VAUGHAN WILLIAMS: Symphony No. 4 / Norfolk Rhapsody No. 1 / Flos Campi
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Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958) Symphony No. 4 Flos Campi Norfolk Rhapsody No. 1 Ralph Vaughan Williams was born in the Gloucestershire village of Down...
Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958)
Symphony No. 4 Flos Campi Norfolk Rhapsody No. 1
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. By now he
had begun to make a reputation for himself as a
composer, not least with the first performance in 1910
of A Sea Symphony, setting words by Walt Whitman,
and his Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis in the
same year. At the outbreak of war in 1914 he enlisted
at once in the Royal Army Medical Corps as a private.
This 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 place 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 immediate cause that led to the start of work
on Symphony No.4 was a newspaper article describing
a 'modern' European symphony, and Vaughan
Williams continued work on it intermittently over the
following years. At first, as always, he was able to rely
on the advice and support of his friend Gustav Holst,
who died in 1934 and was never to hear the finished
work. The first performance took place in April 1935,
given by the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Adrian
Boult. It had a mixed reception. Some found in it a
reflection of the disturbed conditions of the time,
others were critical of what seemed a break with the
composer's earlier style. Vaughan Williams himself, as
so often with his new compositions, expressed mixed
feelings about it. In his A Musical Autobiography he
admits to borrowing the opening of the symphony from
Beethoven's Symphony No.9, but has no regrets,
stressing that a composer should make sure that what
he writes is the right thing to say at that moment. He
was later to insist that whatever he had written in the
new symphony was certainly what he had meant at the
time. The symphony was dedicated to Arnold Bax.
The disturbingly stark opening of the symphony
leads to an appassionato second subject. The
movement eventually reaches tranquillity in the final
Lento, discord now resolved. Muted brass introduce the
Andante moderato, followed by the woodwind and
then strings, with a violin melody over the plucked
notes of the lower strings. Solo oboe, clarinet and
bassoon emerge, melodic lines contrapuntally
interwoven, with increased prominence for the interval
of a fourth, first heard at the outset. After a tense
climax the music unwinds, its Molto tranquillo
conclusion led by the flute. The Scherzo offers
immediate contrast with its jaunty rhythms, answered
in the Trio, by the theme for bassoon, double bassoon
and tuba, before the Scherzo resumes its course. The
Finale follows without a break, bringing a brass
marching accompaniment, and, as in the other
movements, motivic reminiscences. The triumphant
progress is interrupted by a characteristic hymn-like
passage for the strings, before the impetus is restored,
leading to the fugal epilogue, its subject announced by
trombones and tuba. This is developed, together with
other motivic elements from the movement, before the
whole ends in a return to the opening of the whole
work.
Vaughan Williams's first Norfolk Rhapsody, based
on two folk-songs, was written in 1906 and first
performed in the same year, later to be revised. Two
further rhapsodies, written in the following year, were
withdrawn. The sustained notes of muted violins are
punctuated by flute and oboe, before the rhapsodic
entry of the clarinet, followed by the solo viola, 'freely
as if improvising'. The first theme is The Captain's
Apprentice to which the lively Bold Young Apprentice
provides a contrast. The work ends in the tranquillity of
the Norfolk countryside, where it had started.
Scored for solo viola, small orchestra and wordless
chorus, the suite Flos Campi (The Flower of the Field)
was completed and first performed in 1925, with the
great viola-player Lionel Tertis, to whom it is
dedicated. The superscriptions to each of the six
movements, taken from The Song of Songs, indicate the
source of the composition, however secular their
interpretation. The first movement is prefaced by the
words Sicut Lilium inter spinas, sic amica mea inter
filias ... Fulcite me floribus, stipate me malis, quia
amore langueo (As the lily among thorns, so is my love
among the daughters ... Stay me with flagons, comfort
me with apples; for I am sick of love). It will be noticed
that the words of the Authorised Version of the Bible
do not accurately translate the Vulgate, but the
published score includes both versions. Oboe and viola
intertwine in the bitonal opening, after which flute and
viola join together, before the music moves on to a
climax, with the entry of the chorus. Jam enim hiems
transiit; imber abiit, et recessit; Flores apparuerunt in
terra nostra, Tempus putationis advenit; Vox turturis
audita est in terra nostra (For lo, the winter is past, the
rain is over and gone, the flowers appear on the earth,
the time of the singing of birds is come, and the voice
of the turtle is heard in our land) is a movement of
rhapsodic meditation on the coming of spring. A viola
cadenza is continued into the third movement,
Quaesivi quem diligit anima mea; quaesivi illum, et
non inveni ... 'Adjuro vos, filiae Jerusalem, si
inveneritis dilectum meum, ut nuntietis et quia amore
langueo' ... 'Quo abiit dilectus tuus, O pulcherrima
mulierum? Quo declinavit dilectus tuus? et quaeremus
eum tecum.' (I sought him whom my soul loveth, but I
found him not ... 'I charge you, O daughters of
Jerusalem, if ye find my beloved, that ye tell him that I
am sick of love' ... 'Whither is thy beloved gone, O
thou fairest among women? Whither is thy beloved
turned aside? that we may seek him with thee). En
lectulum Solomonis sexaginta fortes ambiunt ... omnes
tenentes gladios, et ad bellum doctissimi (Behold his
bed (palanquin), which is Solomon's, three score
valiant men are about it ... They all hold swords, being
expert in war) introduces a march, suiting the text. The
fifth movement, Revertere, revertere Sulamitis!
Revertere, revertere ut intueamur te ... Quam pulchri
sunt gressus tui in calceamentis, filia principis (Return,
return, O Shulamite, Return, return, that we may look
upon thee ... How beautiful are thy feet with shoes, O
Prince's daughter), brings a passionate climax, until
finally, with Pone me ut signaculum super cor tuum
(Set me as a seal upon thy heart) the viola offers a
resolution of great simplicity, a theme taken up by the
orchestra, leading to the return of the opening, on
which the seal is set in conclusion.
Keith Anderson
Symphony No. 4 in F minor (more info)
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I. Allegro - 8:30
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II. Andante moderato - 10:10
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III. Scherzo: Allegro molto - 5:05
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IV. Finale con epilogo fugato: Allegro molto - 8:25
Norfolk Rhapsody No. 1 in E minor (more info)
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Norfolk Rhapsody No. 1 in E minor - 10:14
Flos Campi (more info)
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Lento: As the lily among the thorns - 2:31
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Andante con moto: For, lo, the winter is past - 3:07
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Lento: I sought him whom my soul loveth - 2:56
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Moderato all marcia: Behold his bed, which is Solomon's - 1:45
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Andante quasi lento: Return, return, O Shulamite - 3:20
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Moderato tranquillo: Set me as a seal upon this heart - 6:31