They Are Written and How They Are Not Written (1861),[25] Household Book of Poetry (1882),[26] and Hymns Ancient and Modern, Revised Version (1982).[27]

The same version with verse two omitted appears in publications including Scouting for Boys (1908),[28] and on the British Monarchy website.[1]

According to Alan Michie's Rule, Britannia, which was published in 1952, after the death of King George VI but before the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, when the first General Assembly of the United Nations was held in London in January 1946 the King, in honour of the occasion, "ordered the belligerent imperious second stanza of 'God Save the King' to be rewritten to bring it more into the spirit of the brotherhood of nations."[citation needed]

In the UK, the first verse is typically sung alone, even on official occasions, although the third verse is sometimes sung in addition on certain occasions such as during the opening ceremonies of the 2012 Summer Olympics, 2012 Summer Paralympics, and the 2022 Commonwealth Games and usually at the Last Night of the Proms.

Standard version of the music

"God Save the Queen" sung by the public at St Giles' Fair, Oxford, 2007

The standard version of the melody and its key of G major are still those of the originally published version, although the start of the anthem is often signalled by an introductory timpani roll of two bars length. The bass line of the standard version differs little from the second voice part shown in the original, and there is a standard version in four-part harmony for choirs. The first three lines (six bars of music) are soft, ending with a short crescendo into "Send him victorious", and then is another crescendo at "over us:" into the final words "God save the King".

In the early 20th century there existed a Military Band version in the higher key of B,[29] because it was easier for brass instruments to play in that key, though it had the disadvantage of being more difficult to sing: however now most Bands play it in the correct key of concert G.

Since 1953, the anthem is sometimes preceded by a fanfare composed by Gordon Jacob for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II.[30]

Alternative British versions

There have been several attempts to rewrite the words. In the nineteenth century there was some lively debate about the national anthem as verse two was considered by some to be slightly offensive in its use of the phrase "scatter her enemies". Some thought it placed better emphasis on the respective power of Parliament and the Crown to change "her enemies" to "our enemies"; others questioned the theology and proposed "thine enemies" instead. Sydney G. R. Coles wrote a completely new version, as did Canon F. K. Harford.[31]

William Hickson's alternative version

In 1836 William Hickson wrote an alternative version, of which the first, third, and fourth verses gained some currency when they were appended to the National Anthem in the English Hymnal. The fourth "Hickson" verse was sung after the traditional first verse at Queen Elizabeth II's Golden Jubilee National Service of Thanksgiving in 2002, and during the raising of the Union Flag during the 2008 Summer Olympics closing ceremony, in which London took the baton from Beijing to host the 2012 Summer Olympics.

God bless our native land!
May Heav'n's protecting hand
Still guard our shore:
May peace his power extend,
Foe be transformed to friend,
And Britain's rights depend
On war no more.

O Lord, our monarch bless
With strength and righteousness:
Long may he reign:
His heart inspire and move
With wisdom from above;
And in a nation's love
His throne maintain.

May just and righteous laws
Uphold the public cause,
And bless our Isle:
Home of the brave and free,
Thou land of Liberty,
We pray that still on thee
Kind Heav'n may smile.

Not in this land alone,
But be God's mercies known
From shore to shore:
Lord make the nations see
That men should brothers be,
And form one family
The wide world o'er.

Samuel Reynolds Hole's alternative version

To mark the celebration of the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria, a modified version of the second verse was written by the Dean of Rochester, the Very Reverend Samuel Reynolds Hole. A four-part harmony setting was then made by Frederick Bridge, and published by Novello.

O Lord Our God Arise,
Scatter her enemies,
Make wars to cease;
Keep us from plague and dearth,
Turn thou our woes to mirth;
And over all the earth
Let there be peace.

The Musical Times commented: "There are some conservative minds who may regret the banishment of the 'knavish tricks' and aggressive spirit of the discarded verse, but it must be admitted that Dean Hole's lines are more consonant with the sentiment of modern Christianity." Others reactions were more negative, one report describing the setting as "unwarrantable liberties...worthy of the severest reprobation", with "too much of a Peace Society flavour about it...If we go about pleading for peace, other nations will get it into their heads that we are afraid of fighting." Perhaps unsurprisingly, Hole's version failed to replace the existing verse permanently.[32][33][34][35]

Official peace version

A less militaristic version of the song, titled "Official peace version, 1919", was first published in the hymn book Songs of Praise in 1925.[36] This was "official" in the sense that it was approved by the British Privy Council in 1919.[21] However, despite being reproduced in some other hymn books, it is largely unknown today.[37]

God save our gracious King!
Long live our noble King!
God save the King!
Send him victorious
Happy and glorious
Long to reign over us
God save the King!

One realm of races four
Blest more and ever more
God save our land!
Home of the brave and free
Set in the silver sea
True nurse of chivalry
God save our land!

Of many a race and birth
From utmost ends of earth
God save us all!
Bid strife and hatred cease
Bid hope and joy increase
Spread universal peace
God save us all!

Globalised verse

W.E. Hickson (1803-1870) wrote an additional verse to give the anthem a more international and global aspect. This is currently used as the third verse by the Church of Scotland.[38]

Not on this land alone,
but be God's mercies known
from shore to shore.
Lord, make the nations see
that all should kindred be,
and form one family
the wide world o'er.

Historic Jacobite and anti-Jacobite alternative verses

Around 1745, anti-Jacobite sentiment was captured in a verse appended to the song, with a prayer for the success of Field Marshal George Wade's army then assembling at Newcastle. These words attained some short-term use, although they did not appear in the published version in the October 1745 Gentleman's Magazine. This verse was first documented as an occasional addition to the original anthem by Richard Clark in 1814,[39] and was also mentioned in a later article on the song, published by the Gentleman's Magazine in October 1836. Therein, it is presented as an "additional verse... though being of temporary application only... stored in the memory of an old friend... who was born in the very year 1745, and was thus the associate of those who heard it first sung", the lyrics given being:[40]

Lord, grant that Marshal Wade
May by thy mighty aid
Victory bring;
May he sedition hush,
and like a torrent rush
Rebellious Scots to crush!
God save the King!

The 1836 article and other sources make it clear that this verse was not used soon after 1745, and certainly before the song became accepted as the British national anthem in the 1780s and 1790s.[41][42] It was included as an integral part of the song in the Oxford Book of Eighteenth-Century Verse of 1926, although erroneously referencing the "fourth verse" to the Gentleman's Magazine article of 1745.[43]

On the opposing side, Jacobite beliefs were demonstrated in an alternative verse used during the same period:[44]

God bless the prince, I pray,
God bless the prince, I pray,
Charlie I mean;
That Scotland we may see
Freed from vile Presbyt'ry,
Both George and his Feckie,
Ever so, Amen.

In May 1800, following an attempt to assassinate King George III at London's Drury Lane theatre, playwright Richard Sheridan immediately composed an additional verse, which was sung from the stage the same night:[45][46]

From every latent foe
From the assassin's blow
God save the King
O'er him Thine arm extend
For Britain's sake defend
Our father, king, and friend
God save the King!

Various other attempts were made during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries to add verses to commemorate particular royal or national events. For example, according to Fitzroy Maclean, when Jacobite forces bypassed Wade's force and reached Derby, but then retreated and when their garrison at Carlisle Castle surrendered to a second government army led by King George's son, the Duke of Cumberland, another verse was added.[47] Other short-lived verses were notably anti-French, such as the following, quoted in the book Handel by Edward J. Dent:[48]

From France and Pretender
Great Britain defend her,
Foes let them fall;
From foreign slavery,
Priests and their knavery,
And Popish Reverie,
God save us all.

However, none of these additional verses survived into the twentieth century.[49] Updated "full" versions including additional verses have been published more recently, including the standard three verses, Hickson's fourth verse, Sheridan's verse and the Marshal Wade verse.[50][51]

Historic republican alternative

A version from 1794 composed by the American republican and French citizen Joel Barlow[52] celebrated the power of the guillotine to liberate:[53][54]

God save the Guillotine
Till England's King and Queen
Her power shall prove:
Till each appointed knob
Affords a clipping job
Let no vile halter rob
The Guillotine

France, let thy trumpet sound –
Tell all the world around
How Capet fell;
And when great George's poll
Shall in the basket roll,
Let mercy then control
The Guillotine

When all the sceptre'd crew
Have paid their Homage, due
The Guillotine
Let Freedom's flag advance
Till all the world, like France
O'er tyrants' graves shall dance
And peace begin.

Performance in the UK

The style most commonly heard in official performances was proposed as the "proper interpretation" by King George V, who considered himself something of an expert (in view of the number of times he had heard it). An Army Order was duly issued in 1933, which laid down regulations for tempo, dynamics and orchestration. This included instructions such as that the opening "six bars will be played quietly by the reed band with horns and basses in a single phrase. Cornets and side-drum are to be added at the little scale-passage leading into the second half of the tune, and the full brass enters for the last eight bars". The official tempo for the opening section is a metronome setting of 60, with the second part played in a broader manner, at a metronome setting of 52.[55] In recent years the prescribed sombre-paced introduction is often played at a faster and livelier tempo.

Until the latter part of the 20th century, theatre and concert goers were expected to stand while the anthem was played after the conclusion of a show. In cinemas this brought a tendency for audiences to rush out while the end credits played to avoid this formality. (This can be seen in the 1972 Dad's Army episode "A Soldier's Farewell".)

The anthem continues to be played at some traditional events such as Wimbledon, Royal Variety Performance, the Edinburgh Tattoo, Royal Ascot, Henley Royal Regatta and The Proms as well as at Royal events.

The anthem was traditionally played at close-down on the BBC, and with the introduction of commercial television to the UK this practice was adopted by some ITV companies (with the notable exceptions of Granada, Thames Television, Central Television, Border Television, and Yorkshire Television). BBC Two also never played the anthem at close-down, and ITV dropped the practice in the late 1980s when the network switched to 24 hour broadcasting, but it continued on BBC One until 8 November 1997 (thereafter BBC One began to simulcast with BBC News after end of programmes). The tradition is carried on, however, by BBC Radio 4, which plays the anthem each night as a transition piece between the end of the Radio 4 broadcasting and the move to BBC World Service.[56] BBC Radio 4 and BBC Radio 2 also play the National Anthem just before the 0700 and 0800 news bulletins on the actual and official birthdays of the King and the birthdays of senior members of the Royal Family. On 17 January 2022, the GB News Channel started playing the anthem at 05:59 every morning at the beginning of the day's programming.[57]

The UK's national anthem usually prefaces The Sovereign's Christmas Message (although in 2007 it appeared at the end, taken from a recording of the 1957 television broadcast), and important royal announcements, such as of royal deaths, when it is played in a slower, sombre arrangement.

Performance in Lancashire

Other British anthems

Frequently, when an anthem is needed for one of the constituent countries of the United Kingdom – at an international sporting event, for instance – an alternative song is used:

The London 2012 Olympics Opening Ceremony provided a conscious use of three of the four anthems listed above; the ceremony began with a rendition of the first verse of "Jerusalem", before a choir in Northern Ireland sang "Danny Boy" and a choir in Edinburgh performed part of "Flower of Scotland". Notably, Wales was represented by the hymn "Bread of Heaven", not "Hen Wlad Fy Nhadhau".

