VAUGHAN WILLIAMS: Songs of Travel / The House of Life
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Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958) Songs of Travel The House of Life Four Poems by Fredegond Shove Ralph Vaughan Williams was born in the Gloucestershire...
Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958)
Songs of Travel The House of Life Four Poems by Fredegond Shove
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
significantly, 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 folkmusic
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 early songs of Vaughan Williams reflect the
contemporary interest in a form to which Parry and
Stanford had given much encouragement. Songs of
Travel, settings of poems by Robert Louis Stevenson,
had its first performance in 1904 and was published in
two volumes in 1905 and 1907, with the ninth song only
appearing posthumously, in 1960. The work, a unified
song-cycle, in spite of the method of its first publication,
opens with the robust marching bass of The Vagabond,
probably the best known of the set. Let beauty awake has
an accompaniment pattern of arpeggios, with the pace
quickening for The Roadside Fire. Youth and Love
brings echoes of the first song of the cycle and, at its
climax, of The Roadside Fire. In Dreams introduces a
more chromatic element into the vocal line, with its
syncopated accompaniment, and there is a certain
radiance about The Infinite Shining Heavens, gently
accompanied by arpeggiated chords. Whither must I
wander?, first published separately in 1902, returns to
the key of the first song and is followed by Bright is the
ring of words, accompanied by boldly resonant chords,
supported at first by octaves in the lowest register of the
keyboard. It is left to the posthumously published I have
trod the upward and the downward slope to form a
summary and conclusion, with its references to The
Vagabond and Bright is the ring of words.
The House of Life, settings of six sonnets by Dante
Gabriel Rossetti, was published and first performed in
1904 in the Bechstein Hall recital that included Songs of
Travel. The poetic language of Rossetti is more elusive
than Stevenson's, reflecting Preraphaelite sensibilities
that had a particular contemporary appeal. The first
song, Love-Sight, ends with an extended postlude in
which thematic material is further developed. Silent
Noon, which had been performed in an earlier recital, is
accompanied by chords of rich sonority, then shifting in
key and pace, before a brief passage of quasi recitative
and a return to the mood of the opening. Love's
Minstrels allows more dramatic depiction of elements in
the text, while Heart's Haven makes a less immediate
effect. Death in Love opens with a summons to
attention, a figure that returns and is echoed in the final
postlude. The cycle ends with Love's Last Gift, in which
the composer responds sensitively to the verbal imagery,
with a recurrent figure that leaves a familiar fingerprint.
Linden Lea, a setting of words by the Dorset dialect
poet William Barnes, remains the best known of all the
songs of Vaughan Williams. It was written in 1901 and
appeared in the first number of The Vocalist, on the
recommendation of Stanford, to be heard in London for
the first time in 1902. As with all these early songs,
however, the settings lack the wit and facility of Britten,
with accompaniments that perhaps reflect the relative
ability of Vaughan Williams as a pianist.
The settings by Vaughan Williams of Four Poems
by Fredegond Shove, published and first performed in
1925, mark a considerable development in technique
and maturity. Fredegond Shove was the wife of a
Cambridge professor of economics, daughter of Frederic
Maitland, professor at Cambridge of the laws of
England, and niece of the composer's wife Adeline. The
cold desolation of Motion and Stillness is suggested in
the open fifths of the accompaniment, contrasted with
the full triads that provide a pattern of accompaniment
for Four Nights, with its passing of the seasons. The
narrative of death in The New Ghost, more Freund Hein
than grim reaper, opens with a passage for
unaccompanied voice, with the piano using the upper
register, and then, at the end, ascending into a far distant
land. The group of songs ends with The Water Mill, for
which the accompaniment depicts the turn of the millwheel
and other homely details of the poem, illustrative
treatment largely absent from the early songs.
Keith Anderson
Songs of Travel (more info)
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The Vagabond - 3:24
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Let Beauty awake - 1:57
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The Roadside Fire - 2:17
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Youth and Love - 3:34
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In Dreams - 2:18
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The Infinite Shining Heavens - 2:15
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Whither must I wander? - 4:14
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Bright is the ring of words - 2:10
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I have trod the upward and the downward slope - 1:54
The House of Life (more info)
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Love-sight - 4:29
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Silent Noon - 4:09
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Love’s Minstrels - 5:21
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Heart’s Haven - 3:46
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Death in Love - 4:28
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Love’s Last Gift - 4:15
Linden Lea (more info)
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Linden Lea - 2:44
4 Poems by Fredegond Shove (more info)
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Motion and Stillness - 2:01
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Four Nights - 3:33
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The New Ghost - 5:15
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The Water Mill - 3:04