Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958) Symphony No.5 in D major Symphony No.9 in E minor Ralph Vaughan Williams was born in the Gloucestershire village of Down...
Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958)
Symphony No.5 in D major
Symphony No.9 in E minor
Ralph Vaughan Williams was born in the
Gloucestershire village of Down Ampney in 1872, the son of a clergyman, His ancestry on
both his father' s and mother's side was of some intellectual distinction. His father was
descended from a family eminent in the law, while his maternal grandfather was a Wedgwood
and his grandmother a Darwin. On the death of his father in 1875 the family moved to live
with his mother' s father at Leith Hill Place in Surrey. As a child Vaughan Williams
learned the piano and the violin and received a conventional upper middle class education
at Charterhouse, after which he delayed entry to Cambridge, preferring instead to study at
The Royal College of Music, where his teachers included Hubert Parry and Walter Parratt,
later Master of The Queen's Musick, both soon to be knighted. In 1892 he took up his place
at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he read History, but took composition lessons from
Charles Wood. After graduation in both History and Music, he returned to The Royal
College, where he studied composition with Stanford, and, perhaps more significant, became
a friend of a fellow-student, Gustav Holst. The friendship with Holst was to prove of
great importance in frank exchanges of views on one another' s compositions in the years
that followed.
In 1897 Vaughan Williams married and
took The opportunity to visit Berlin, where he had lessons from Max Bruch and widened his
musical experience. In England he turned his attention to the collection of folk-music in
various regions of the country , an interest that materially influenced The shape of his
musical language. In 1908 he went to Paris to take lessons, particularly in orchestration,
from Ravel, and had by now begun to make a reputation for himself as a composer, not least
with the first performance in 1910 of his first symphony, >A Sea Symphony, setting words by Walt Whittnan, and
his Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis in the same year. The even tenor of his life was
interrupted by the war, when he enlisted at once in the Royal Army Medical Corps as a
private. 1914 was also the year of the London Symphony and of his rhapsodic work for
violin and orchestra, The Lark Ascending. Three years later, after service in Salonica
that seemed to him ineffective, he took a commission in the Royal Garrison Artillery and
was posted to France. There he was also able to make some use of his abilities as a
musician.
After the war Vaughan Williams
returned to the Royal College of Music, now as a professor of composition, a position he
retained until 1938. In these years he came to occupy a commanding position in the musical
life of the country, with a series of compositions that seemed essentially English, the
apparent successor of Elgar, although his musical language was markedly different. The war
of 1939 brought the challenge of composition for the cinema, with notable scores for The
49th Parallel in 1940 and a number of other films, culminating in 1949 in his music for
the film Scott of the Antarctic, the basis
of the seventh of his symphonies. Other works of the last decade of his life included two
more symphonies, the opera The Pilgrim's Progress, a violin sonata and concertos for
harmonica and for tuba, remarkable adventures for an octogenarian.
The first performance of the fifth of
the symphonies, Symphony No.5 in D major,
took place at a Promenade Concert in London at the Royal Albert Hall on 24th June 1943,
under the direction of the composer. Vaughan Williams had started work on the new symphony
in 1938, the year of his Serenade to Music, and continued over the following years, among
the inevitable distractions of wartime and commissioned film-scores. For some time he had
been working intermittently on an opera based on John Bunyan's A Pilgrim's Progress. The conditions of war-time
made further work on any such project unrealistic and it was not until an invitation of
1951 for the Festival of Britain that the opera, or Morality, as he called it, was
completed and staged at Covent Garden. Nevertheless there was material from the opera that
could be used, providing elements of the first, third and last movements, to be treated
symphonically.
The new symphony was scored for an
orchestra of normal dimensions, with double woodwind, the second flute alternating with
piccolo, cor anglais, pairs of horns, trumpets and tenor trombones, bass trombone, timpani
and strings. Considering the period of its composition and the relative stridency of
elements of the Fourth Symphony, it is
noticeable that an aura of tranquillity predominates in much of the Fifth Symphony. The work was dedicated, 'Without
permission and with the sincerest flattery to Jean Sibelius, whose great example is worthy
of imitation, a tribute which, at the time, might have seemed unfashionable. The first
movement Preludio opens with some harmonic ambiguity, the evocative French horn motif
underpinned by a sustained C, a flattened seventh of the tonic key, in the lower strings.