In April 2007 there was an early day motion, number 1319, to the British Parliament to propose that there should be a separate England anthem: "That this House ... believes that all English sporting associations should adopt an appropriate song that English sportsmen and women, and the English public, would favour when competing as England". An amendment (EDM 1319A3) was proposed by Evan Harris that the song "should have a bit more oomph than God Save The Queen and should also not involve God."[69]

For more information see also:

Use in media

In 3 November 2016, Conservative MP Andrew Rosindell argued for a return to the broadcasting of "God Save the Queen" at the end of BBC One transmissions each day. The practice was dropped in 1997 (ostensibly due to BBC One adopting 24-hour broadcasting by simulcasting BBC News 24 overnight, rendering closedown obsolete).[70]

Since 18 January 2022, GB News has played "God Save the Queen" at the start of live programming every day.[71][72]

Use in other Commonwealth countries

"God Save the King" was exported around the world via the expansion of the British Empire, serving as each country's national anthem. Throughout the Empire's evolution into the Commonwealth of Nations, the song declined in use in most states which became independent. In New Zealand, it remains one of the official national anthems.[73]

Australia

In Australia, the song has standing through a Royal Proclamation issued by Governor-General Sir Ninian Stephen on 19 April 1984.[74] It declared "God Save the Queen" to be the Royal Anthem and that it is to be played when the Australian monarch or a member of the Royal Family is present, though not exclusively in such circumstances. The same proclamation made "Advance Australia Fair" the national anthem and the basis for the "Vice-Regal Salute" (the first four and last two bars of the anthem).

Prior to 1984, "God Save the Queen" was the national anthem of Australia.[75] In 1975, former Prime Minister Gough Whitlam, dismissed by Governor-General Sir John Kerr, alluded to the anthem in his comment "Well may we say 'God save the Queen', because nothing will save the Governor-General!".[76]

Belize

"God Save the King" is the royal anthem of Belize.[77] The Vice-Regal Salute to the Belizean governor general is composed of the first verse of "God Save the King" and the chorus of National Anthem, "Land of the Free".[78]

Canada

Percival Price performs "O Canada" and "God Save the King" on the Peace Tower Carillon, 1927

By convention,[79] "God Save the King" (French: Dieu Sauve le Roi, Dieu Sauve la Reine when a Queen) is the royal anthem of Canada.[80][81][82][83][84] It is sometimes played or sung together with the national anthem, "O Canada", at private and public events organised by groups such as the Government of Canada, the Royal Canadian Legion, police services, and loyal groups.[85][86][87][88][89] The governor general and provincial lieutenant governors are accorded the "Viceregal Salute", comprising the first three lines of "God Save the King", followed by the first and last lines of "O Canada".[90]

"God Save the King" has been sung in Canada since the late 1700s and by the mid 20th century was, along with "O Canada", one of the country's two de facto national anthems, the first and last verses of the standard British version being used.[91] By-laws and practices governing the use of either song during public events in municipalities varied; in Toronto, "God Save the King" was employed, while in Montreal it was "O Canada". Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson in 1964 said one song would have to be chosen as the country's national anthem and, three years later, he advised Governor General Georges Vanier to appoint the Special Joint Committee of the Senate and House of Commons on the National and Royal Anthems. Within two months, on 12 April 1967, the committee presented its conclusion that "God Save the Queen" (as this was during the reign of Queen Elizabeth II), whose music and lyrics were found to be in the public domain,[92] should be designated as the royal anthem of Canada and "O Canada" as the national anthem, one verse from each, in both official languages, to be adopted by parliament. The group was then charged with establishing official lyrics for each song; for "God Save the Queen", the English words were those inherited from the United Kingdom and the French words were taken from those that had been adopted in 1952 for the coronation of Elizabeth II.[81] When the bill pronouncing "O Canada" as the national anthem was put through parliament, the joint committee's earlier recommendations regarding "God Save the Queen" were not included.[92]

The Department of National Defence and the Canadian Forces regulates that "God Save the King" be played as a salute to the monarch of Canada and other members of the Canadian royal family,[93] though it may also be used as a hymn or prayer. The words are not to be sung when the song is played as a military royal salute and is abbreviated to the first three lines, while arms are being presented.[93] Elizabeth II stipulated that the arrangement in G major by Lieutenant Colonel Basil H. Brown be used in Canada. The authorised version to be played by pipe bands is Mallorca.[93]

Lyrics in Canada

"God Save the King" has been translated into French,[94] as shown below, but this translation does not fit the music and cannot be sung:

Que Dieu protège notre gracieux Roi,
Longue vie à notre noble Roi,
Que Dieu protège le Roi!
Rends-le victorieux,
Heureux et glorieux;
Que soit long son règne sur nous,
Que Dieu protège le Roi!

Ô Seigneur, notre Dieu, surgis
Disperse ses ennemis
Et fais-les chuter;
Confonds leurs complots,
Déjoue leurs conspirations de filou!
En Toi, nous mettons notre espoir;
Que Dieu nous protège tous!

Parmi tous, Tu choisis les dons
Qu'il Te plaît de lui accorder;
Puisse-t-il régner longuement;
Puisse-t-il défendre nos lois
Et nous donner souvent raison
De chanter avec cœur et à pleine voix :
Que Dieu protège le Roi!

Nevertheless, this translation has been adapted into a bilingual version that can be sung when the monarch is male, and has been sung during public ceremonies, such as the National Remembrance Day Ceremony at the National War Memorial in Ottawa:[95]

Dieu sauve notre Roi,
Notre gracieux Roi,
Vive le Roi !

Send him victorious,
Happy and glorious;
Long to reign over us,
God save the King!

A special singable one-verse adaptation[96] is used when a singable French version is required, such as when royalty is present at an official occasion:

Dieu protège le Roi!
De sa main souveraine!
Vive le Roi!
Qu’un règne glorieux,
Long et victorieux,
Rende son peuple heureux,
Vive le Roi!

There is a special Canadian verse in English which was once commonly sung in addition to the two standing verses:[91]

Our loved Dominion bless
With peace and happiness
From shore to shore;
And let our Empire be
Loyal, united, free,
True to herself and Thee
For evermore.

Channel Islands

"God Save the King" is used by both Bailiwicks of the Channel Islands as an alternative to their respective national anthems. Its use case and popular version is generally similar to how it is used in the United Kingdom. However, the anthem has been translated in Jèrriais:[97]: 35 

Dgieu sauve not' Duc,
Longue vie à not' Duc,
Dgieu sauve la Rei!
Rends-la victorieuse
Jouaiyeuse et glorieuse;
Qu'on règne sus nous heûtheuse -
Dgieu sauve la Rei!

Tes dons les pus précieux,
Sus yi vèrse des cieux,
Dgieu sauve la Rei!
Qu'on défende nous louais
Et d'un tchoeu et d'eune vouaix
Jé chantons à janmais
Dgieu sauve la Rei!

The meaning is broadly similar to the first paragraph of the English version, except for the first two lines which say "God save our Duke" and "Long live our Duke".

New Zealand

"God Save the King" was the sole official national anthem until 1977 when "God Defend New Zealand" was added as a second. Since then, "God Save the King" is most often only played when the sovereign, governor-general[98] or other member of the Royal Family is present, or on some occasions such as Anzac Day.[99][100] The Māori-language version was written by Edward Marsh Williams under the title, "E te atua tohungia te kuini".[101]

There is a special New Zealand verse in English which was once commonly sung to replace the second and third verses:[102]

Not on this land alone
But be God's mercies known
From shore to shore.
Lord, make the nations see
That we in liberty
Should form one family
The wide world o'er.

Lyrics in Māori

All verses of "God Save the King" have been translated into Māori.[101] The first verse is shown below:

Me tohu e te Atua
To matou Kīngi pai:
Kia ora ia
Meinga kia maia ia,
Kia hari nui, kia koa,
Kia kingi tonu ia,
Tau tini noa.

Rhodesia

When Rhodesia issued its Unilateral Declaration of Independence from the UK on 11 November 1965, it did so while still maintaining loyalty to Queen Elizabeth II as the Rhodesian head of state, despite the non-recognition of the Rhodesian government by the United Kingdom and the United Nations;[103] "God Save the Queen" therefore remained the Rhodesian national anthem. This was supposed to demonstrate the continued allegiance of the Rhodesian people to the monarch, but the retention in Rhodesia of a song so associated with the UK while the two countries were at loggerheads regarding its constitutional status caused Rhodesian state occasions to have "a faintly ironic tone", in the words of The Times. Nevertheless, "God Save the Queen" remained Rhodesia's national anthem until March 1970, when the country formally declared itself a republic.[104] "Rise, O Voices of Rhodesia" was adopted in its stead in 1974 and remained in use until the country returned to the UK's control in December 1979.[105][106] Since the internationally recognised independence of the Republic of Zimbabwe in April 1980, "God Save the King" has had no official status there.[107]

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines

"God Save the King" is the royal anthem of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. It is played on royal and vice-regal occasions. The Vice-Regal Salute to the governor general is composed of the chorus of "God Save the King" and followed by that of the National Anthem, "Saint Vincent, Land so Beautiful".[108]

All proclamations in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines end with the phrase: "God Save the King".[109]

Solomon Islands

"God Save the King" was translated into the Lau language in 1945:

God, ka faamouria a King!
Nia ka aofia diena
Usia tooa gi;
Fasuia firua,
Falea mai unidiena,
Faadiena na taloa nia,
God, faamouria a King!

South Africa

"God Save the King" (Afrikaans: God Red die Koning, God Red die Koningin when a Queen) was a co-national anthem of South Africa from 1938 until 1957,[110] when it was formally replaced by "Die Stem van Suid-Afrika" as the sole national anthem.[110] The latter served as a sort of de facto co-national anthem alongside the former until 1938.[110]

Use elsewhere

The melody has often been used, with lyrics slightly or significantly altered, for royal or national anthems of other countries.

During the 19th century, it was used officially in Sweden,[111][better source needed][a] and in Iceland.[112][b] It was also in official usage for brief periods in Imperial Russia,[c] in Greece[113] and in the Kingdom of Hawaii.[114]

In Germany, it was used by the kingdoms of Prussia, Hanover, Saxony and Bavaria, and was adopted as anthem of the German Empire ("Heil dir im Siegerkranz") after unification in 1871. It remains as the national anthem of Liechtenstein, and was used by Switzerland until 1961.

Musical adaptations

Composers

About 140 composers have used the tune in their compositions.[23]

Ludwig van Beethoven composed a set of seven piano variations in the key of C major to the theme of "God Save the King", catalogued as WoO.78 (1802–1803). He also quotes it in his orchestral work Wellington's Victory. It is also the first song arranged in the collection WoO 157.

Muzio Clementi used the theme to "God Save the King" in his Symphony No. 3 in G major, often called the "Great National Symphony", catalogued as WoO. 34. Clementi paid a high tribute to his adopted homeland (the United Kingdom) where he grew up and stayed most of his lifetime. He based the Symphony (about 1816–1824) on "God Save the King", which is hinted at earlier in the work, not least in the second movement, and announced by the trombones in the finale.

Johann Christian Bach composed a set of variations on "God Save the King" for the finale to his sixth keyboard concerto (Op. 1) written c. 1763.

Joseph Haydn was impressed by the use of "God Save the King" as a national anthem during his visit to London in 1794, and on his return to Austria composed a different tune, "Gott erhalte Franz den Kaiser" ("God Save Emperor Francis"), for the birthday of the last Holy Roman Emperor and Roman-German King, Francis II, which became the basis for the anthem of the later Austrian Empire, and ultimately for the German national anthem.

Franz Liszt wrote a piano paraphrase on the anthem (S.259 in the official catalogue, c. 1841).

Johann Strauss I quoted "God Save the Queen" in full at the end of his waltz Huldigung der Königin Victoria von Grossbritannien (Homage to Queen Victoria of Great Britain), Op. 103, where he also quoted Rule, Britannia! in full at the beginning of the piece.

