Untitled Document-4 PDF
Untitled Document-4 PDF
]
Ralph Vaughan
Williams
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
"Vaughan Williams" redirects here. For the cricketer, see Vaughan
Williams (cricketer). For the surname and other holders of the surname,
see Vaughan Williams (surname).
[n 1]
Ralph Vaughan Williams OM (/reɪf vɔːn/ ( listen); 12 October
Contents
Welsh descent; many of them went into the law or the Church. The
judges Sir Edward and Sir Roland Vaughan Williams were respectively
Darwin.[n
3]
Leith Hill Place, Surrey, Vaughan Williams's childhood home
Wotton, Surrey.[5]
The children were under the care of a nurse, Sara
Wager, who instilled in them not only polite manners and good
examinations.[8]
which were rife among his fellow pupils.[9] From there he moved on to
avoid upsetting the family. His views on religion did not affect his love of
the Authorised Version of the Bible, the beauty of which, in the words of
Ursula Vaughan Williams in her 1964 biography of the composer,
from trying, they had allowed him to go to the RCM.[n 4] Nevertheless, a
much from them and formed lifelong friendships with several.[17] Among
married.[18][n 5]
Charles Villiers Stanford, Vaughan Williams's second composition teacher
at the RCM
relationship, "Holst declared that his music was influenced by that of his
organ was not his preferred instrument,[n 6] the only post he ever held
later undertakings.[24]
Vaughan Williams lived in Cheyne Walk, Chelsea from 1905 to 1929
Bruch.[2]
On their return they settled in London, originally in Westminster
1953.[2]
love of Tudor and Stuart music, helped shape his compositional style for
the tone poem In the Fen Country (1904) and the Norfolk Rhapsody No.
Ravel took few pupils, and was known as a demanding taskmaster for
Paris in the winter of 1907–1908, working with him four or five times
forty-three years after the event.[36] The degree to which the French
declared Vaughan Williams to be "my only pupil who does not write my
himself said that Ravel had helped him escape from "the heavy
Fanta
sia
on a
Them
e by
Thom
as
Tallis
MEN
U
0:00
Perfo
rmed
by
the
US
Army
Band
string
s
Problems playing
this file? See
media help.
In the years between his return from Paris in 1908 and the outbreak of
the First World War in 1914, Vaughan Williams increasingly established
himself as a figure in British music. For a rising composer it was
important to receive performances at the big provincial music festivals,
two of the largest and most prestigious festivals, with the premieres of
the Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis at the Three Choirs Festival
in Gloucester Cathedral in September and A Sea Symphony at the
critics of the time, J. A. Fuller Maitland of The Times and Samuel
Langford of The Manchester Guardian, were strong in their praise. The
former wrote of the fantasia, "The work is wonderful because it seems to
lift one into some unknown region of musical thought and feeling.
Throughout its course one is never sure whether one is listening to
symphony "definitely places a new figure in the first rank of our English
lost many comrades and friends, including the young composer George
Butterworth.[46]
In 1917 Vaughan Williams was commissioned as a
director of music for the British First Army until demobilised in February
1919.[4]
During the war Vaughan Williams stopped writing music, and after
returning to civilian life he took some time before feeling ready to
compose new works. He revised some earlier pieces, and turned his
attention to other musical activities. In 1919 he accepted an invitation
from Hugh Allen, who had succeeded Parry as director, to teach
composition at the RCM; he remained on the faculty of the college for
of the Bach Choir, London. It was not until 1922 that he produced a
major new composition, A Pastoral Symphony; the work was given its
first performance in London in May conducted by Adrian Boult and its
American premiere in New York in December conducted by the
composer.[51]
Vaughan Williams in 1922
(1925).[52]
town.[53]
Pennsylvania.[5] The texts of his lectures were published under the title
National Music in 1934; they sum up his artistic and social credo more
fully than anything he had published previously, and remained in print
blow to Vaughan Williams; the two had been each other's closest
friends and musical advisers since their college days. After Holst's death
Vaughan Williams was glad of the advice and support of other friends
and the Fourth Symphony (1935) surprised the public and critics.[30]
interpretations, and insisted that the work was absolute music, with no
programme of any kind; nonetheless, some of those close to him,
including Foss and Boult, remained convinced that something of the
Wood.[59] She was a poet, and had approached the composer with a
proposed scenario for a ballet. Despite their both being married, and a
four-decade age-gap, they fell in love almost from their first meeting;
they maintained a secret love affair for more than a decade.[60] Ursula
became the composer's muse, helper and London companion, and later
helped him care for his ailing wife. Whether Adeline knew, or suspected,
that Ursula and Vaughan Williams were lovers is uncertain, but the
relations between the two women were of warm friendship throughout
the years they knew each other. The composer's concern for his first
wife never faltered, according to Ursula, who admitted in the 1980s that
she had been jealous of Adeline, whose place in Vaughan Williams's life
During the Second World War Vaughan Williams was active in civilian
