Tag: Ralph Vaughan Williams

  • Daniel Day-Lewis’ Surprising Godfather: Vaughan Williams

    Daniel Day-Lewis’ Surprising Godfather: Vaughan Williams

    Sure, Daniel Day-Lewis played a wicked Lincoln, but did you know his godfather was… Ralph Vaughan Williams?

    I was stunned to learn this myself, but it makes perfect sense, as Day-Lewis’ father, Cecil Day Lewis was a friend and associate of the composer.

    He wrote the following letter to Vaughan Williams on the eve of his 80th birthday, October 12, 1952:

    Dear R.V.W.

    Will you accept this, as a very small return for all the pleasure & inspiration your music has given me? If you were ever moved to set the sonnet-sequence here, O Dreams O Destinations, (I’ve often thought it might interest a composer), it would be a wonderful thing for me.

    Yours sincerely

    C. Day Lewis

    It’s speculated the letter accompanied a copy of “The Poems of C. Day Lewis,” in the Penguin Poets series, which Vaughan Williams selected as one of the books of the year for an article in London’s The Sunday Times.

    You’ll find the text of “O Dreams, O Destinations” at the link:

    https://www.poetryexplorer.net/poem.php?id=10006142

    Around the same time, Day Lewis stepped up to take the role of speaker in “An Oxford Elegy” at a Vaughan Williams birthday concert.

    The poet also narrated the belated first performance of Vaughan Williams’ “Epithalamion,” which was composed in 1938-9 (as “The Bridal Day”). With the outbreak of World War II, the work was put away in a trunk, receiving its televised premiere, finally, on June 5, 1953.

    At Vaughan Williams’ 85th birthday celebration, Day Lewis provided the following encomium. I could not find a printed copy (I transcribe from the audio), so the format and punctuation are my own.

    O Prospero,

    You have made for us

    A brave new world of harmony,

    Where discords are resolved by art,

    Born of true magnanimity.

    Ancient Ariel,

    Your music shall fly on,

    As now it flies,

    Girdling with joy our trouble earth,

    From Wenlock to the Antarctic skies.

    Sir,

    You have many friends;

    Accept their birthday wish:

    May God keep safe and bless

    Our 85 year-old Ariel,

    Prospero,

    Uncle Ralph!

    Daniel Daniel Day-Lewis was born in April 29, 1957, 16 months before Vaughan Williams’ death. Cecil Day Lewis served as Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom from 1968 until his own passing in 1972.

    The actor restored the hyphen to his double-barreled surname, originally a pretense on the part of his grandfather, who combined the surnames of his own birth father (Day) and adoptive father (Lewis) in a bid for greater respectability. It is a bid C. Day Lewis symbolically rejected.

  • Scrooge Reimagined A Passionate Christmas Carol

    Scrooge Reimagined A Passionate Christmas Carol

    Think you’re played-out on Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol?” Consider giving this one a shot.

    “The Passion of Scrooge” is not just a filmed performance of a work by composer Jon Deak (who, from 1973 to 2009, was also a bassist with the New York Philharmonic); it is a collaborative documentary in which the film direction is every bit as expressive and essential to the overall experience as anything that happens musically or onstage.

    The award-winning filmmaker, H. Paul Moon, has received perhaps his widest exposure through the nationwide television broadcast, on PBS, of his documentary “Samuel Barber: Absolute Beauty.” Moon traveled from D.C. to the studios of WWFM – The Classical Network to talk with me about Barber – who was born in West Chester, PA, and attended Philadelphia’s Curtis Institute of Music – in 2017.

    We met up again, a couple of years ago, to chat about his work on “Scrooge.” I’m delighted to find that he posted the audio file of our conversation.

    Contemporary, challenging, and thought-provoking, “The Passion of Scrooge” strips away the accrued nostalgia for a well-worn holiday tradition to get at the heart of Dickens’ message.

    Moon’s film is on BluRay and DVD and is also available for online streaming. To learn more about it, listen to our conversation – with selections from Deak’s opera – or visit scroogeopera.com.

    At Paul’s suggestion, the balance of the hour during his visit to WWFM was devoted to a recording of Ralph Vaughan Williams’ “On Christmas Night,” a rarely-heard masque also inspired by “A Christmas Carol.” Here’s a link to the music if you’d like to reconstruct the full experience.

    Zen Violence Films

  • All Saints Day Hymn For Halloween Regret

    All Saints Day Hymn For Halloween Regret

    Halloween hangover on All Saints’ Day. A hymn by Ralph Vaughan Williams for those with “buyer’s remorse.”

  • Vaughan Williams: Rumpled Genius of English Music

    Vaughan Williams: Rumpled Genius of English Music

    Lord knows, he was no fashion plate – but he sure could write music!

    Ralph Vaughan Williams looked to England’s agrarian roots as a roundabout way of securing the future of its cultural identity.

    As did so many composers who were caught in the wildfire of nationalism that swept across Europe from the mid-19th century forward, Vaughan Williams put the torch to the prevailing academicism that stretched its tendrils all the way from Germany to choke the musically “provincial” outlands. He emerged from an environment that had produced far too many knock-offs of Mendelssohn and Brahms. Vaughan Williams would revolutionize his compatriots’ perception of art music by embracing the sounds of the English countryside.

    That said, much like Béla Bartók, he was no simplistic, twee purveyor of folk song. On the contrary, he recognized that the rhythms and inflections of his native land were already embedded his DNA. The songs he documented while roaming the fields and fens with his colleague, Gustav Holst, merely brought to the surface what was already innate. What he expressed in his original music was thoroughly internalized and deeply personal.