Siegfried August Mahlmann in the early 19th century wrote alternate lyrics to adapt the hymn for the Kingdom of Saxony, as "Gott segne Sachsenland" ("God Bless Saxony").[115]

Christian Heinrich Rinck wrote two sets of variations on the anthem: the last movement of his Piano Trio, Op. 34, No. 1 (1815) is a set of five variations and a concluding coda; and Theme (Andante) and (12) Variations in C major on "Heil dir im Siegerkranz" (God Save the King), Op. 55.

Heinrich Marschner used the anthem in his "Grande Ouverture solenne", Op. 78 (1842).

Gaetano Donizetti used this anthem in his opera "Roberto Devereux".

Joachim Raff used this anthem in his Jubelouverture, Op. 103 (1864) dedicated to Adolf, Herzog von Nassau, on the 25th anniversary of his reign.

Gioachino Rossini used this anthem in the last scene of his "Il viaggio a Reims", when all the characters, coming from many different European countries, sing a song which recalls their own homeland. Lord Sidney, bass, sings "Della real pianta" on the notes of "God Save the King". Samuel Ramey used to interpolate a spectacular virtuoso cadenza at the end of the song.

Fernando Sor used the anthem in his 12 Studies, Op. 6: No. 10 in C major in the section marked 'Maestoso.'

Arthur Sullivan quotes the anthem at the end of his ballet Victoria and Merrie England.

Claude Debussy opens with a brief introduction of "God Save the King" in one of his Preludes, Hommage à S. Pickwick Esq. P.P.M.P.C.. The piece draws its inspiration from the main character of the Charles Dickens novel The Pickwick Papers.

Niccolò Paganini wrote a set of highly virtuosic variations on "God Save the King" as his Op. 9.

Max Reger wrote Variations and Fugue on 'Heil dir im Siegerkranz' (God Save the King) for organ in 1901 after the death of Queen Victoria. It does not have an opus number.

A week before the Coronation Ode was due to be premiered at the June 1902 "Coronation Gala Concert" at Covent Garden (it was cancelled, owing to the King's illness), Sir Edward Elgar introduced an arrangement of "Land of Hope and Glory" as a solo song performed by Clara Butt at a "Coronation Concert" at the Albert Hall. Novello seized upon the prevailing patriotism and requested that Elgar arrange the National Anthem as an appropriate opening for a concert performed in front of the Court and numerous British and foreign dignitaries. This version for orchestra and chorus, which is enlivened by use of a cappella and marcato effects, was also performed at the opening of the British Empire Exhibition at Wembley on St. George's Day, 1924, and recorded under the composer's baton in 1928, with the London Symphony Orchestra and the Philharmonic Choir.[116] Elgar also used the first verse of the Anthem as the climax of a short "Civic Procession and Anthem", written to accompany the mayoral procession at the opening of the Hereford Music Festival on 4 September 1927. This premiere performance was recorded, and is today available on CD; the score was lost following the festival, and Elgar reconstructed it by ear from the recording.[117]

Carl Maria von Weber uses the "God Save the King" theme at the end of his "Jubel Overture".

Giuseppe Verdi included "God Save the Queen" in his "Inno delle nazioni" (Hymn of the Nations), composed for the London 1862 International Exhibition.

Benjamin Britten arranged "God Save the Queen" in 1961 for the Leeds Festival. This version has been programmed several times at the Last Night of the Proms.[118]

Charles Ives wrote Variations on "America" for organ in 1891 at age seventeen. It included a polytonal section in three simultaneous keys, though this was omitted from performances at his father's request, because "it made the boys laugh out loud". Ives was fond of the rapid pedal line in the final variation, which he said was "almost as much fun as playing baseball". The piece was not published until 1949; the final version includes an introduction, seven variations and a polytonal interlude. The piece was adapted for orchestra in 1963 by William Schuman. This version became popular during the bicentennial celebrations, and is often heard at pops concerts.

Muthuswami Dikshitar (1776–1835), one of the musical trinity in South Indian classical (Carnatic) music composed some Sanskrit pieces set to Western tunes. These are in the raga Sankarabharanam and are referred to as "nottu swaras". Among these, the composition "Santatam Pahimam Sangita Shyamale" is set to the tune of "God Save the Queen".

Sigismond Thalberg (1812–1871), Swiss composer and one of the most famous virtuoso pianists of the 19th century, wrote a fantasia on "God Save the Queen".

Johan Nepomuk Hummel (1778–1837) wrote Variations on God Save the King in D major, Op. 10 and quoted the tune briefly in his Freudenfest-Ouverture in D major, S 148.

Adrien-François Servais (1807–66) and Joseph Ghys (1801–48) wrote Variations brillantes et concertantes sur l'air "God Save the King", Op. 38, for violin and cello and performed it in London and St Petersburg.[119]

Georges Onslow (1784–1853) used the tune in his String Quartet No. 7 in G minor, Op. 9, second movement.

Hans Huber used the melody ("Rufst du, mein Vaterland") in the first movement of his Symphony no 3 in C minor, Op. 118 ("Heroic").

Ferdinando Carulli used the melody in Fantaisie sur un air national anglais, for recorder & guitar, Op. 102.

Louis Drouet composed "Variations on the air God save the King" for flute and piano.

Gordon Jacob wrote a choral arrangement of "God Save the Queen" with a trumpet fanfare introduction, for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953.[120]

Rock adaptations

Jimi Hendrix played an impromptu version of "God Save the Queen" to open his set at the Isle of Wight Festival 1970. Just before walking onto the stage, he asked "How does it [the anthem] go again?". Hendrix gave the same sort of distortion and improvisation of "God Save the Queen", as he had done with "The Star-Spangled Banner" at the Woodstock Festival, 1969.[121]

The rock band Queen recorded an instrumental version of "God Save the Queen" for their 1975 album A Night at the Opera. Guitarist Brian May adapted the melody using his distinctive layers of overdubbed electric guitars. This recorded version was played at the end of almost every Queen concert, while vocalist Freddie Mercury walked around the stage wearing a crown and a cloak on their Magic Tour in 1986. The song was played whilst all the Queen members would take their bows.[122] On 3 June 2002, during the Queen's Golden Jubilee, Brian May performed the anthem on his Red Special electric guitar for Party at the Palace from the roof of Buckingham Palace which is featured on the 30th Anniversary DVD edition of A Night at the Opera.[123]

In 1977, the Sex Pistols recorded a song titled "God Save the Queen" in open reference to the National Anthem and the Queen's Silver Jubilee celebrations that year, with the song intending to stand for sympathy for the working class and resentment of the monarchy.[124] They were banned from many venues, censored by mainstream media, and reached number 2 on the official U.K. singles charts and number 1 on the NME chart.[124][125]

A version of "God Save the Queen" by Madness features the melody of the song played on kazoos. It was included on the compilation album The Business – the Definitive Singles Collection.[126]

Computer music

The anthem was the first piece of music played on a computer, and the first computer music to be recorded.

Musical notes were first generated by a computer programmed by Alan Turing at the Computing Machine Laboratory of the University of Manchester in 1948. The first music proper, a performance of the National Anthem was programmed by Christopher Strachey on the Mark II Manchester Electronic Computer at same venue, in 1951. Later that year, short extracts of three pieces, the first being the National Anthem, were recorded there by a BBC outside broadcasting unit: the other pieces being "Ba Ba Black Sheep", and "In the Mood". Researchers at the University of Canterbury, Christchurch restored the acetate master disc in 2016 and the results may be heard on SoundCloud.[127][128]

Reception

The philosopher and reformer Jeremy Bentham praised "God Save the King" in 1796: "the melody recommending itself by beauty to the most polished ears, and by its simplicity to the rudest ear. A song of this complexion, implanted by the habit of half a century in the mass of popular sentiment, can not be refused a place in the inventory of the national blessings."[129] Ludwig van Beethoven wrote "I have to show the English a little of what a blessing 'God Save the King' is".[130]

Calls for a new national anthem/new national anthems

There have been calls within the UK for a new national anthem, whether it be for the United Kingdom itself, Britain and/or England (which all currently use "God Save the King"). There are many reasons people cite for wishing for a new national anthem, such as: from a non-religious standpoint[131] claims of "God Save the King" being long outdated and irrelevant in the 21st century,[132] rejection of odes to promoting war[133] and rejection of praising the monarchy from a republican perspective.[134] A further reason is that England has no anthem of its own for sporting contests and the like, whereas Scotland, Northern Ireland, and Wales do; "Flower of Scotland", "Londonderry Air", and "Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau" fill this niche (the former two on an unofficial basis), while England tends to use "God Save the King" exclusively and also unofficially.

Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ See Bevare Gud vår kung.
  2. ^ Where it was set to Íslands minni ("To Iceland", better known as Eldgamla Ísafold), a poem by Bjarni Thorarensen.
  3. ^ See Molitva russkikh.

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  4. ^ cf. the versions in the hymn books English Hymnal, Hymns Ancient and Modern, and Songs of Praise
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Further reading

  • Scholes, Percy A. (1954). God Save the Queen!: The History and Romance of the World's First National Anthem. Oxford University Press.

External links

  • Dimont, Charles (May 1953). "God Save the Queen: the History of the National Anthem". History Today. 3 (5). Retrieved 31 May 2020.
  • National Anthem at the Royal Family website
  • Streaming audio, lyrics and information about God Save the Queen
  • Department of Canadian Heritage – Royal anthem page
  • God Save Great George our King: – article discussing different versions of the lyrics
  • Free sheet music of God Save the King from Cantorion.org
  • A Point of View: Is it time for a new British national anthem? BBC News. Published 15 January 2016. Retrieved 17 July 2017.
  • On some Philological Peculiarities in the English Authorized Version of the Bible. By Thomas Watts, Esq.

