Ginger writes that, around 1709, Grano joined the orchestra in the Haymarket. He was paid 10 shillings per performance twice a week, playing the rest of the time in salons in
Lincoln's Inn Fields or
St James's Square, where he earned between two and four guineas an evening. The earliest record of him as a trumpeter is around 1711, when the Duchess of Shrewsbury hired him to play during a reception in the Lord Chamberlain's apartment at
Kensington Palace. Grano returned to England around March 1720, playing his trumpet and flute compositions in several salons, including in
Drury Lane. During the same year, his name was added as a member of the orchestra of the proposed
Royal Academy of Music, with
George Frederick Handel as master of the orchestra and
John James Heidegger as manager. He set up home with John Jones, a violinist, in
Oxford Street, between Holles Street and Cavendish Street. By 1728 there is a record of Jones's wife living with them. ==Imprisonment==