    Some of Vaughan Williams’ best loved works are imbued with nostalgia for a faded world, but the composer pushed forward, as well, through two world wars and into the Great Beyond. He was not a conventionally religious man, but mysticism seems to color a fair amount of his music. Other pieces stare desolation unflinchingly in the face. Lessons with Maurice Ravel made him a thoughtful orchestrator, so that throughout his life he deployed his instrumental forces with considerable creativity and expertise. Given the proper attention, there is much to engage on all levels of his music.

    He may not have been on intimate terms with a comb or perhaps even capable of tying his own tie, but beneath that tousled mop and behind those bushy eyebrows, his workshop was always kept in good working order.

    Happy birthday, RVW. In all your rumpled glory, we salute you!


    Incidental music to “The Wasps”

    “Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis”

    Mass in G minor

    Symphony No. 4, conducted by the composer

    Phantasy Quintet

    Selections from the opera “The Poisoned Kiss,” virtually unknown, but full of good tunes

    Adrian Boult conducts a selection from “Job: A Masque for Dancing”

    Symphony No. 8, conducted by Charles Munch

    “Serenade to Music”


    GALLERY: Ralph Vaughan Williams, fashion icon

  • Happy Birthday Gustav Holst!

    Happy Birthday Gustav Holst!

    It’s interesting that Gustav Holst and Ralph Vaughan Williams were born three weeks apart (though separated by two years). Uncle Ralph’s birthday is coming up on October 12, but today is a day to celebrate Holst, born on this date in 1874.

    “Gustav” may seem like a strange name for one of England’s greatest composers. Even more peculiar, he was actually christened Gustavus. Also, there was a “von” in his name – Gustavus Theodore von Holst. Holst’s father was of Swedish, Latvian, and German descent. His great-grandfather had also been a composer, who taught harp at the Imperial Russian Court in St. Petersburg. Continuing in the family trade, his grandfather set up shop in England. In doing so, he added the “von,” thinking it lent a little gravitas and that it might help to drum up some business. With the outbreak of war with Germany in 1914, sensibly Gustav dropped the prefix

    Like Vaughan Williams, Holst was born in Gloucestershire. Both were students at the Royal College of Music, who studied with Sir Charles Villiers Stanford. Significantly, they were also linked by a common destiny, spearheading a movement to establish a distinctly “English” national sound in music. They accomplished this by getting their hands dirty, tying on their boots and striking out for the fields and fens, documenting by cylinder and notating by hand songs of the English countryside, already endangered by encroaching industrialization. In some of their best original music, both composers assimilate native folk inflections into their respective styles.

    Holst himself was an exacting teacher, who took his duties very seriously. However, in common with the best of his profession, he never imposed his will on his students, but rather shepherded them in finding their own voices and solutions. Holst served as director of music at St. Paul’s Girls’ School, Hammersmith, and at Morley College.

    Of course his masterpiece would be “The Planets,” composed between 1914 and 1916. Hard to believe, in a world full of composers schooled on the piano, that Holst’s principal instrument was the trombone! I recall listening to this music for the first time in my teens and thinking “Jupiter,” in particular, exuded “England.” Its roistering, galumphing, perhaps Falstaffian antics give way to a stately, processional theme, later adapted by the composer into the patriotic hymn “I Vow to Thee, My Country.” But with the passage of time, and longer familiarity, “The Planets’” English identity, is detectable to me in every note.

    For all that, Holst was never of a provincial mindset. On the contrary, he was a much more adventurous – and frequently modernist – composer than he is frequently given credit for. His literary inspirations were far-flung, from Thomas Hardy to Walt Whitman to Sanskrit. His music is often less emotive than Vaughan Williams’. I’ve always detected more of an objective detachment in Holst’s works. Remarked Vaughan Williams, “He was not afraid of being obvious when the occasion demanded, nor did he hesitate to be remote when remoteness expressed his purpose.”

    The two were one another’s most constructive critics. When Holst died, young, at the age of 59, in 1934, Vaughan Williams felt his friend’s passing keenly. Adding to the personal loss of a lifelong companion, from a professional and artistic standpoint, suddenly he was bereft of his most valued confidante and advisor.

    Holst’s legacy can be detected best in those composers who reacted against Vaughan Williams and the pastoral school. His economy and restraint appealed to the generation of Walton, Britten, and Tippett. Also – and I never see this remarked upon – I detect his spirit often in the film and concert music of Bernard Herrmann. (Herrmann was a great anglophile, who championed Holst.) There is a certain aloofness, a chill even, in the work of both artists, but also great sensitivity.

    Happy birthday, Gustav Holst! You may be regarded by most as a one-hit wonder, but you connected squarely, and the resulting line drive carried further than is generally accepted.


    “Jupiter” (1914)

    “Beni Mora” (1910)

    Bernard Herrmann conducts “The Planets” (complete)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CX_dTxshVh8

    Vaughan Williams’ setting of “Seventeen Come Sunday” from his “English Folk Song Suite” (1923)

    Listen for the tune in Holst’s “Somerset Rhapsody” (1906), about three minutes in:

    “Choral Hymns from the Rig Veda” (1911), anticipating Britten?

    “Hammersmith” (1930), prelude and scherzo

    “Song of the Blacksmith”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DbNwpJPlpAQ

    “My sweetheart’s like Venus”


    PHOTO: Holst and Vaughan Williams in the Malvern Hills in 1921

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