save, king, other, uses, disambiguation, save, queen, disambiguation, alternatively, save, queen, when, monarch, female, facto, national, anthem, united, kingdom, british, crown, dependencies, national, anthems, zealand, since, 1977, royal, anthem, most, commo. For other uses see God Save the King disambiguation and God Save the Queen disambiguation God Save the King alternatively God Save the Queen when the monarch is female is the de facto national anthem of the United Kingdom and the British Crown Dependencies 1 2 one of two national anthems of New Zealand since 1977 and the royal anthem of most Commonwealth realms The author of the tune is unknown and it may originate in plainchant but an attribution to the composer John Bull has sometimes been made God Save the KingPublication of an early version in The Gentleman s Magazine October 1745 The title on the contents page is given as God save our lord the king A new song set for two voices National or royal anthem of theUnited KingdomAlso known as God Save the Queen when the monarch is female MusicUnknownAdoptedSeptember 1745 277 years ago 1745 09 Audio sample source source track track track track track track track track track track track track track God Save the King filehelpIn countries not part of the British Empire the tune of God Save the King has provided the basis for various patriotic songs though still generally connected with royal ceremony 3 The melody continues to be used for the national anthem of Liechtenstein Oben am jungen Rhein and the royal anthem of Norway Kongesangen The melody is used for the American patriotic song My Country Tis of Thee also known as America The melody was also used for the national anthem Heil dir im Siegerkranz of the German Empire from 1871 to 1918 and as The Prayer of Russians the imperial anthem of Russia from 1816 to 1833 In Switzerland it is known as Rufst du mein Vaterland Beyond its first verse which is consistent God Save the King has many historic and extant versions Since its first publication different verses have been added and taken away and even today different publications include various selections of verses in various orders 4 In general only one verse is sung Sometimes two verses are sung and on certain occasions three 1 The entire composition is the musical salute for the monarch and royal consort 5 while other members of the royal family who are entitled to royal salute such as the Prince of Wales along with his spouse receive just the first six bars The first six bars also form all or part of the viceregal salute in some Commonwealth realms other than the UK e g in Canada governors general and lieutenant governors at official events are saluted with the first six bars of God Save the King followed by the first four and last four bars of O Canada as well as the salute given to governors of British overseas territories Contents 1 History 1 1 Original lyrics 2 Use in the United Kingdom 2 1 Lyrics in the UK 2 1 1 Standard version in the United Kingdom 2 1 2 Standard version of the music 2 1 3 Alternative British versions 2 1 3 1 William Hickson s alternative version 2 1 3 2 Samuel Reynolds Hole s alternative version 2 1 3 3 Official peace version 2 1 4 Globalised verse 2 1 5 Historic Jacobite and anti Jacobite alternative verses 2 1 6 Historic republican alternative 2 2 Performance in the UK 2 2 1 Performance in Lancashire 2 3 Other British anthems 2 4 Use in media 3 Use in other Commonwealth countries 3 1 Australia 3 2 Belize 3 3 Canada 3 3 1 Lyrics in Canada 3 4 Channel Islands 3 5 New Zealand 3 5 1 Lyrics in Maori 3 6 Rhodesia 3 7 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 3 8 Solomon Islands 3 9 South Africa 4 Use elsewhere 5 Musical adaptations 5 1 Composers 5 2 Rock adaptations 5 3 Computer music 6 Reception 6 1 Calls for a new national anthem new national anthems 7 Notes and references 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory EditIn The Oxford Companion to Music Percy Scholes points out the similarities to an early plainsong melody although the rhythm is very distinctly that of a galliard 6 and he gives examples of several such dance tunes that bear a striking resemblance to God Save the King Scholes quotes a keyboard piece by John Bull 1619 which has some similarities to the modern tune depending on the placing of accidentals which at that time were unwritten in certain cases and left to the discretion of the player see musica ficta He also points to several pieces by Henry Purcell one of which includes the opening notes of the modern tune setting the words God Save the King Nineteenth century scholars and commentators mention the widespread belief that an old Scots carol Remember O Thou Man was the source of the tune 7 8 The first published version that resembles the present song appeared in 1744 with no title but the heading For two voices in an anthology originally named Harmonia Britannia but changed after only a few copies had been printed to Thesaurus Musicus 9 When the Jacobite pretender Charles Edward Stuart led the the 1745 rising the song spread among those loyal to King George II The tune published in The Gentleman s Magazine in 1745 departs from that used today at several points one as early as the first bar but is otherwise clearly a strong relative of the contemporary anthem It was recorded as being sung in London theatres in 1745 with for example Thomas Arne writing a setting of the tune for the Drury Lane Theatre Scholes analysis includes mention of untenable and doubtful claims as well as an American misattribution Some of these are James Oswald was a possible author of the Thesaurus Musicus so may have played a part in the history of the song but is not a strong enough candidate to be cited as the composer of the tune Henry Carey Scholes refutes this attribution first on the grounds that Carey himself never made such a claim second when the claim was made by Carey s son in 1795 it was in support of a request for a pension from the British Government and third the younger Carey claimed that his father who died in 1743 had written parts of the song in 1745 It has also been claimed that the work was first publicly performed by Carey during a dinner in 1740 in honour of Admiral Edward Grog Vernon who had captured the Spanish harbour of Porto Bello then in the Viceroyalty of New Granada now in Panama during the War of Jenkins Ear Scholes recommends the attribution traditional or traditional earliest known version by John Bull 1562 1628 The English Hymnal musical editor Ralph Vaughan Williams gives no attribution stating merely 17th or 18th cent 10 Original lyrics Edit The lyrics as published in the Gentleman s Magazine in October 1745 ran God save great George our king Long live our noble king God save the king Send him victorious Happy and glorious Long to reign over us God save the king O Lord our God arise Scatter his enemies And make them fall Confound their politics Frustrate their knavish tricks On him our hope we fix O save us all Thy Choicest gift in store On George be pleas d to pour Long may he reign May he defend our laws And ever give us cause To say with heart and voice God save the king 11 12 Use in the United Kingdom Edit The phrase God Save the King in use as a rallying cry to the support of the monarch and the UK s forces during the First World War Like many aspects of British constitutional life God Save the King derives its official status from custom and use not from Royal Proclamation or Act of Parliament citation needed The variation in the UK of the lyrics to God Save the King is the oldest amongst those currently used and forms the basis on which all other versions used throughout the Commonwealth are formed though again the words have varied over time England has no official national anthem of its own God Save the King is treated as the English national anthem when England is represented at sporting events though there are some exceptions to this rule such as cricket where Jerusalem is used There is a movement to establish an English national anthem with Blake and Parry s Jerusalem and Elgar s Land of Hope and Glory among the top contenders Wales has a single official national anthem Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau Land of my Fathers while Scotland uses unofficial anthems Scotland the Brave was traditionally used until the 1990s since then Flower of Scotland is more commonly used these anthems are used formally at state and national ceremonies as well as international sporting events such as football and rugby union matches 13 On all occasions in Northern Ireland God Save the King is still used as the official anthem In 2001 it was claimed that the phrase No surrender was occasionally sung in the bridge before Send her victorious by England football fans at matches 14 15 Since 2003 God Save the King considered an all inclusive anthem for Great Britain and Northern Ireland as well as other countries within the Commonwealth has been dropped from the Commonwealth Games Northern Irish athletes receive their gold medals to the tune of the Londonderry Air popularly known as Danny Boy In 2006 English winners heard Elgar s Pomp and Circumstance March No 1 usually known as Land of Hope and Glory 16 but after a poll conducted by the Commonwealth Games Council for England prior to the 2010 Games Jerusalem was adopted as England s new Commonwealth Games anthem In sports in which the UK competes as one nation most notably as Great Britain at the Olympics the anthem is used to represent anyone or any team that comes from the United Kingdom 13 Lyrics in the UK Edit Stratford upon Avon Town Hall built 1767 bearing the painted slogan God Save the King The phrase God Save the King is much older than the song appearing for instance several times in the King James Bible 17 A text based on the 1st Book of Kings Chapter 1 verses 38 40 And all the people rejoic d and said God save the King Long live the King May the King live for ever Amen has been sung at every coronation since that of King Edgar in 973 18 Scholes says that as early as 1545 God Save the King was a watchword of the Royal Navy with the response being Long to reign over us 19 20 He also notes that the prayer read in churches on anniversaries of the Gunpowder Plot includes words which might have formed part of the basis for the second verse Scatter our enemies assuage their malice and confound their devices In 1745 The Gentleman s Magazine published God save our lord the king A new song set for two voices describing it As sung at both Playhouses the Theatres Royal at Drury Lane and Covent Garden 11 Traditionally the first performance was thought to have been in 1745 when it was sung in support of King George II after his defeat at the Battle of Prestonpans by the army of Charles Edward Stuart son of James Francis Edward Stuart the Jacobite claimant to the British throne It is sometimes claimed that ironically the song was originally sung in support of the Jacobite cause the word send in the line Send him victorious could imply that the king was absent However the Oxford English Dictionary cites examples of God send a person safe victorious etc meaning God grant that he may be safe etc There are also examples of early 18th century drinking glasses which are inscribed with a version of the words and were apparently intended for drinking the health of King James II and VII Scholes acknowledges these possibilities but argues that the same words were probably being used by both Jacobite and Hanoverian supporters and directed at their respective kings 21 In 1902 the musician William Hayman Cummings quoting mid 18th century correspondence between Charles Burney and Sir Joseph Banks suggested that the words had been based on a Latin verse composed for King James II at the Chapel Royal O Deus optime Salvum nunc facito Regem nostrum Sic laeta victoria Comes et gloria Salvum iam facito Tu dominum 22 source track track track track God Save the King performed with each of its three verses Standard version in the United Kingdom Edit God save our gracious King Long live our noble King God save the King Send him victorious Happy and glorious Long to reign over us God save the King O Lord our God arise Scatter his enemies and make them fall Confound their politics Frustrate their knavish tricks On thee our hopes we fix God save us all Thy choicest gifts in store On him be pleased to pour Long may he reign May he defend our laws And ever give us cause To sing with heart and voice God save the King 23 When the monarch of the time is female King is replaced with Queen and all masculine pronouns are replaced with their feminine equivalents There is no definitive version of the lyrics However the version consisting of the three above verses has the best claim to be regarded as the standard British version sometimes omitting the second verse appearing not only in the 1745 Gentleman s Magazine but also in publications such as The Book of English Songs From the Sixteenth to the Nineteenth Century 1851 24 National Hymns How They Are Written and How They Are Not Written 1861 25 Household Book of Poetry 1882 26 and Hymns Ancient and Modern Revised Version 1982 27 The same version with verse two omitted appears in publications including Scouting for Boys 1908 28 and on the British Monarchy website 1 According to Alan Michie s Rule Britannia which was published in 1952 after the death of King George VI but before the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II when the first General Assembly of the United Nations was held in London in January 1946 the King in honour of the occasion ordered the belligerent imperious second stanza of God Save the King to be rewritten to bring it more into the spirit of the brotherhood of nations citation needed In the UK the first verse is typically sung alone even on official occasions although the third verse is sometimes sung in addition on certain occasions such as during the opening ceremonies