war work, chairing the Home Office Committee for the Release of
Interned Alien Musicians, helping Myra Hess with the organisation of the
daily National Gallery concerts, serving on a committee for refugees
from Nazi oppression, and on the Council for the Encouragement of
Music and the Arts (CEMA), the forerunner of the Arts Council.[5]
In
1940 he composed his first film score, for the propaganda film 49th
Parallel. [61]
raids all three slept in the same room in adjacent beds, holding hands
for comfort.[62]
celebrate the end of the war, Thanksgiving for Victory, was marked by
what the critic Edward Lockspeiser called the composer's characteristic
were respectful,[69] but the work did not catch the opera-going public's
following year, but was still not a great success. Vaughan Williams
commented to Ursula, "They don't like it, they won't like it, they don't
want an opera with no heroine and no love duets—and I don't care, it's
left the Dorking house and they took a lease of 10 Hanover Terrace,
Regent's Park, London. It was the year of Queen Elizabeth II's
coronation; Vaughan Williams's contribution was an arrangement of the
Old Hundredth psalm tune, and a new setting of "O taste and see" from
and in 1954 he visited the US once again, having been invited to lecture
at Cornell and other universities and to conduct. He received an
enthusiastic welcome from large audiences, and was overwhelmed at
state occasion".[75]
Rhymer.[76]
The predominant works of the 1950s were his three last
Kennedy cites the masque Job and the Fifth and Ninth
are not among his better known compositions.[88] Some of his finest
and piano.[4]
composer and academic Elliott Schwartz wrote (1964), "It may be said
with truth that Vaughan Williams, Sibelius and Prokofieff are the
symphonists of this century".[90] Although Vaughan Williams did not
complete the first of them until he was thirty-eight years old, the nine
symphonies span nearly half a century of his creative life. In his 1964
analysis of the nine, Schwartz found it striking that no two of the
rather than numbers,[n 12] form a sub-group within the nine, having
A Sea Symphony (1910), the only one of the series to include a part for
full choir, differs from most earlier choral symphonies in that the choir
sings in all the movements.[4][94] The extent to which it is a true
the most part not overtly pictorial in its presentation of London. Vaughan
Williams insisted that it is "self-expressive, and must stand or fall as
elements", is "very much like the city itself".[100] Vaughan Williams said
in his later years that this was his favourite of the symphonies.[n 13]
The last of the first group is A Pastoral Symphony (1921). The first three
movements are for orchestra alone; a wordless solo soprano or tenor
voice is added in the finale. Despite the title the symphony draws little
on the folk-songs beloved of the composer, and the pastoral landscape
evoked is not a tranquil English scene, but the French countryside
ravaged by war.[102] Some English musicians who had not fought in the
First World War misunderstood the work and heard only the slow tempi
and quiet tone, failing to notice the character of a requiem in the music
and mistaking the piece for a rustic idyll.[n 14] Kennedy comments that it
was not until after the Second World War that "the spectral 'Last Post' in
the second movement and the girl's lamenting voice in the finale" were
required are not large by the standards of the first half of the 20th
century, although the Fourth calls for an augmented woodwind section
The composer firmly contradicted any notions that the work was
programmatical in any respect, and Kennedy calls attempts to give the
work "a meretricious programme ... a poor compliment to its musical
symphony.[111] Alain Frogley in Grove argues that though the work can
ovation at its premiere,[115] but at first the critics were not sure what to
make of it, and it took some years for it to be generally ranked alongside
Grove lists more than thirty works by Vaughan Williams for orchestra or
band over and above the symphonies. They include two of his most
popular works—the Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis (1910,
revised 1919), and The Lark Ascending, originally for violin and piano
Vaughan Williams wrote four concertos: for violin (1925), piano (1926),
oboe (1944) and tuba (1954); another concertante piece is his Romance
for harmonica, strings and piano (1951).[30] None of these works has
mentioned above.[n 16] Bartók was among the admirers of the Piano
masterpiece.[119]
In addition to the music for Scott of the Antarctic, Vaughan Williams
composed incidental music for eleven other films, from 49th Parallel
was not drawn to the solo piano and wrote little for it.[n 17] From his
mature years, there survive for standard chamber groupings two string
quartets (1908–1909, revised 1921; and 1943–1944), a "phantasy"
string quintet (1912), and a sonata for violin and piano (1954). The first
quartet was written soon after Vaughan Williams's studies in Paris with
the same period as the Sixth Symphony, and has something of that
work's severity and anguish.[122] The quintet (1912) was written two
years after the success of the Tallis Fantasia, with which it has elements
in common, both in terms of instrumental layout and the mood of rapt
Between the mid-1890s and the late 1950s Vaughan Williams set more
than eighty poems for voice and piano accompaniment. The earliest to
survive is "A Cradle Song", to Coleridge's words, from about 1894.[30]
The songs include many that have entered the repertory, such as
