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Published: Tuesday, 05 November 2024 at 15:37 PM


The rock band Ugly Rumours could so nearly have made it big in the early 1970s. Fronted by heartthrob singer and guitarist Tony Blair, the group announced themselves with a debut gig at Corpus Christi College, leading to a further five appearances at bars and junior common rooms across Oxford University.

At that point, however, Ugly Rumours folded, appreciating that they were, in fact, quite rubbish. Those six gigs were ‘probably six too many’, Blair would admit in a TV interview many years later, adding that ‘I always say to people that, if there had been social media around at the time I was at university, there’s no way I would ever have become prime minister.’

Former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair showing off his guitar skills. Pic: Pool/AFP via Getty Images – Pool/AFP via Getty Images

If Blair’s wayward musicianship had the potential to stop his political career in its tracks, governor Bill Clinton’s image was probably by no means harmed when he played a saxophone solo on the Arsenio Hall Show on US TV in 1992 – months later, he would be elected as the 42nd president of the United States. Blair and Clinton are just two of a number of world leaders in the course of history who have enjoyed not just listening to music, but actually playing it. Some have enjoyed showing off their skills in public; others have kept them largely to themselves. The competence levels, meanwhile, range from enthusiastic amateur to concert-hall pro. 

And so, in a year that has seen a veritable deluge of elections, from India to the United Kingdom and with the biggest of all about to take place in the US, it’s time to look, in chronological order, at some of history’s most musical monarchs, presidents and prime ministers…

History’s most musical politicians

Nero (Emperor of Rome, 54-68 AD): lyrist

Nero played the fiddle while Rome burned, they say. Except that he clearly didn’t, as violins didn’t come onto the scene until some 15 centuries after the Great Fire of Rome in 64AD. But if notions of the notorious emperor wielding the bow are far-fetched, Nero did at least have some sort of musical inclination.

Coins from the era depict him playing the lyre, and his love of the instrument is also described in Cassius Dio’s Roman History, though in none-too-glowing terms. The emperor won every lyre-playing contest, notes the historian, but that was only because everyone else was barred from taking part, Worse, when he accompanied himself singing, he ‘moved his whole audience to laughter and tears at once’.

Roman Emperor Nero playing lyre while Rome burns
Emperor Nero infamously playing the lyre while Rome burns. Pic: API/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images – API/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images

Cassius Dio even brings Nero’s plucky endeavours into a speech by Boudicca who, leading a revolt hundreds of miles away in chilly Britain, tartly observes that the Romans ‘are slaves to a lyre-player, and a poor one too’.

Frederick the Great (King of Prussia, 1740-86): flautist, composer

In contrast to Nero, the flute-playing Frederick II (‘the Great’) was well received by his audiences. Take, for instance, a description by Charles Burney of a performance in Potsdam in 1772. ‘The concert began by a German flute concerto in which his majesty executed the solo parts with great precision…,’ reported the writer. 

‘I was much pleased, and even surprised with the neatness of his execution in the allegros, as well as by his expression and feeling in the adagio.’ The Prussian king took his music seriously as both a player and a composer, surrounding himself with top talent such as fellow composer CPE Bach, flautist Johann Joachim Quantz and soprano Elisabeth Schmeling.

The latter later remembered that ‘He did not blow… like a King, but very well; he had a strong full sound and much virtuosity.’ His own father, however, was a little less charitable. When Frederick William I, ‘the soldier king’, described the young Fred as ‘a flutist and a poet’, it was not intended as a compliment…

Thomas Jefferson (US President, 1801-09): violinist, cellist

‘Nothing is more agreeable, and ornamental, than good music.’ So wrote George Washington, and the first president of the US’s thoughts were echoed by his fellow Founding Father Thomas Jefferson, who described music as ‘the favorite passion of my soul’.

Jefferson, the third US president, would practise the violin and cello for up to three hours a day as a young man, and would regularly participate in concerts while up at college. Though the passing years saw this commitment decline, he continued to keep a collection of violins and often played with his wife Martha, a fine keyboard player, in duet.

Ignacy Jan Paderewski (Prime minister of Poland, 1919): pianist, composer

On the Treaty of Versailles, by which the end of World War I was formally ratified on 29 June 1919, you’ll find the signature of Ignacy Jan Paderewski. The pianist and composer was at the political top table as a result of a remarkable, and rapid, career transition.