of the 2012 Summer Olympics 2012 Summer Paralympics and the 2022 Commonwealth Games and usually at the Last Night of the Proms Standard version of the music Edit source source source source source source God Save the Queen sung by the public at St Giles Fair Oxford 2007 The standard version of the melody and its key of G major are still those of the originally published version although the start of the anthem is often signalled by an introductory timpani roll of two bars length The bass line of the standard version differs little from the second voice part shown in the original and there is a standard version in four part harmony for choirs The first three lines six bars of music are soft ending with a short crescendo into Send him victorious and then is another crescendo at over us into the final words God save the King In the early 20th century there existed a Military Band version in the higher key of B 29 because it was easier for brass instruments to play in that key though it had the disadvantage of being more difficult to sing however now most Bands play it in the correct key of concert G Since 1953 the anthem is sometimes preceded by a fanfare composed by Gordon Jacob for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II 30 Alternative British versions Edit There have been several attempts to rewrite the words In the nineteenth century there was some lively debate about the national anthem as verse two was considered by some to be slightly offensive in its use of the phrase scatter her enemies Some thought it placed better emphasis on the respective power of Parliament and the Crown to change her enemies to our enemies others questioned the theology and proposed thine enemies instead Sydney G R Coles wrote a completely new version as did Canon F K Harford 31 William Hickson s alternative version Edit In 1836 William Hickson wrote an alternative version of which the first third and fourth verses gained some currency when they were appended to the National Anthem in the English Hymnal The fourth Hickson verse was sung after the traditional first verse at Queen Elizabeth II s Golden Jubilee National Service of Thanksgiving in 2002 and during the raising of the Union Flag during the 2008 Summer Olympics closing ceremony in which London took the baton from Beijing to host the 2012 Summer Olympics God bless our native land May Heav n s protecting hand Still guard our shore May peace his power extend Foe be transformed to friend And Britain s rights depend On war no more O Lord our monarch bless With strength and righteousness Long may he reign His heart inspire and move With wisdom from above And in a nation s love His throne maintain May just and righteous laws Uphold the public cause And bless our Isle Home of the brave and free Thou land of Liberty We pray that still on thee Kind Heav n may smile Not in this land alone But be God s mercies known From shore to shore Lord make the nations see That men should brothers be And form one family The wide world o er Samuel Reynolds Hole s alternative version Edit To mark the celebration of the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria a modified version of the second verse was written by the Dean of Rochester the Very Reverend Samuel Reynolds Hole A four part harmony setting was then made by Frederick Bridge and published by Novello O Lord Our God Arise Scatter her enemies Make wars to cease Keep us from plague and dearth Turn thou our woes to mirth And over all the earth Let there be peace The Musical Times commented There are some conservative minds who may regret the banishment of the knavish tricks and aggressive spirit of the discarded verse but it must be admitted that Dean Hole s lines are more consonant with the sentiment of modern Christianity Others reactions were more negative one report describing the setting as unwarrantable liberties worthy of the severest reprobation with too much of a Peace Society flavour about it If we go about pleading for peace other nations will get it into their heads that we are afraid of fighting Perhaps unsurprisingly Hole s version failed to replace the existing verse permanently 32 33 34 35 Official peace version Edit A less militaristic version of the song titled Official peace version 1919 was first published in the hymn book Songs of Praise in 1925 36 This was official in the sense that it was approved by the British Privy Council in 1919 21 However despite being reproduced in some other hymn books it is largely unknown today 37 God save our gracious King Long live our noble King God save the King Send him victorious Happy and glorious Long to reign over us God save the King One realm of races four Blest more and ever more God save our land Home of the brave and free Set in the silver sea True nurse of chivalry God save our land Of many a race and birth From utmost ends of earth God save us all Bid strife and hatred cease Bid hope and joy increase Spread universal peace God save us all Globalised verse Edit W E Hickson 1803 1870 wrote an additional verse to give the anthem a more international and global aspect This is currently used as the third verse by the Church of Scotland 38 Not on this land alone but be God s mercies known from shore to shore Lord make the nations see that all should kindred be and form one family the wide world o er Historic Jacobite and anti Jacobite alternative verses Edit Around 1745 anti Jacobite sentiment was captured in a verse appended to the song with a prayer for the success of Field Marshal George Wade s army then assembling at Newcastle These words attained some short term use although they did not appear in the published version in the October 1745 Gentleman s Magazine This verse was first documented as an occasional addition to the original anthem by Richard Clark in 1814 39 and was also mentioned in a later article on the song published by the Gentleman s Magazine in October 1836 Therein it is presented as an additional verse though being of temporary application only stored in the memory of an old friend who was born in the very year 1745 and was thus the associate of those who heard it first sung the lyrics given being 40 Lord grant that Marshal Wade May by thy mighty aid Victory bring May he sedition hush and like a torrent rush Rebellious Scots to crush God save the King The 1836 article and other sources make it clear that this verse was not used soon after 1745 and certainly before the song became accepted as the British national anthem in the 1780s and 1790s 41 42 It was included as an integral part of the song in the Oxford Book of Eighteenth Century Verse of 1926 although erroneously referencing the fourth verse to the Gentleman s Magazine article of 1745 43 On the opposing side Jacobite beliefs were demonstrated in an alternative verse used during the same period 44 God bless the prince I pray God bless the prince I pray Charlie I mean That Scotland we may see Freed from vile Presbyt ry Both George and his Feckie Ever so Amen In May 1800 following an attempt to assassinate King George III at London s Drury Lane theatre playwright Richard Sheridan immediately composed an additional verse which was sung from the stage the same night 45 46 From every latent foe From the assassin s blow God save the King O er him Thine arm extend For Britain s sake defend Our father king and friend God save the King Various other attempts were made during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries to add verses to commemorate particular royal or national events For example according to Fitzroy Maclean when Jacobite forces bypassed Wade s force and reached Derby but then retreated and when their garrison at Carlisle Castle surrendered to a second government army led by King George s son the Duke of Cumberland another verse was added 47 Other short lived verses were notably anti French such as the following quoted in the book Handel by Edward J Dent 48 From France and Pretender Great Britain defend her Foes let them fall From foreign slavery Priests and their knavery And Popish Reverie God save us all However none of these additional verses survived into the twentieth century 49 Updated full versions including additional verses have been published more recently including the standard three verses Hickson s fourth verse Sheridan s verse and the Marshal Wade verse 50 51 Historic republican alternative Edit A version from 1794 composed by the American republican and French citizen Joel Barlow 52 celebrated the power of the guillotine to liberate 53 54 God save the Guillotine Till England s King and QueenHer power shall prove Till each appointed knob Affords a clipping job Let no vile halter robThe Guillotine France let thy trumpet sound Tell all the world around How Capet fell And when great George s poll Shall in the basket roll Let mercy then controlThe Guillotine When all the sceptre d crew Have paid their Homage dueThe Guillotine Let Freedom s flag advance Till all the world like France O er tyrants graves shall danceAnd peace begin Performance in the UK Edit The style most commonly heard in official performances was proposed as the proper interpretation by King George V who considered himself something of an expert in view of the number of times he had heard it An Army Order was duly issued in 1933 which laid down regulations for tempo dynamics and orchestration This included instructions such as that the opening six bars will be played quietly by the reed band with horns and basses in a single phrase Cornets and side drum are to be added at the little scale passage leading into the second half of the tune and the full brass enters for the last eight bars The official tempo for the opening section is a metronome setting of 60 with the second part played in a broader manner at a metronome setting of 52 55 In recent years the prescribed sombre paced introduction is often played at a faster and livelier tempo Until the latter part of the 20th century theatre and concert goers were expected to stand while the anthem was played after the conclusion of a show In cinemas this brought a tendency for audiences to rush out while the end credits played to avoid this formality This can be seen in the 1972 Dad s Army episode A Soldier s Farewell The anthem continues to be played at some traditional events such as Wimbledon Royal Variety Performance the Edinburgh Tattoo Royal Ascot Henley Royal Regatta and The Proms as well as at Royal events The anthem was traditionally played at close down on the BBC and with the introduction of commercial television to the UK this practice was adopted by some ITV companies with the notable exceptions of Granada Thames Television Central Television Border Television and Yorkshire Television BBC Two also never played the anthem at close down and ITV dropped the practice in the late 1980s when the network switched to 24 hour broadcasting but it continued on BBC One until 8 November 1997 thereafter BBC One began to simulcast with BBC News after end of programmes The tradition is carried on however by BBC Radio 4 which plays the anthem each night as a transition piece between the end of the Radio 4 broadcasting and the move to BBC World Service 56 BBC Radio 4 and BBC Radio 2 also play the National Anthem just before the 0700 and 0800 news bulletins on the actual and official birthdays of the King and the birthdays of senior members of the Royal Family On 17 January 2022 the GB News Channel started playing the anthem at 05 59 every morning at the beginning of the day s programming 57 The UK s national anthem usually prefaces The Sovereign s Christmas Message although in 2007 it appeared at the end taken from a recording of the 1957 television broadcast and important royal announcements such as of royal deaths when it is played in a slower sombre arrangement Performance in Lancashire Edit Main article Long live our noble Duke Other British anthems Edit Frequently when an anthem is needed for one of the constituent countries of the United Kingdom at an international sporting event for instance an alternative song is used England generally uses God Save the King but Jerusalem Rule Britannia and Land of Hope and Glory have also been used 58 59 At international test cricket matches England has since 2004 used Jerusalem as the anthem 60 At international rugby league matches England uses God Save the King and also Jerusalem 61 At international rugby union and football matches England uses God Save the King 62 At the Commonwealth Games Team England uses Jerusalem as their victory anthem 63 Scotland uses Flower of Scotland as their anthem for most sporting occasions 64 Wales uses Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau Land of My Fathers for governmental ceremonies and sporting occasions At official occasions especially those with royal connections God Save the King is also played 65 Northern Ireland uses God Save the King as its national anthem However many Irish nationalists feel unrepresented by the British anthem and seek an alternative 66 Northern Ireland also uses the Londonderry Air as its victory anthem at the Commonwealth Games 67 When sung the Londonderry Air has the lyrics to Danny Boy At international rugby union matches where Northern Irish players compete alongside those from the Republic of Ireland as part of an All Ireland team Ireland s Call is used The British and Irish Lions rugby union tour of 2005 used the song The Power of Four but this experiment has not been repeated 68 The London 2012 Olympics Opening Ceremony provided a conscious use of three of the four anthems listed above the ceremony began with a rendition of the first verse of Jerusalem before a choir in Northern Ireland sang Danny Boy and a choir in Edinburgh performed part of Flower of Scotland Notably Wales was represented by the hymn Bread of Heaven not Hen Wlad Fy Nhadhau In April 2007 there was an early day motion number 1319 to the British Parliament to propose that there should be a separate