A lyrical melody, suggesting a pentatonic or modal outline with concomitant pastoral
implications, is heard, bringing shifts of tonality reaching a shaft of gentle sunlight in
E major, marked Tranquillo, a theme to be used in the later opera. The Allegro development
section, at first in E flat, ends in the return of the French horns' motif, seeming again
to pierce the mist, as the music moves forward to a dynamic climax with the second
subject, which now clearly invites identification with the Alleluia from the composer's
hymn-setting For all the saints who from their labours rest, the melody Sine nomine. Calm
descends again and the movement ends with the French horns' motif, finally muted. In the
Scherzo muted strings introduce pentatonic figuration, before wind instruments add
fragments of melody of another kind, as one thematic element follows another, bringing an
interruption from the oboe and a jaunty passage that might even suggest for a moment the
difficulties encountered by the sorcerer' s apprentice. A sudden change of rhythm leads,
in the end, to the return of the mood, texture and thematic material of the opening. The
principal theme of the Romanza, heard from the cor anglais over gentle string chords, is
used in the later opera, where it has the words, from Bunyan, 'He hath given me rest by
his sorrow and life by his death'. Cor anglais and oboe solos intermingle, as one echoes
the other and other woodwind instruments join them. A dynamic climax is followed by the
re- appearance of elements of the principal theme from the French horn, followed by the
trumpet, and there is music of greater intensity, before a hush descends, allowing a solo
violin its rhapsodic comment, followed by a muted French horn, before divided strings
bring the movement to a serene conclusion. The last movement, a Passacaglia, allows the
cellos to introduce the ground on which the following sections are to be built, although
the form is treated with some freedom. The first violin introduces a hymn-like
countermelody and the music moves on to livelier syncopation and more varied material,
often seemingly allusive in its references. A chord, reinforced by the brass, brings the
ground, against tremolo strings, to the clarinet and the flute, but before long the music
has moved forward to its inevitable goal, the contemplative mood suggested by the
Preludio, introduced first by a triumphant horn-call, transformed from its earlier less
assertive appearance, with its opening violin theme now demonstrating association with the
passacaglia countermelody, on which the gently meditative coda is based.
Vaughan Williams's first wife,
Adeline, had died in 1951, at the age of eighty. In 1953, shortly after the successful
launching of the Sinfonia Antartica in Manchester and in London, he married his second
wife, Ursula Wood, the widow of a Royal Artillery officer, who had already provided texts
for him and was later to be his biographer. The following year brought the first
performance of his Tuba Concerto and a series of lectures in Canada and the United States
at leading universities. By early 1955 he had completed his Eighth Symphony, a work he
dedicated to Barbirolli, who conducted the first performance with the Halle Orchestra in
Manchester on 2nd May 1956. In the same year Vaughan Williams started work on his final
symphony.
The Symphony No.9 in E minor was
dedicated to the Royal Philharmonic Society and first performed by the Royal Philharmonic
Orchestra under Malcolm Sargent in London on 2nd April 1958. Vaughan Williams still led an
astonishingly active life. With his wife, he took a holiday in Ischia with Susana and
William Walton, returning to work on a new opera, receive an honorary doctorate from
Nottingham University and attend the Cheltenham Festival, while continuing active social
and musical activities. His earlier opera Sir John in Love was staged at Sadler's Wells at
the end of July and on 5th August he heard again the Ninth Symphony at a Promenade
Concert, performed by the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Malcolm Sargent. The work, now
receiving a generally more favourable critical reception than had at first been the case,
was to be recorded towards the end of August by the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Adrian
Boult. On 26th August, the day of the recording, Vaughan Williams suffered a heart attack
and died. The death of one who had long seemed a permanent feature of English music was
widely mourned and his ashes were later laid to rest in Westminster Abbey.
The last symphony is innovative in its
scoring. Double woodwind is augmented by a piccolo, cor anglais, bass clarinet and double
bassoon, with three saxophones, while a brass section of four horns, two trumpets, three
trombones and tuba also finds a place for a B flat flügelhorn. There is a large
percussion section that includes glockenspiel, xylophone, side drum, tenor drum, bass
drum, cymbals, triangle, a very large gong, tam-tam, deep bells, celesta and timpani,
with two harps and the necessary string section. It has been pointed out by Michael
Kennedy and in some detail by Alain Frogley that the symphony had its genesis in part in
an evocation of Salisbury, of the Plain and Stonehenge
and of Thomas Hardy's Wessex and his novel Tess of the
d'Urbervilles. As in certain other Vaughan Williams symphonies, no traces of
this original programme were retained, but from the surviving sketches Alain Frogley has
identified a close parallel in the second movement with the final scenes of Hardy's novel,
as Tess and her husband Angel Clare approach Stonehenge, a true Temple of the Winds, by
night, resting there, but, as dawn breaks, interrupted by the arrival of the police and
the arrest of Tess for the murder of her seducer (qv. Music and Letters, LXVIII, No.1).
Her death at the hands of the hangman is suggested, as the movement draws to a close.
