Tag: Vaughan Williams

  • Hubert Parry English Musical Renaissance

    Hubert Parry English Musical Renaissance

    Today is the 175th anniversary of the birth of Sir Charles Hubert Hastings Parry – who, let’s face it, had far too many names, which is why everyone generally refers to him, simply, as Hubert Parry.

    Parry was one of the foremost figures of the so-called English Musical Renaissance – not the actual Renaissance, mind you, but rather the flowering of English music that took place toward the end of the 19th century, after a nearly 200-year dearth of world-class composers following the death of Henry Purcell in 1695.

    A professor at the Royal College of Music in London, Parry eventually became the school’s head. He influenced an entire generation of much better-known musicians, people like Ralph Vaughan Williams, Gustav Holst, John Ireland, and Frank Bridge.

    Parry himself composed reams of music – symphonies, odes and oratorios, unaccompanied choral pieces, church music, an opera, chamber and instrumental works, incidental music for the stage, a piano concerto and, perhaps best of all, a set of “Symphonic Variations” – but he is probably best-recognized these days for his enduring choral work “Jerusalem” (still sung on the Last Night of the Proms) and the coronation anthem “I was glad.”

    The character of much of his music – and the fact that his works have been embraced by royals and nationalists – might lead one to assume that Parry the man was a little on the stodgy side. But nothing could be further from the truth. He was a free-thinker, humanist and Darwinian in outlook, who was described with affection by some as a radical, with a strong bias against Conservatism.

    Though he himself was enormously wealthy and never wanted for anything, he lived an ascetic life and a reflective one. He was against blood-sports and prone to bouts of depression – understandable in one disposed to reflection.

    He was generous with his pupils and broadminded with those he disagreed with. Though he held strong convictions, he seldom took anything at face value. Without Parry’s perception and support of his most promising students, English music might have developed very differently.

    It’s interesting to note that, even during his lifetime, his detractors used his “privilege” against him. But it seems his only indulgence was his yacht, which he dubbed “The Wanderer.”

    Parry is buried in St. Paul’s Cathedral, alongside Sir Arthur Sullivan and William Boyce.

    Happy birthday, Hubert Parry!


    “Symphonic Variations”

    Symphony No. 3 “The English”

    The “Lady Radnor Suite,” composed for Helen, Countess of Radnor, who led an all-female string orchestra

    “Jerusalem” at the Proms

    “I was glad” at the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee

    Vaughan Williams remembers Hubert Parry and Sir Charles Villiers Stanford

    Dave Hurwitz of classicstoday.com shares George Bernard Shaw’s evisceration of Parry’s oratorio “Job”

    “The Wanderer” Toccata and Fugue, named for Parry’s yacht

  • Christmas Music Book Haul Gipps Grondahl Ives

    Christmas Music Book Haul Gipps Grondahl Ives

    Too late to post anything of substance today, so I’m just sharing some highlights from my Christmas booty: two CDs of unusual and neglected repertoire (orchestral works by English composer Ruth Gipps and piano music by Norwegian composer Agathe Backer Grøndahl) and two books (“Mad Music: Charles Ives, the Nostalgic Rebel” by Stephen Budiansky and “Vaughan Williams” by Eric Saylor) — all new except the Ives bio, which was issued in 2014. Something must have happened to Santa’s naughty list!

  • Christmas Music Parry Vaughan Williams WWFM

    Christmas Music Parry Vaughan Williams WWFM

    Later tonight, with all the cooking, conviviality, and hopefully clean-up winding down, settle in for an hour of reflection, with two 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 and Gustav Holst. We’ll hear his “Ode on the Nativity,” 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 level of concentration. He managed to pound out the whole thing in short score in only a few weeks. Furthermore, he had fully 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 pastoral music for a pastoral scene. I hope you’ll join me for “A Play in a Manger,” THIS SUNDAY NIGHT, ONE HOUR LATER THAN USUAL, AT 11:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Until then, best wishes for a happy and meaningful Christmas!

  • All Saints Day Music Vaughan Williams Sine Nomine

    All Saints Day Music Vaughan Williams Sine Nomine

    November 1st. Time to put away the vampires and get all saintly and thankful. To this end, here’s Vaughan Williams’ “Sine Nomine” (“For All the Saints”), performed by the Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge, the composer’s alma mater.

  • Vaughan Williams Late Bloom Colorful Genius

    Vaughan Williams Late Bloom Colorful Genius

    Here’s Ralph Vaughan Williams, looking as miserable as you would imagine, being serenaded by the tuba. The composer wrote the first ever concerto for the instrument in 1954. A late and unusual work, the piece was dedicated to Philip Catelinet, principal tubist of the London Symphony Orchestra. “Glorious John” Barbirolli conducted the premiere. These are the forces heard on the work’s first recording. Listen here, for a tubby start to your Friday.

    BONUS! Vaughan Williams’ “Romance for Harmonica,” composed in 1952.

    Vaughan Williams seemed often to be in search of unusual timbres in his later years. Rather ironic, since by then he was severely deaf, the result of prolonged exposure to heavy artillery during World War I. But he was a true composer, a master of his craft, who didn’t have to hear what he wrote in order to know the sound. Moreover, as a pupil of Maurice Ravel, he never lost his sense of color.

    Take for example the exotic percussion in the outer movements of his Symphony No. 8, composed in 1953-54. (The second movement is scored for brass and the third for strings alone.) It’s heard here in a superb performance from perhaps an unlikely source, given the pervasive claims that the music of this quintessentially English composer does not “travel.” Nobody told Charles Munch and the Boston Symphony Orchestra.

    Or the insinuating saxophones and mysterious harps in the valedictory Symphony No. 9, written in 1956-57. Vaughan Williams died on the eve of the first recording session, with Sir Adrian Boult and the London Philharmonic Orchestra. Boult’s brief eulogy appears at the beginning of this world premiere recording.

    It’s extraordinary that a composer in his 80s would remain so vital and so full of invention. (RVW was 80 back when 80 was REALLY 80!) His symphonies, in particular, are among the greatest of the 20th century. And he never repeated himself. All nine have such a distinctive character, and there’s not a weak link in the bunch. Would that more of our music directors would get to know them.

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