England anthem That this House believes that all English sporting associations should adopt an appropriate song that English sportsmen and women and the English public would favour when competing as England An amendment EDM 1319A3 was proposed by Evan Harris that the song should have a bit more oomph than God Save The Queen and should also not involve God 69 For more information see also National anthem of England National anthem of Scotland Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau National anthem of Northern IrelandUse in media Edit In 3 November 2016 Conservative MP Andrew Rosindell argued for a return to the broadcasting of God Save the Queen at the end of BBC One transmissions each day The practice was dropped in 1997 ostensibly due to BBC One adopting 24 hour broadcasting by simulcasting BBC News 24 overnight rendering closedown obsolete 70 Since 18 January 2022 GB News has played God Save the Queen at the start of live programming every day 71 72 Use in other Commonwealth countries Edit God Save the King was exported around the world via the expansion of the British Empire serving as each country s national anthem Throughout the Empire s evolution into the Commonwealth of Nations the song declined in use in most states which became independent In New Zealand it remains one of the official national anthems 73 Australia Edit Further information Australian royal symbols Verbal and musical symbols In Australia the song has standing through a Royal Proclamation issued by Governor General Sir Ninian Stephen on 19 April 1984 74 It declared God Save the Queen to be the Royal Anthem and that it is to be played when the Australian monarch or a member of the Royal Family is present though not exclusively in such circumstances The same proclamation made Advance Australia Fair the national anthem and the basis for the Vice Regal Salute the first four and last two bars of the anthem Prior to 1984 God Save the Queen was the national anthem of Australia 75 In 1975 former Prime Minister Gough Whitlam dismissed by Governor General Sir John Kerr alluded to the anthem in his comment Well may we say God save the Queen because nothing will save the Governor General 76 Belize Edit God Save the King is the royal anthem of Belize 77 The Vice Regal Salute to the Belizean governor general is composed of the first verse of God Save the King and the chorus of National Anthem Land of the Free 78 Canada Edit Further information Canadian royal symbols Verbal and musical symbols and Anthems and nationalistic songs of Canada source source Percival Price performs O Canada and God Save the King on the Peace Tower Carillon 1927 By convention 79 God Save the King French Dieu Sauve le Roi Dieu Sauve la Reine when a Queen is the royal anthem of Canada 80 81 82 83 84 It is sometimes played or sung together with the national anthem O Canada at private and public events organised by groups such as the Government of Canada the Royal Canadian Legion police services and loyal groups 85 86 87 88 89 The governor general and provincial lieutenant governors are accorded the Viceregal Salute comprising the first three lines of God Save the King followed by the first and last lines of O Canada 90 God Save the King has been sung in Canada since the late 1700s and by the mid 20th century was along with O Canada one of the country s two de facto national anthems the first and last verses of the standard British version being used 91 By laws and practices governing the use of either song during public events in municipalities varied in Toronto God Save the King was employed while in Montreal it was O Canada Prime Minister Lester B Pearson in 1964 said one song would have to be chosen as the country s national anthem and three years later he advised Governor General Georges Vanier to appoint the Special Joint Committee of the Senate and House of Commons on the National and Royal Anthems Within two months on 12 April 1967 the committee presented its conclusion that God Save the Queen as this was during the reign of Queen Elizabeth II whose music and lyrics were found to be in the public domain 92 should be designated as the royal anthem of Canada and O Canada as the national anthem one verse from each in both official languages to be adopted by parliament The group was then charged with establishing official lyrics for each song for God Save the Queen the English words were those inherited from the United Kingdom and the French words were taken from those that had been adopted in 1952 for the coronation of Elizabeth II 81 When the bill pronouncing O Canada as the national anthem was put through parliament the joint committee s earlier recommendations regarding God Save the Queen were not included 92 The Department of National Defence and the Canadian Forces regulates that God Save the King be played as a salute to the monarch of Canada and other members of the Canadian royal family 93 though it may also be used as a hymn or prayer The words are not to be sung when the song is played as a military royal salute and is abbreviated to the first three lines while arms are being presented 93 Elizabeth II stipulated that the arrangement in G major by Lieutenant Colonel Basil H Brown be used in Canada The authorised version to be played by pipe bands is Mallorca 93 Lyrics in Canada Edit God Save the King has been translated into French 94 as shown below but this translation does not fit the music and cannot be sung Que Dieu protege notre gracieux Roi Longue vie a notre noble Roi Que Dieu protege le Roi Rends le victorieux Heureux et glorieux Que soit long son regne sur nous Que Dieu protege le Roi O Seigneur notre Dieu surgis Disperse ses ennemis Et fais les chuter Confonds leurs complots Dejoue leurs conspirations de filou En Toi nous mettons notre espoir Que Dieu nous protege tous Parmi tous Tu choisis les dons Qu il Te plait de lui accorder Puisse t il regner longuement Puisse t il defendre nos lois Et nous donner souvent raison De chanter avec cœur et a pleine voix Que Dieu protege le Roi Nevertheless this translation has been adapted into a bilingual version that can be sung when the monarch is male and has been sung during public ceremonies such as the National Remembrance Day Ceremony at the National War Memorial in Ottawa 95 Dieu sauve notre Roi Notre gracieux Roi Vive le Roi Send him victorious Happy and glorious Long to reign over us God save the King A special singable one verse adaptation 96 is used when a singable French version is required such as when royalty is present at an official occasion Dieu protege le Roi De sa main souveraine Vive le Roi Qu un regne glorieux Long et victorieux Rende son peuple heureux Vive le Roi There is a special Canadian verse in English which was once commonly sung in addition to the two standing verses 91 Our loved Dominion bless With peace and happiness From shore to shore And let our Empire be Loyal united free True to herself and Thee For evermore Channel Islands Edit God Save the King is used by both Bailiwicks of the Channel Islands as an alternative to their respective national anthems Its use case and popular version is generally similar to how it is used in the United Kingdom However the anthem has been translated in Jerriais 97 35 Dgieu sauve not Duc Longue vie a not Duc Dgieu sauve la Rei Rends la victorieuse Jouaiyeuse et glorieuse Qu on regne sus nous heutheuse Dgieu sauve la Rei Tes dons les pus precieux Sus yi verse des cieux Dgieu sauve la Rei Qu on defende nous louais Et d un tchoeu et d eune vouaix Je chantons a janmais Dgieu sauve la Rei The meaning is broadly similar to the first paragraph of the English version except for the first two lines which say God save our Duke and Long live our Duke New Zealand Edit Further information National anthems of New Zealand God Save the King was the sole official national anthem until 1977 when God Defend New Zealand was added as a second Since then God Save the King is most often only played when the sovereign governor general 98 or other member of the Royal Family is present or on some occasions such as Anzac Day 99 100 The Maori language version was written by Edward Marsh Williams under the title E te atua tohungia te kuini 101 There is a special New Zealand verse in English which was once commonly sung to replace the second and third verses 102 Not on this land alone But be God s mercies known From shore to shore Lord make the nations see That we in liberty Should form one family The wide world o er Lyrics in Maori Edit All verses of God Save the King have been translated into Maori 101 The first verse is shown below Me tohu e te Atua To matou Kingi pai Kia ora ia Meinga kia maia ia Kia hari nui kia koa Kia kingi tonu ia Tau tini noa Rhodesia Edit When Rhodesia issued its Unilateral Declaration of Independence from the UK on 11 November 1965 it did so while still maintaining loyalty to Queen Elizabeth II as the Rhodesian head of state despite the non recognition of the Rhodesian government by the United Kingdom and the United Nations 103 God Save the Queen therefore remained the Rhodesian national anthem This was supposed to demonstrate the continued allegiance of the Rhodesian people to the monarch but the retention in Rhodesia of a song so associated with the UK while the two countries were at loggerheads regarding its constitutional status caused Rhodesian state occasions to have a faintly ironic tone in the words of The Times Nevertheless God Save the Queen remained Rhodesia s national anthem until March 1970 when the country formally declared itself a republic 104 Rise O Voices of Rhodesia was adopted in its stead in 1974 and remained in use until the country returned to the UK s control in December 1979 105 106 Since the internationally recognised independence of the Republic of Zimbabwe in April 1980 God Save the King has had no official status there 107 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Edit God Save the King is the royal anthem of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines It is played on royal and vice regal occasions The Vice Regal Salute to the governor general is composed of the chorus of God Save the King and followed by that of the National Anthem Saint Vincent Land so Beautiful 108 All proclamations in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines end with the phrase God Save the King 109 Solomon Islands Edit God Save the King was translated into the Lau language in 1945 God ka faamouria a King Nia ka aofia diena Usia tooa gi Fasuia firua Falea mai unidiena Faadiena na taloa nia God faamouria a King South Africa Edit God Save the King Afrikaans God Red die Koning God Red die Koningin when a Queen was a co national anthem of South Africa from 1938 until 1957 110 when it was formally replaced by Die Stem van Suid Afrika as the sole national anthem 110 The latter served as a sort of de facto co national anthem alongside the former until 1938 110 Use elsewhere EditThe melody has often been used with lyrics slightly or significantly altered for royal or national anthems of other countries During the 19th century it was used officially in Sweden 111 better source needed a and in Iceland 112 b It was also in official usage for brief periods in Imperial Russia c in Greece 113 and in the Kingdom of Hawaii 114 In Germany it was used by the kingdoms of Prussia Hanover Saxony and Bavaria and was adopted as anthem of the German Empire Heil dir im Siegerkranz after unification in 1871 It remains as the national anthem of Liechtenstein and was used by Switzerland until 1961 Musical adaptations EditComposers Edit About 140 composers have used the tune in their compositions 23 Ludwig van Beethoven composed a set of seven piano variations in the key of C major to the theme of God Save the King catalogued as WoO 78 1802 1803 He also quotes it in his orchestral work Wellington s Victory It is also the first song arranged in the collection WoO 157 Muzio Clementi used the theme to God Save the King in his Symphony No 3 in G major often called the Great National Symphony catalogued as WoO 34 Clementi paid a high tribute to his adopted homeland the United Kingdom where he grew up and stayed most of his lifetime He based the Symphony about 1816 1824 on God Save the King which is hinted at earlier in the work not least in the second movement and announced by the trombones in the finale Johann Christian Bach composed a set of variations on God Save the King for the finale to his sixth keyboard concerto Op 1 written c 1763 Joseph Haydn was impressed by the use of God Save the King as a national anthem during his visit to London in 1794 and on his return to Austria composed a different tune Gott erhalte Franz den Kaiser God Save Emperor Francis for the birthday of the last Holy Roman Emperor and Roman German King Francis II which became the basis for the anthem of the later Austrian Empire and ultimately for the German national anthem Franz Liszt wrote a piano paraphrase on the anthem S 259 in the official catalogue c 1841 Johann Strauss I quoted God Save the Queen in full at the end of his waltz Huldigung der Konigin Victoria von Grossbritannien Homage to Queen Victoria of Great Britain Op 103 where he also quoted Rule Britannia in full at the beginning of the piece Siegfried August Mahlmann in the early 19th century wrote alternate lyrics to adapt the hymn for the Kingdom of Saxony as Gott segne Sachsenland God Bless Saxony 115 Christian Heinrich Rinck wrote two sets of variations on the anthem the last movement of his Piano Trio Op 34 No 1 1815 is a set of five variations and a concluding coda and Theme Andante and 12 Variations in C major on Heil dir im Siegerkranz God Save the King Op 55 Heinrich Marschner used the anthem in his Grande Ouverture solenne Op 78 1842 Gaetano Donizetti used this anthem in his opera Roberto Devereux Joachim Raff used this anthem in his Jubelouverture Op 103 1864 dedicated to Adolf Herzog von Nassau on the 25th anniversary of his