The
first movement opens against a sustained tonic, as a sombre melody rises in the lower
register of brass and woodwind. Harp chords accompany gentler thematic material in G
minor, introduced by the clarinets, and this returns in fuller form, to be heard again in
recapitulation, when it is entrusted to a solo violin, before the movement ends as it had
begun. The flügelhorn, the timbre of which had added a darker colouring to the first
movement, presents the opening theme of the Andante sostenuto, which Alain Frogley
suggests as evoking the sound of the wind, as it blows through the lonely monument where
Tess and Angel Clare rest. A second 'barbaric march' theme intrudes, alternating with the
first theme and then further developed. It is the first theme that precedes a fourth
thematic element, identified in the composer's sketches with Tess herself, while further
passages suggest a mood of overhanging fate, the inescapable doom that has overshadowed
Tess's life and now leads to her death, as the bell tolls for her. The mood changes at
once with the Scherzo, its jaunty and ironic first theme presented by one of the
saxophones, instruments that come into their own in later sections of the movement, not
least in a passage with the direction quasi choral, then taken up by the strings. The
saxophones bring the Scherzo to an end, followed only by the insistent rhythm of the side
drum. The complex final movement starts with a singing melody for the first violins, with
imitative entries following from the violas, second violins and first clarinet in turn. A
section marked Poco animato follows, with a melody proposed by a French horn and echoed by
the flüge1horn, bringing a characteristic falling interval that is to return. An Andante
sostenuto brings back a derivative of the opening cantilena, introduced by the bass
clarinet and lower strings, and a more direct version of the theme from the oboe,
accompanied by the harps. There is continued contrast in what follows, with one thematic
element derived from another in alternating episodes. A second section of the movement
starts with a viola melody, imitated by the violins and further developed. The music
reaches its grandiose climax in the final Largamente, leading to a confident E major
chord, dying away into the distance.
This digital recording was made and
edited using 20bit technology. It was subsequently dithered down to 16bit using the Apogee
UV22 algorithm. which retains the benefits of 20bit resolution. 20bit recordings are
sonically superior to those in 16bit due to the increase in the signal-to-noise ratio
which is inherent in a higher bit-rate recording. This enhanced quality is evident to the
listener with an increase in dynamic range capability and a recorded sound which captures
more detail within the musical texture.
Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra
The Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra was
founded on 22nd May 1893 by Dan Godfrey. the son of a Victorian band-master. At first it
was known as the Bournemouth Municipal Orchestra and provided music for one of the most
prosperous resorts on the South coast of England. Dan Godfrey served as principal
conductor for the next forty years and established one of the most famous orchestras in
Great Britain. Since then the orchestra has worked under a succession of distinguished
Principal Conductors, the most recent being Sir Charles Groves. Constantin Silvestri.
Paavo Berglund and Rudolf Barshai. In September 1988 the American conductor Andrew Litton
was appointed Principal Conductor, with Kees Bakels as Principal Guest Conductor. In 1993
the orchestra celebrated its centenary; and during the ensuing year undertook its first
tour of the USA. The visit consolidated a touring history which has included Russia, Hong
Kong. Spain. France, Switzerland, Finland, Germany. Czecho-Slovakia, and Poland. The
Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra has recorded for a number of labels, with highly acclaimed
interpretations of the complete Tchaikovsky symphonies and the complete cycle of Vaughan
Williams symphonies for Naxos.
Kees Bakels
Kees Bakels was born in Amsterdam,
beginning his musical career as a violinist. He studied conducting at the Amsterdam
Conservatory and at the Academy Chigiana in Siena. During his studies he became Assistant
Conductor of the Amsterdam Philharmonic Orchestra and subsequently held the position of
Associate Conductor with that orchestra. At the same time he became Principal Guest
Conductor of the Netherlands Chamber Orchestra, which he has directed in festivals in
Finland, Belgium and Spain. Kees Bakels has conducted all the major Dutch orchestras, as
well as orchestras in Europe and Russia. He has also directed many concerts with the
Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra and in 1985 conducted his first London Promenade concert
with the National youth Orchestra of Great Britain. From the beginning of his career, Kees
Bakels has concentrated as much on opera as on the symphonic repertoire and has conducted
English National Opera productions of Aida
and Fidelio and productions by the Welsh
National Opera of La Bohème and Die Zauberflote. He has also specialised in the
performance of lesser known operas by Mascagni and Leoncavallo and earlier works by Verdi
in the concert-hall, broadcasting studio and opera-house. He became Principal Guest
Conductor of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra in September 1988. In 1998 he was
appointed Music Director Designate of the Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra, with an
inaugural concert under his direction in August 1998 in the new Petronas Hall in Kuala
Lumpur.