Sir Daniel Eyers Godfrey (20 June 1868 – 20 July 1939) was a British music conductor and member of a musical dynasty that included his fatherDaniel Godfrey (1831–1903),[1][2] his uncleFred Godfrey,[3] ahd his grandfatherCharles Godfrey.[4] His son, also Dan Godfrey, was also a musician, station manager at BBC Manchester in the 1920s, and the first full-time conductor of the BBC Wireless Orchestra (1924–1926).[5]
He was born inLondon, a member of a distinguished family of English bandmasters, and son of thebandmaster of theGrenadier Guards - (to whom the waltzLes Grenadiers, Op. 207, byÉmile Waldteufel was dedicated.[6])
He founded theBournemouth Municipal Orchestra in 1893 and remained its leading conductor for 41 years, until 1934. Although he was contracted by the Bournemouth Corporation to conduct a seasonal band of 30 musicians, his ambition was to build a permanent symphony orchestra in the town.
Godfrey gave the first performance of the reconstruction of Vaughan Williams'sA London Symphony on 11 February 1915, and made acoustic recordings of excerpts of the work in 1923 and an abridged version in 1925. He also made electric recordings of Mozart'sJupiter Symphony, Dvořák'sSlavonic Dances, Debussy'sPetite Suite and Grieg'sSigurd Jorsalfar March with the London Symphony Orchestra.[7]
Godfrey and the Bournemouth Municipal Orchestra made several gramophone records for HMV from 1914 to 1930. He was knighted in 1922 'for valuable services to British music' largely as a result of a vigorous campaign on his behalf fromEthel Smyth.[8] He died in Bournemouth in 1939 aged 71 and is buried atSt Peter's Church.