Tag: Vaughan Williams

  • Easter Music Vaughan Williams and More

    Easter Music Vaughan Williams and More

    Rise heart; thy Lord is risen!

    For me, it just isn’t Easter until I’ve heard Ralph Vaughan Williams’ “Five Mystical Songs.” I defy anyone not to be uplifted by the opening song of the cycle, titled, appropriately enough, “Easter.” The songs are settings of poems by George Herbert (1593-1633).

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll enjoy a classic performance, with bass-baritone John Shirley-Quirk, as part of a program devoted to music inspired by the 17th century metaphysical poets.

    We’ll also hear William Alwyn’s “Lyra Angelica” of 1954, a harp concerto inspired by Giles Fletcher’s epic poem of 1610, “Christ’s Victorie and Triumph.” The composer regarded it as his most beautiful piece, and I am inclined to agree. The work likely received its widest exposure when Michelle Kwan elected to skate to it during the 1988 Olympics.

    Finally, we’ll have a lute song by John Hilton, setting poetry by John Donne, “Wilt thou forgive that sinne.” It’s from an album on the Harmonia Mundi label, titled “The Rags of Time.”

    I hope you’ll join me for “Donne Deal” – an hour of metaphysical therapy – this Easter Sunday at 10 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    Vaughan Williams’ “Easter,” from “Five Mystical Songs”:

  • Rainy Day Music Vaughan Williams Symphonies

    Rainy Day Music Vaughan Williams Symphonies

    A good rainy day. The perfect time to hunker down with Ralph Vaughan Williams.

    Here are links to two of his symphonies – the first, his most desolate, the Symphony No. 6, and the second, his most unambiguously hopeful, the Symphony No. 5. In common with the greatest classics, both exist outside of time – they are timeless – yet both speak perfectly to the present. Life in the time of Coronavirus

    Vaughan Williams’ Sixth Symphony (1944-47) is full of tension, turbulent, bleak, with a few wistful passages that seem to reflect on a lost world. Though the composer denied any extramusical program, the last movement has been interpreted by many as an aural portrait of the world laid waste. Some have attributed the barren atmosphere as a response to the atomic bomb.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I1suBbnp5Go

    The Symphony No. 5 (1938-43), by contrast, is a balm for the soul. Though completed at the height of World War II, the symphony is a musical celebration of the endurance of humanity and tradition against an implacable enemy. The work shares much in common with Vaughan Williams’ passion project, the opera “The Pilgrim’s Progress,” which he had already been writing for 30 years. Not only does it quote some of the opera’s themes, it also reflects its spirit. The piece is brimming with solace, hope, and indescribable beauty.

    Vaughan Williams dedicated the work to Jean Sibelius, “without permission and with the sincerest flattery.” When Sibelius heard the piece, he confided to the conductor Sir Adrian Boult, “This Symphony is a marvelous work… the dedication made me feel proud and grateful… I wonder if Dr. Williams has any idea of the pleasure he has given me?”

    Keep calm and carry on. Pour youself a cuppa. Listen to Ralph Vaughan Williams, and find your strength.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q9YoEETzYsE

  • Elgar & Vaughan Williams Quintets Marlboro

    Elgar & Vaughan Williams Quintets Marlboro

    English music is more than simply ham, lamb, and strawberry jam. On the next “Music from Marlboro,” we’ll highlight one of the most deeply personal utterances of perhaps Albion’s most respected composer.

    In the spring of 1918, Sir Edward Elgar underwent an operation in London to have an infected tonsil removed. At the time, this was considered a dangerous operation for a 61 year-old man. When the composer regained consciousness, the first thing he did was ask for a piece of paper, and he jotted down the opening theme of what was to become his last major work, the Cello Concerto in E minor.

    The Elgars retired to Brinkwells, a thatched cottage that was their summer home near Fittleworth, in Sussex, so that they could have time to relax and recover from their ailments. Even in this idyllic setting, with its trees and farmland, the guns could be heard at night rumbling across the Channel. The First World War had a profound effect on Elgar, as it did on everyone, but most especially those of the older generation, who had regarded the Boer War as a yardstick against which the cost and loss of armed conflict had been measured.

    Nevertheless, by August, Elgar was composing again. In quick succession came the Violin Sonata in E minor, the Piano Quintet in A minor, and the String Quartet in E minor. All three works were given their first performances one hundred years ago, in May of 1919, at which point Elgar launched into the Cello Concerto, which was to be his final masterpiece.

    Elgar labored with great intensity, rising at 4 or 5:00 every morning. His music from this period is spare and almost confessional in nature, colored by nostalgia, introspection, and a kind of sad beauty.

    But when it came time to play through the quintet, the composer was surrounded by some of his closest confidantes, and he couldn’t have been happier. These included W.H. Reed, with whom he had worked on the Violin Concerto; Albert Sammons, who would make the concerto’s first complete recording, and Felix Salmond, who would assist him on the Cello Concerto.

    We’ll hear a performance of Elgar’s Piano Quintet from the 2002 Marlboro Music Festival, featuring pianist Jeremy Denk, violinists Erin Keefe and Bradley Creswick, violist Teng Li, and cellist Joel Noyes.