reign Gioachino Rossini used this anthem in the last scene of his Il viaggio a Reims when all the characters coming from many different European countries sing a song which recalls their own homeland Lord Sidney bass sings Della real pianta on the notes of God Save the King Samuel Ramey used to interpolate a spectacular virtuoso cadenza at the end of the song Fernando Sor used the anthem in his 12 Studies Op 6 No 10 in C major in the section marked Maestoso Arthur Sullivan quotes the anthem at the end of his ballet Victoria and Merrie England Claude Debussy opens with a brief introduction of God Save the King in one of his Preludes Hommage a S Pickwick Esq P P M P C The piece draws its inspiration from the main character of the Charles Dickens novel The Pickwick Papers Niccolo Paganini wrote a set of highly virtuosic variations on God Save the King as his Op 9 Max Reger wrote Variations and Fugue on Heil dir im Siegerkranz God Save the King for organ in 1901 after the death of Queen Victoria It does not have an opus number A week before the Coronation Ode was due to be premiered at the June 1902 Coronation Gala Concert at Covent Garden it was cancelled owing to the King s illness Sir Edward Elgar introduced an arrangement of Land of Hope and Glory as a solo song performed by Clara Butt at a Coronation Concert at the Albert Hall Novello seized upon the prevailing patriotism and requested that Elgar arrange the National Anthem as an appropriate opening for a concert performed in front of the Court and numerous British and foreign dignitaries This version for orchestra and chorus which is enlivened by use of a cappella and marcato effects was also performed at the opening of the British Empire Exhibition at Wembley on St George s Day 1924 and recorded under the composer s baton in 1928 with the London Symphony Orchestra and the Philharmonic Choir 116 Elgar also used the first verse of the Anthem as the climax of a short Civic Procession and Anthem written to accompany the mayoral procession at the opening of the Hereford Music Festival on 4 September 1927 This premiere performance was recorded and is today available on CD the score was lost following the festival and Elgar reconstructed it by ear from the recording 117 Carl Maria von Weber uses the God Save the King theme at the end of his Jubel Overture Giuseppe Verdi included God Save the Queen in his Inno delle nazioni Hymn of the Nations composed for the London 1862 International Exhibition Benjamin Britten arranged God Save the Queen in 1961 for the Leeds Festival This version has been programmed several times at the Last Night of the Proms 118 Charles Ives wrote Variations on America for organ in 1891 at age seventeen It included a polytonal section in three simultaneous keys though this was omitted from performances at his father s request because it made the boys laugh out loud Ives was fond of the rapid pedal line in the final variation which he said was almost as much fun as playing baseball The piece was not published until 1949 the final version includes an introduction seven variations and a polytonal interlude The piece was adapted for orchestra in 1963 by William Schuman This version became popular during the bicentennial celebrations and is often heard at pops concerts Muthuswami Dikshitar 1776 1835 one of the musical trinity in South Indian classical Carnatic music composed some Sanskrit pieces set to Western tunes These are in the raga Sankarabharanam and are referred to as nottu swaras Among these the composition Santatam Pahimam Sangita Shyamale is set to the tune of God Save the Queen Sigismond Thalberg 1812 1871 Swiss composer and one of the most famous virtuoso pianists of the 19th century wrote a fantasia on God Save the Queen Johan Nepomuk Hummel 1778 1837 wrote Variations on God Save the King in D major Op 10 and quoted the tune briefly in his Freudenfest Ouverture in D major S 148 Adrien Francois Servais 1807 66 and Joseph Ghys 1801 48 wrote Variations brillantes et concertantes sur l air God Save the King Op 38 for violin and cello and performed it in London and St Petersburg 119 Georges Onslow 1784 1853 used the tune in his String Quartet No 7 in G minor Op 9 second movement Hans Huber used the melody Rufst du mein Vaterland in the first movement of his Symphony no 3 in C minor Op 118 Heroic Ferdinando Carulli used the melody in Fantaisie sur un air national anglais for recorder amp guitar Op 102 Louis Drouet composed Variations on the air God save the King for flute and piano Gordon Jacob wrote a choral arrangement of God Save the Queen with a trumpet fanfare introduction for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953 120 Rock adaptations Edit Jimi Hendrix played an impromptu version of God Save the Queen to open his set at the Isle of Wight Festival 1970 Just before walking onto the stage he asked How does it the anthem go again Hendrix gave the same sort of distortion and improvisation of God Save the Queen as he had done with The Star Spangled Banner at the Woodstock Festival 1969 121 The rock band Queen recorded an instrumental version of God Save the Queen for their 1975 album A Night at the Opera Guitarist Brian May adapted the melody using his distinctive layers of overdubbed electric guitars This recorded version was played at the end of almost every Queen concert while vocalist Freddie Mercury walked around the stage wearing a crown and a cloak on their Magic Tour in 1986 The song was played whilst all the Queen members would take their bows 122 On 3 June 2002 during the Queen s Golden Jubilee Brian May performed the anthem on his Red Special electric guitar for Party at the Palace from the roof of Buckingham Palace which is featured on the 30th Anniversary DVD edition of A Night at the Opera 123 In 1977 the Sex Pistols recorded a song titled God Save the Queen in open reference to the National Anthem and the Queen s Silver Jubilee celebrations that year with the song intending to stand for sympathy for the working class and resentment of the monarchy 124 They were banned from many venues censored by mainstream media and reached number 2 on the official U K singles charts and number 1 on the NME chart 124 125 A version of God Save the Queen by Madness features the melody of the song played on kazoos It was included on the compilation album The Business the Definitive Singles Collection 126 Computer music Edit The anthem was the first piece of music played on a computer and the first computer music to be recorded Musical notes were first generated by a computer programmed by Alan Turing at the Computing Machine Laboratory of the University of Manchester in 1948 The first music proper a performance of the National Anthem was programmed by Christopher Strachey on the Mark II Manchester Electronic Computer at same venue in 1951 Later that year short extracts of three pieces the first being the National Anthem were recorded there by a BBC outside broadcasting unit the other pieces being Ba Ba Black Sheep and In the Mood Researchers at the University of Canterbury Christchurch restored the acetate master disc in 2016 and the results may be heard on SoundCloud 127 128 Reception EditThe philosopher and reformer Jeremy Bentham praised God Save the King in 1796 the melody recommending itself by beauty to the most polished ears and by its simplicity to the rudest ear A song of this complexion implanted by the habit of half a century in the mass of popular sentiment can not be refused a place in the inventory of the national blessings 129 Ludwig van Beethoven wrote I have to show the English a little of what a blessing God Save the King is 130 Calls for a new national anthem new national anthems Edit There have been calls within the UK for a new national anthem whether it be for the United Kingdom itself Britain and or England which all currently use God Save the King There are many reasons people cite for wishing for a new national anthem such as from a non religious standpoint 131 claims of God Save the King being long outdated and irrelevant in the 21st century 132 rejection of odes to promoting war 133 and rejection of praising the monarchy from a republican perspective 134 A further reason is that England has no anthem of its own for sporting contests and the like whereas Scotland Northern Ireland and Wales do Flower of Scotland Londonderry Air and Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau fill this niche the former two on an unofficial basis while England tends to use God Save the King exclusively and also unofficially Notes and references EditNotes See Bevare Gud var kung Where it was set to Islands minni To Iceland better known as Eldgamla Isafold a poem by Bjarni Thorarensen See Molitva russkikh References a b c National Anthem The official website of The British Monarchy Archived from the original on 2 September 2014 Retrieved 21 August 2014 Isle of Man nationalanthems info Archived from the original on 27 September 2010 Retrieved 17 August 2010 United Kingdom God Save the King NationalAnthems me Retrieved 23 November 2011 cf the versions in the hymn books English Hymnal Hymns Ancient and Modern and Songs of Praise Thatcher funeral Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II Prince Philip arrive YouTube Archived from the original on 14 March 2016 Retrieved 28 July 2017 Scholes Percy A The Oxford Companion to Music Tenth Edition Oxford University Press Sousa John Philip 1890 National Patriotic and Typical Airs of All Lands Remember O Thou Man is the air on the ground of which God Save the King Is sometimes claimed for Scotland It is in two strains of 8 bars each and has the rhythm and melody of the modern tune in the first and third bars of the second strain But it is in minor Pinkerton John 1830 The Literary Correspondence of John Pinkerton Esq Remember O thou man is unquestionably the root of God save the King Krummel Donald W 1962 God save the King The Musical Times 103 1429 159 160 doi 10 2307 949253 ISSN 0027 4666 JSTOR 949253 Chappell William 1855 The Ballad Literature and Popular Music of the Olden Time A History of the Ancient Songs Ballads and of the Dance Tunes of England with Numerous Anecdotes and Entire Ballads Also a Short Account of the Minstrels Chappell p 709 A Loyal Song sung at the Theatres Royal Thesaurus musicus a collection of two three and four part songs several of them never before printed to which are added some choice dialogues set to musick by the most eminent masters Vol I London J Simpson 1745 p 22 Dearmer Percy Vaughan Williams Ralph 1906 The English Hymnal with Tunes Oxford University Press p 724 Hymn No 560 National Anthem a b A Song for Two Voices As sung at both Playhouses The Gentleman s Magazine 15 10 552 October 1745 God Save the King www encyclopediavirginia org a b National anthems amp national songs British Council Archived from the original on 20 November 2007 Retrieved 2 February 2008 Les Back Tim Crabbe John Solomos 1 November 2001 The Changing Face of Football Racism Identity and Multiculture in the English Game Berg Publishers p 266 ISBN 978 1 85973 478 0 Retrieved 30 March 2013 Marina Hyde 29 March 2013 Race issues News FA Football Association England football team Rio Ferdinand John Terry Football Sport UK news The Guardian London Anthem 4 England At the 2010 Commonwealth games Blake and Parry s Jerusalem was used by the England team Land of Hope and Glory Archived 7 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine 1 Samuel x 24 2 Samuel xvi 16 and 2 Kings xi 12 Guide to the Coronation Service Westminster Abbey website London U K Dean and Chapter of Westminster 2009 retrieved 20 August 2009 Meanwhile the choir sings the anthem Zadok the Priest the words of which from the first Book of Kings have been sung at every coronation since King Edgar s in 973 Since the coronation of George II in 1727 the setting by Handel has always been used Wood William 1919 Flag and Fleet How the British Navy Won the Freedom of the Seas Macmillan permanent dead link The Watchword in the Night shall be God save King Henrye The other shall answer Long to raign over Us a b Scholes p 412 Cummings William H 1902 God Save the King the origin and history of the music and words of the national anthem London Novello amp Co a b National Anthem The Royal Family Retrieved 8 February 2023 Mackay Charles 1851 The Book of English Songs From the Sixteenth to the Nineteenth Century p 203 White Richard Grant 1861 National Hymns How They are Written and how They are Not Written Rudd amp Carleton p 42 Dana Charles Anderson 1882 Household Book of Poetry Freeport N Y Books for Libraries Press p 384 Hymns Ancient and Modern Revised Version SCM Canterbury Press Ltd 1982 p 504 ISBN 0 907547 06 0 Baden Powell Robert 1908 Scouting for Boys p 341 Official versions published by Kneller Hall Royal Military School of Music Jeffrey Richards 2002 Imperialism And Music Britain 1876 1953 Manchester University Press p 120 ISBN 0719045061 Richards p 91 A rare performance of Hole s verse was given in the 1956 Edinburgh Festival by Sir Thomas Beecham and the Edinburgh Festival Chorus on this occasion the musical setting was by Edward Elgar with Hole s verse supplanting the traditional second verse Elgar had set Jeffrey Richards Imperialism and Music Britain 1876 1953 Bridge J Frederick Hole S Reynolds 1897 Extra Supplement God save the Queen The Musical Times and Singing Class Circular 38 651 1 4 JSTOR 3367016 CARMARTHEN UNDER THE SEARCH LIGHT 1897 07 02 The Carmarthen Weekly Reporter Welsh Newspapers Online the National Library of Wales Dearmer Percy Vaughan Williams Ralph 1925 Songs of Praise Oxford University Press Forgotten National Anthem Sung at Halesowen Service Black Country Bugle 15 March 2007 Retrieved 20 January 2017 permanent dead link Source describes it as an unusual and little known version of the national anthem taken from the order of service for the blessing of Halesowen s borough charter on Sunday 20 September 1936 Hickson