Tag: Vaughan Williams

  • English Documentary Music: Vaughan Williams & More

    English Documentary Music: Vaughan Williams & More

    It’s not that I don’t have any commercial sense; I just don’t care. If I were in it for the money, I’d be in another line of work. Anyway, if it moves me or interests me, I am pretty sure it will interest some of you. After all, what could be more engaging than an hour of… ENGLISH DOCUMENTARY MUSIC?

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” though perhaps not exactly by popular demand, we’ll listen to four examples of such scores.

    In England, unlike in the United States, there is no demarcation between “film composer” and “concert composer.” What is often regarded here as “hack work,” is seen there as just another aspect of what it means to be a working artist. There is no disgrace in a composer earning a living, and some of the nation’s greatest musicians – including those in the employ of the Royal Family – have contributed finely-crafted works to its body of cinema.

    With this in mind, we’ll hear music by Ralph Vaughan Williams, from “The People’s Land” (1942), Benjamin Britten, from “The King’s Stamp” (1935), William Alwyn, from “The Green Girdle” (1941), and Sir Arthur Bliss, from “The Royal Palaces of Britain” (1966). All four films are patriotic utterances on distinctly English themes.

    You may not have seen any of the movies, but the music is beautiful. I hope you’ll join me for selections from English documentaries, this Friday evening at 6 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    The complete documentary short, “The People’s Land,” is posted on YouTube:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jpRtM8FcBb4

    As is “The Green Girdle:”

    And “The King’s Stamp”:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6gSsJHlLFg4

    Thank you, Internet!


    PHOTO: It’s not about what you think

  • Vaughan Williams Symphony No 5 Hope Amidst Wartime

    Vaughan Williams Symphony No 5 Hope Amidst Wartime

    Oh, Ralph, you’re such the contrarian. You wrote that embodiment of English pastoralism, “The Lark Ascending,” in response to the War to End All Wars. Then in peacetime, in the early 1930s, you composed your most turbulent symphony, the Symphony No. 4. Some say that already you sensed the impending cataclysm of World War II. Then when the war finally hit, you turned around and wrote your most serene symphony.

    On this date in 1943, you unveiled your Symphony No. 5. Queen’s Hall lay in ruins from German bombs, so you conducted the London Philharmonic at Royal Albert Hall. Perhaps unexpectedly, the audience that day found itself awash in hope and optimism. In place of the seemingly obligatory bluster of a “wartime symphony,” there was a sense of affirmation in a musical celebration of humanity and tradition. London may be rocked by air raids today, but England, the country and its people, would endure.

    You had already long been flirting with your pet project, the opera “The Pilgrim’s Progress,” for decades. The symphony shares the same sense of faith and optimism in the face of seemingly implacable adversity. The audience emerged into the sunlight on that summer afternoon feeling refreshed and ready to face the future.


    The Symphony No. 5 (dedicated, by the way, to Jean Sibelius):

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

    PHOTO: Vaughan Williams and Foxy in 1942

  • Haydn Serenade A Musical Mystery Unveiled

    Haydn Serenade A Musical Mystery Unveiled

    One of Haydn’s most popular melodies wasn’t by Haydn at all.

    Join me this afternoon on The Classical Network, as we listen to the “Haydn Serenade,” in reality composed by one Roman Hoffstetter. Hoffstetter was a Benedictine monk who evidently admired Hadyn to the point of successfully emulating his style.

    It wasn’t until 1965 that musicologist Alan Tyson asserted that the six string quartets published under Haydn’s Op. 3 – including the fifth, which contains the celebrated andante cantabile widely known as the “Serenade” – were indeed the work of Hoffstetter. We’ll enjoy it this afternoon, on this, the anniversary of Hoffstetter’s birth.

    We’ll also hear music for guitar and orchestra performed by John Williams (the guitarist, not the film composer), on his birthday, and a substantial fantasy on Ralph Vaughan Williams’ neglected opera, “The Poisoned Kiss.”

    Name your poison, from 4 to 7:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Easter Joy Vaughan Williams & Metaphysical Poets

    Easter Joy Vaughan Williams & Metaphysical Poets

    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 hear a classic recording, with bass-baritone John Shirley-Quirk, as part of a program devoted to 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 setting by John Hilton of a poem by John Donne, “Wilt thou forgive that sinne,” 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.

  • Christmas Music Elgar Stanford Vaughan Williams

    Christmas Music Elgar Stanford Vaughan Williams

    It’s Christmas, so I’ll try to keep this brief. Nobody will be around to read it anyway! After all the gifts have been exchanged and all the guests entertained and all the dishes cleaned and put away, if you’re still able to keep your eyes open, consider unwinding with me tonight on “The Lost Chord,” when I‘ll be presenting a couple of works by English composers inspired by the Nativity.

    Alongside Sir Charles Villiers Stanford and Sir Edward Elgar, Sir Hubert Parry was one of the key figures of the so-called English “musical Renaissance.” He influenced a whole generation of much better known composers, including Ralph Vaughan Williams, Gustav Holst, John Ireland and Frank Bridge. His “Ode on the Nativity” was given its first performance on the same concert, at the Hereford Three Choirs Festival in 1912, as Vaughan Williams’ “Fantasia on Christmas Carols.”

    Vaughan Williams, the great-nephew of Charles Darwin and an atheist in his youth, later softened into a kind of cheerful agnosticism. He dearly loved the King James Bible, and he especially enjoyed Christmas. Of course, he wrote much music on the subject. In fact, his very last composition was “The First Nowell.” He worked diligently at the piece, inspired by medieval pageants, during his final month, but died suddenly before its completion.

    However, even at 85 years-old, RVW retained a remarkable concentration. He managed to pound out the whole thing in short score in only a few weeks. Furthermore, he had actually orchestrated the first two-thirds. The finishing touches were applied by his assistant, Roy Douglas – he of “Les Sylphides” fame.

    If you like the “Fantasia on Christmas Carols,” I think you’ll really enjoy this. It’s the star atop the Christmas tree of special holiday programs being shared all day on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org. Merry Christmas to you!

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