    That will be prefaced by another quintet, from 1912, by Ralph Vaughan Williams. Vaughan Williams’ “Phantasy Quintet” was one of a number of works commissioned from England’s great composers by Walter Wilson Cobbett, a businessman and amateur musician whose dual passions were chamber music and music of the Elizabethan era. (“Phantasy” was Cobbett’s preferred spelling.)

    Vaughan Williams’ quintet is full of Tudor inflections and stamped by the composer’s tell-tale love of folk music. RVW doubles his violas, and the instrument is heard to great effect throughout the piece. We’ll enjoy it in a 1975 performance from Marlboro, featuring violinists James Buswell and Sachiko Nakajima, violists Philipp Naegele and Caroline Levine, and cellist Anne Martindale.

    I hope you’ll join me for the quintessence of English quintets – and one fantastic phantasy – on the next “Music from Marlboro,” this Wednesday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page

  • Vaughan Williams’ London Symphony on WWFM

    Vaughan Williams’ London Symphony on WWFM

    It’s a rainy day in Princeton town. Join me this afternoon on The Classical Network, as I’ll pay tribute to our meteorological sister city – London!

    It was George Butterworth who suggested to Ralph Vaughan Williams that he compose a purely orchestral symphony. Of course, RVW had already composed “A Sea Symphony,” on texts of Walt Whitman, but that work was as much a cantata as anything else. Vaughan Williams told Butterworth it was never in his thoughts to write a symphony, but privately the suggestion got his gears turning.

    The result was Vaughan Williams’ second symphony, advertised as “A London Symphony.” The piece would prove to be the first of RVW’s eight purely orchestral essays in the form that would go on to become some of the most frequently-played by any English composer. Unfortunately, Butterworth would not live to witness his friend’s enduring success. He would be killed by sniper fire on the Somme in 1916.

    Vaughan Williams’ symphony underwent numerous revisions from its original version of 1914-15 to the final form of 1936 that we know today. The original, revived only in 2001, with the permission of the composer’s widow, Ursula, is a remarkable achievement in its own right. Like an x-rayed painting by an Old Master, the work reveals aspects of its creation previously undreamed of by even the most ardent RVW admirer.

    Over time, Vaughan Williams not only revised the music, but also seemingly his thoughts on the piece, gradually transforming it from a nostalgic portrait of London to what he liked to refer to as a “Symphony by a Londoner.” In this way, he could downplay the descriptive elements of the work and push for its acceptance as “absolute” music.

    Along the way, he jettisoned about a third of the original music. Heard as it was originally conceived, the piece is revealed to be more ambitious, darker perhaps, containing, as RVW later grumbled to Bernard Herrmann, “some horrible modern music – awful stuff.”

    The composer dedicated the piece to George Butterworth, without whom it would not have been composed. The original version of “A London Symphony” will form the centerpiece of this afternoon’s playlist.

    First, it’s off to New York town, for our Noontime Concert. The period instrument ensemble Juilliard415 will present a concert titled, appropriately enough, “Eye of the Storm.” The program will include works by Heinrich Ignaz Franz von Biber, Johann Joachim Quantz, Francois Couperin, and Jean-Marie Leclair.

    It’s another concert brought to us by Gotham Early Music Scene, or GEMS. GEMS’ Midtown Concerts series is held at the chapel of St. Bartholomew’s Church, 325 Park Avenue, in New York City. Free concerts take place at St. Bart’s on Thursdays at 1:15 p.m. For more information, visit GEMS’ website, gemsny.org, and click on the events calendar.

    Have an umbrella on hand and get ready to slip into a nice cup of tea, from 12 to 4 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    “There was no fog in London until Whistler started painting it.” – Oscar Wilde

  • Celebrating Adrian Boult and Musical Birthdays

    Celebrating Adrian Boult and Musical Birthdays

    As a self-professed anglophile, I do so enjoy the recordings of Sir Adrian Boult. I am especially grateful for the famous ones, the recordings and re-recordings of the repertoire with which he is most closely associated – the works of Elgar, Vaughan Williams, Holst, and some of the lesser sons of Albion.

    But Boult’s interests – and excellence – extended across a considerably wider field, and though not always reflected in the comparative timidity of what record companies were prepared to roll the dice on, Sir Adrian was always game for Bach, Beethoven, Verdi, Stravinsky, and even the Second Viennese School.

    I’m hoping to reflect just a little of that questing spirit in what I have to work with, this afternoon on The Classical Network, as I celebrate Boult’s birthday with compelling performances of Sibelius and Schumann alongside perhaps the more expected fare.

    It will be a very competitive playlist, however, as I’d also like to offer salutes to John Antill, Franco Corelli, Asger Hamerik, Josef Krips, Karl Hermann Pillney, and Giuseppe Tartini, all of whom were also born on this date. I’ve only got three hours to do so, and each of these figures, it seems, is more fascinating than the last.

    When so spoiled for choice, what’s a poor radio host to do? Sense my frantic indecision when you tune in today, from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT, to WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    PHOTO: Boult, a spring chicken at 80. He died in 1983, at the age of 93.

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