W E May 2005 Church Hymnary 4th ed Hymn 703 Canterbury Press ISBN 978 1 85311 613 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Clark Richard ed 1814 The Words of the Most Favourite Pieces Performed at the Glee Club the Catch Club and Other Public Societies London printed by the Philanthropic Society for the editor p xiii Clark Richard 1822 An Account of the National Anthem Entitled God Save the King London W Wright pp 8 9 Richards Jeffrey 2002 Imperialism and Music Britain 1876 to 1953 Manchester University Press p 90 ISBN 0 7190 4506 1 A fourth verse was briefly in vogue at the time of the rebellion but was rapidly abandoned thereafter God grant that Marshal Wade etc The history of God Save the King The Gentleman s Magazine Vol 6 new series 1836 p 373 There is an additional verse though being of temporary application only it was but short lived but it was stored in the memory of an old friend of my own Oh grant that Marshal Wade etc The Oxford Book of Eighteenth Century Verse Archived from the original on 4 June 2009 ISBN missing Groom Nick 2006 The Union Jack the Story of the British Flag Atlantic Books Appendix ISBN 1 84354 336 2 The horrid assassin Is Hatfield attempting to shoot the king in Drury Lane Theatre on the 15th of May 1800 British Museum Retrieved 10 August 2012 permanent dead link Ford Franklin L 1985 Political Murder From Tyrannicide to Terrorism Harvard University Press p 207 ISBN 0 674 68636 5 Maclean Fitzroy 1989 Bonnie Prince Charlie Canongate Books Ltd ISBN 0 86241 568 3 Note that the verse he quotes appears to have a line missing See etext 9089 at Project Gutenberg and p35 at FullTextArchive com Richards p 90 God Save the Queen lyrics The Telegraph London 3 June 2012 Retrieved 9 August 2012 Should Welsh Olympics 2012 stars sing God Save the Queen anthem Wales Online 27 July 2012 Retrieved 9 August 2012 A song Tune God save the guillotine permanent dead link stanford edu catalogue Wells C 2017 Poetry Wars Verse and Politics in the American Revolution and Early Republic University of Pennsylvania Press Incorporated pp 138 139 ISBN 9780812249651 God Save the Guillotine parodiya na God Save the King tekst 16 May 2004 Percy A Scholes Oxford Companion to Music Tenth Edition Oxford University Press Radio 4 keeps flying the flag The Guardian London 17 March 2010 Retrieved 9 March 2013 Martin Pavitt Ross 18 January 2022 GB News plays national anthem every morning to mark Queen s Platinum Jubilee year The Independent Retrieved 2 February 2022 Brantley Ben 20 July 2009 Time and the Green and Pleasant Land The New York Times Retrieved 23 April 2010 Britannia History Rule Britannia Archived 13 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 26 February 2011 Sing Jerusalem for England BBC Sport Retrieved 26 February 2011 Hubert Parry The Composer Icons of England Archived 9 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 26 February 2011 Home nations fans back England BBC Sport Retrieved 26 February 2011 Commonwealth Games 2010 England stars discuss Jerusalem BBC Sport Retrieved 26 February 2011 Flower of Scotland The Herald 13 July 1990 Retrieved 26 February 2011 dead link Land of My Fathers v La Marseillaise Clash of rugby s greatest anthems The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 26 February 2011 Poll Should God Save the Queen be dropped for Northern Ireland sports events and what could replace it BelfastTelegraph co uk BelfastTelegraph co uk Retrieved 23 May 2016 Tara Magdalinski Timothy Chandler 2002 With God on Their Side Sport in the Service of Religion p 24 Routledge 2002 Sing when you re winning BBC Sport Retrieved 26 February 2011 Parliamentary Information Management Services Early day Motion 1319 Edmi parliament uk Archived from the original on 31 October 2018 Retrieved 12 February 2014 Hughes Laura 3 November 2016 Tory MP calls for BBC 1 to mark Brexit with national anthem at the end of each day The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 3 November 2016 Meighan Craig 17 January 2022 GB News announces it will play God Save The Queen every single day The National Retrieved 30 March 2022 Demianyk Graeme 17 January 2022 Tories Celebrate GB News Playing God Save The Queen Every Morning HuffPost UK Retrieved 30 March 2022 Letter from Buckingham Palace to the Governor General of New Zealand Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 3 April 2007 Royal assent that the two songs should have equal status Commonwealth of Australia Gazette No S 142 19 April 1984 National Anthem Australian Government Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade Retrieved 24 July 2013 Kelly Paul 1995 November 1975 the inside story of Australia s greatest political crisis St Leonards NSW Allen amp Unwin St p 275 ISBN 978 1 86373 987 0 The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency 2012 p 79 ISBN 9780160911422 New Governor General takes office I will build bridges Breaking Belize News 27 May 2021 Department of Canadian Heritage Ceremonial and Canadian Symbols Promotion gt Royal anthem God Save the Queen Queen s Printer for Canada Archived from the original on 4 May 2010 Retrieved 25 June 2010 MacLeod 2008 pp 54 Iharvnb error no target CITEREFMacLeod2008 help a b Kallmann Helmut The Canadian Encyclopedia in Marsh James Harley ed Encyclopedia of Music in Canada gt Musical Genres gt National and royal anthems Toronto Historica Foundation of Canada archived from the original on 10 October 2011 retrieved 25 June 2010 Office of the Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia History of the Lieutenant Governor gt Royal Salute gt Royal Salute Formerly known as the Vice Regal Salute Queen s Printer for Nova Scotia Archived from the original on 30 April 2010 Retrieved 25 June 2010 Hoiberg Dale ed Encyclopaedia Britannica O Canada Toronto Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc retrieved 25 June 2010 Citizenship and Immigration Canada 2009 Discover Canada PDF Ottawa Queen s Printer for Canada p 2 ISBN 978 1 100 12739 2 Archived PDF from the original on 22 November 2009 Retrieved 16 January 2011 Alberta Police and Peace Officers Memorial Day 2009 Order of Service Queen s Printer for Alberta 27 September 2009 Department of Canadian Heritage Ceremonial and Canadian Symbols Promotion gt The National Flag of Canada Queen s Printer for Canada Retrieved 5 July 2010 Royal Canadian Legion Dominion Command 4 November 2009 National Remembrance Day Ceremony Royal Canadian Legion Archived from the original on 12 March 2010 Retrieved 5 July 2010 Department of Veterans Affairs Canada Remembers gt Partnering Opportunities gt Community Engagement Partnership Fund gt Nova Scotia gt Community Engagement Partnership Fund Nova Scotia Queen s Printer for Canada Archived from the original on 19 April 2013 Retrieved 5 July 2010 Remembrance Day PDF Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation 11 November 2009 archived from the original PDF on 7 July 2011 retrieved 5 July 2010 Honours and Salutes Queen s Printer for Canada Archived from the original on 5 March 2017 Retrieved 4 March 2017 a b Belanger Claude The Quebec History Encyclopedia In Marianopolis College ed National Anthem of Canada Montreal Marianopolis College Retrieved 5 July 2010 a b Department of Canadian Heritage National Anthem O Canada gt Parliamentary Action Queen s Printer for Canada Retrieved 29 June 2010 a b c Department of National Defence 1 April 1999 The Honours Flags and Heritage Structure of the Canadian Forces PDF Ottawa Queen s Printer for Canada p 503 A AD 200 000 AG 000 archived from the original PDF on 25 March 2009 retrieved 30 October 2009 Hymne royal Dieu protege le Roi on Canadian Heritage site in French 11 August 2017 Retrieved 9 September 2022 God Save the King 2022 bilingual version YouTube in English and French Cable Public Affairs Channel 12 November 2022 Event occurs at 2 14 Retrieved 27 December 2022 Decouvrir le Canada Les symboles canadiens Canada ca 11 October 2017 Retrieved 19 November 2022 Lempiere Raoul 1976 Customs Ceremonies and Traditions of the Channel Islands Great Britain Robert Hale ISBN 0 7091 5731 2 Max Cryer Hear Our Voices We Entreat The Extraordinary Story of New Zealand s National Anthems Exisle Publishing Archived from the original on 25 April 2013 Retrieved 17 July 2011 New Zealand s National Anthems Ministry for Culture and Heritage Retrieved 17 February 2008 Protocol for using New Zealand s National Anthems Ministry for Culture and Heritage Retrieved 17 February 2008 a b Derby Mark 22 October 2014 God save the Queen in te reo Maori Te Ara The Encyclopedia of New Zealand Retrieved 1 February 2019 History of God Save the Queen Ministry for Culture and Heritage Archived from the original on 29 December 2018 Retrieved 29 December 2018 Wood J R T April 2008 A matter of weeks rather than months The Impasse between Harold Wilson and Ian Smith Sanctions Aborted Settlements and War 1965 1969 Victoria British Columbia Trafford Publishing pp 1 8 ISBN 978 1 4251 4807 2 Buch Esteban May 2004 1999 Beethoven s Ninth A Political History Trans Miller Richard Chicago Illinois University of Chicago Press p 243 ISBN 978 0 226 07824 3 Buch Esteban May 2004 1999 Beethoven s Ninth A Political History Trans Miller Richard Chicago Illinois University of Chicago Press p 247 ISBN 978 0 226 07824 3 Fisher J L 2010 Pioneers settlers aliens exiles the decolonisation of white identity in Zimbabwe Canberra ANU E Press p 60 ISBN 978 1 921666 14 8 Zimbabwe athlete sings own anthem London BBC 19 July 2004 Retrieved 18 February 2012 SVG gov t opts to install new GG on Emancipation Day iWitness News 2 August 2019 Proclamation PDF assembly gov vc 20 January 2020 Archived PDF from the original on 28 December 2021 a b c South Africa Will Play Two Anthems Hereafter The New York Times New York 3 June 1938 p 10 Retrieved 31 October 2018 Sweden royal anthem nationalanthems info www nationalanthems info Retrieved 17 March 2021 Daisy ed 2006 A history of Icelandic literature University of Nebraska Press Lincoln pp 262 518 Ellas Shmaiai Emblhmata E8imotypia Greece Flags Emblems Etiquette www anemi lib uoc gr in Greek Athens Pyrsos Publishing 1934 p 244 Retrieved 31 August 2018 Since the arrival of Otto to Greece the German national anthem was formalised in Greece which is an imitation of the British one On the melody of God Save the King the following Greek lyrics were adapted God Save our King Otto the First Lengthen Strengthen his Reign God Save our King Hawaiʻi ponoʻi Archived from the original on 17 January 2018 Retrieved 2 June 2018 Granville Bantock 1913 Sixty Patriotic Songs of All Nations Ditson p xv His Music Orchestral Arrangements and Transcriptions Elgar Archived from the original on 11 October 1997 Retrieved 12 February 2014 Jerrold Northrop Moore Edward Elgar a Creative Life Oxford University Press Oxford 1987 Benjamin Britten The National Anthem Boosey com 21 August 2013 Archived from the original on 15 December 2018 Retrieved 12 February 2014 Bederova Julia 2002 Kremerata Baltica Happy Birthday Media notes New York Nonesuch Records 7559 79657 2 Range Matthias 2012 Music and Ceremonial at British Coronations From James I to Elizabeth II Cambridge University Press pp 256 257 ISBN 978 1 107 02344 4 Hopkins Jerry 1998 The Jimi Hendrix experience p 290 Arcade Publishing 1996 Queen Live www queenlive ca Retrieved 27 January 2021 A Night at the Opera 30th Anniversary CD DVD AllMusic Retrieved 26 February 2011 a b Fred Vermorel Judy Vermorel 1987 Sex Pistols the inside story p 83 Omnibus Press Retrieved 26 February 2011 Official Singles Chart The Sex Pistols God Save The Queen Retrieved 26 February 2011 Ska Revival Albums Bad Manners Albums Madness Band Albums the Beat Albums the Members Albums the Specials Albums the Toasters Albums General Books 2010 First recording of computer generated music created by Alan Turing restored The Guardian 26 September 2016 Retrieved 28 August 2017 Restoring the first recording of computer music Sound and vision blog British Library 13 September 2016 Retrieved 28 August 2017 Bentham Jeremy 2001 Quinn Michael ed Writings on the Poor Laws Vol I Oxford Clarendon Press p 136 ISBN 0199242321 Mathew Nicholas 2013 Political Beethoven Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 00589 1 p 151 Why some people don t sing the national anthem BBC NEWS Published 16 September 2015 Retrieved 11 November 2017 Jeremy Corbyn was right not to sing God Save the Queen It s rubbish The Telegraph Published 16 September 2015 Retrieved 11 November 2017 Time to ditch God Save The Queen The Guardian Auhthor Peter Tatchell Published 27 August 2008 Retrieved 11 November 2017 Do we need a new National Anthem The Republic 12 November 2017 Archived from the original on 12 November 2017 Retrieved 11 November 2017 Further reading EditScholes Percy A 1954 God Save the Queen The History and Romance of the World s First National Anthem Oxford University Press External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article God Save the King Wikimedia Commons has media related to God Save the King Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article National Anthems Dimont Charles May 1953 God Save the Queen the History of the National Anthem History Today 3 5 Retrieved 31 May 2020 National Anthem at the Royal Family website Streaming audio lyrics and information about God Save the Queen Department of Canadian Heritage Royal anthem page God Save Great George our King article discussing different versions of the lyrics Free sheet music of God Save the King from Cantorion org A Point of View Is it time for a new British national anthem BBC News Published 15 January 2016 Retrieved 17 July 2017 On some Philological Peculiarities in the English Authorized Version of the Bible By Thomas Watts Esq Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title God Save the King amp oldid 1145081181, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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