"Linden Lea" (1902), "Silent Noon" (1904) and the song cycles Songs of
Williams the human voice was "the oldest and greatest of musical
career.[130] Many composers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries
Vaughan Williams's later songs are less well known; Fuller singles out
the cycle Three Poems by Walt Whitman, a largely dark work, as too
often overlooked by singers and critics.[132] For some of his songs the
songs".[132]
Statue of Vaughan Williams by William Fawke, Dorking
and "Sine nomine" "For All the Saints".[133] Grove lists a dozen more,
(1928)[30] and the motets O Clap Your Hands(1920), Lord, Thou hast
been our Refuge (1921) and O Taste and See (1953, first performed at
and student groups, which sometimes led to the staging of his operas
themselves."[140]
students at the Royal College of Music, and the work is rarely staged by
Old King Cole (1923) is a humorous ballet. The score, which makes
liberal use of folk-song melodies, was thought by critics to be strikingly
modern when first heard. Kennedy comments that the music "is not a
major work but it is fun." The piece has not been seen frequently since
its premiere, but was revived in a student production at the RCM in
1937.[143]
The only work that the composer designated as an opera is the comedy
Sir John in Love (1924–1928). It is based on Shakespeare's The Merry
Wives of Windsor. Folk song is used, though more discreetly than in
Hugh the Drover, and the score is described by Saylor as "ravishingly
Nicolai, Verdi, and Holst, Vaughan Williams's is distinctive for its greater
1931, with the Leith Hill Festival in mind, the composer recast some of
the music as a five-section cantata, In Windsor Forest, giving the public
Vaughan Williams knew the Savoy operas well,[149] and his music for
Job: A Masque for Dancing (1930) was the first large-scale ballet by a
powerful impression at its early stagings, and has been revived by the
symphony."[156]
verbatim setting of J. M. Synge's 1902 play of the same name, depicting
family tragedy in an Irish fishing village. Kennedy describes the score as
"organized almost symphonically" with much of the thematic material
developed from the brief prelude. The orchestration is subtle, and
foreshadows the ghostly finale of the Sixth Symphony; there are also
pre-echoes of the Sinfonia antartica in the lamenting voices of the
(1957).[159]
The Pilgrim's Progress (1951), the composer's last opera, was the
culmination of more than forty years' intermittent work on the theme of
Bunyan's religious allegory. Vaughan Williams had written incidental
music for an amateur dramatisation in 1906, and had returned to the
theme in 1921 with the one-act The Shepherds of the Delectable
Mountains (finally incorporated, with amendments, into the 1951 opera).
The work has been criticised for a preponderance of slow music and
stretches lacking in dramatic action,[160] but some commentators
ballet Old King Cole (both made in 1925),[162] Dona Nobis Pacem
All the composer's major works and many of the minor ones have been
Although rarely staged, the operas have fared well on disc. The earliest
recording of a Vaughan Williams opera was Hugh the Drover, in an
Progress.[173]
Most of the orchestral recordings have been by British
between 1967 and 1972.[175] Among the British conductors most closely
post of Master of the King's Music after Elgar's death.[177] The one state
(1954).[2][25]
At the time of his death Vaughan Williams was President of the English
Folk Dance and Song Society, who renamed their library the Vaughan
Library.[2]
[181] There is a statue of Vaughan Williams in Dorking,[182] and
a bust in Chelsea Embankment Gardens, near his old house in Cheyne
Walk.[183]
charity,[184]
has sponsored and encouraged performances of the
neglected works, and has its own record label, Albion Records.[185]
century this neglect has been reversed. In the fiftieth anniversary year of
his death two contrasting documentary films were released: Tony
Palmer's O Thou Transcendent: The Life of Vaughan Williams and John
Ascending increased,[n 21] but a wide public also became aware of what
folk music, and collected 140 songs from villages in the region.[191]
● v
● t
● e
show
● v
● t
● e
Musical nationalism
A ● BNE: XX1177244
● BNF: cb13900779b (data)
ut
● CiNii: DA02673374
h ● GND: 118643118
or ● ISNI: 0000 0001 0859 1472
it ● LCCN: n79139255
● MusicBrainz: 4f3b96ed-f1f1-4a68-be73-0e0657837096
y ● NDL: 00459613
● NKC: ola2002150823
c ● NLA: 35578594
● SELIBR: 200327
o
● SNAC: w67p8x4w
nt ● SUDOC: 032411049
ro ● VIAF: 89801735
l ● WorldCat Identities (via VIAF): 89801735
● Biography portal
● England portal
Categories:
Navigation menu
● Not logged in
● Talk
● Contributions
● Create account
● Log in
● Article
● Talk
● Read
● Edit
● View history
Search
● Main page
● Contents
● Featured content
● Current events
● Random article
● Donate to Wikipedia
● Wikipedia store
Interaction
● Help
● About Wikipedia
● Community portal
● Recent changes
● Contact page
Tools
● What links here
● Related changes
● Upload file
● Special pages
● Permanent link
● Page information
● Wikidata item
● Cite this page
Print/export
● Create a book
● Download as PDF
● Printable version
In other projects
● Wikimedia Commons
● Wikiquote
Languages
● اﻟﻌﺮﺑﯿﺔ
● Deutsch
● Español
● Français
● 한국어
● Italiano
● Русский
● Tiếng Việt
● 中文
34 more
Edit links
● This page was last edited on 28 February 2019, at 20:47 (UTC).
● Privacy policy
● About Wikipedia
● Disclaimers
● Contact Wikipedia
● Developers
● Cookie statement
● Mobile view