What did Philip Jones green plaque do at 14 Hamilton Terrace?


The Story
# Philip Jones at 14 Hamilton Terrace For thirty-six years, from 1964 until his death in 2000, Philip Jones made 14 Hamilton Terrace his creative sanctuary in the heart of St John's Wood, transforming this elegant Victorian townhouse into the beating heart of British brass chamber music. It was within these walls that the visionary musician and CBE recipient developed and refined the revolutionary concept of the Philip Jones Brass Ensemble, a groundbreaking group that shattered conventions by proving brass instruments could deliver intimate, nuanced chamber music rather than merely provide bombastic fanfare. From his home on this quiet North West London street, Jones nurtured generations of young musicians, hosted rehearsals, composed arrangements, and built an ensemble that would ultimately perform across the world's greatest concert halls and recording studios, fundamentally reshaping how audiences understood the expressive potential of brass. This address represents not just where a man lived, but where an entire musical movement took root—making 14 Hamilton Terrace the true birthplace of modern brass chamber music in Britain.
Location
14 Hamilton Terrace, NW8