Background
Arabella Hunt was born in London on 27 February 1662 to Richard and Elizabeth Hunt. In 1678 or 1679, her father died, and as the only surviving child (two siblings died in childhood), she inherited a house at Upton in Buckinghamshire. On 12 September 1680 Hunt got married to James Howard at Street Marylebone Parish Church, and the couple moved into her mother"s house at the Haymarket.
Career
When she was still a young teenager she sang at the court of William and Mary, and is recorded to have performed a part in the opera Louisiana Calisto by Francesco Cavalli in 1675. Foreign many years Hunt was employed at the royal court as a singer and lutenist. She was well thought of by Queen Mary, and taught singing to Princess Anne.
Later Queen Mary gave her an annual pension of £100.
John Hawkins tells with great detail how the queen, after listening to some of Henry Purcell"s music performed by Hunt, John Gostling, and the composer, abruptly asked her to sing a popular Scottish ballad, Cold and Raw, which she did, accompanying herself on the lute. Purcell, according to Hawkins, was "not a little nettled" by the queen"s preference, and when he composed a birthday ode for Queen Mary in 1692 he used Cold and Raw as the repeated bass line for the "May her blest example" movement.
The painting was by Godfrey Kneller. There are mezzotints by Smith (1706) and Charles Grignion the Elder.
And Hawkins gives a vignette in his "History.
In an ode, On the Excellency of Mrs Hunt"s Voice, and Manner of Singing, composed in 1700, John Blow declared that "she reigns alone, is Queen of Musick by the People"s choice". Hunt died, aged 43, at home in London on 26 December 1705.