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What you should know about Ralph Vaughan Williams

Discover the life of Ralph Vaughan Williams, the quintessential British composer, known for his evocative symphonies, folk music collecting and enduring legacy.

Published:

By Alexandra Wilson

5 minutes

The Essentials

Ralph Vaughan Williams was born in 1872 in the pretty Gloucestershire village of Down Ampney. Though he received a cosmopolitan training, including studying with Max Bruch in Berlin and Maurice Ravel in Paris, he is regarded as one of the most quintessentially English of composers. He was passionately interested in traditional English folk songs and collected over 800 of them. Over the course of a long career, Vaughan Williams tackled many genres, large and small, composing songs, ballets, choral works, operas and symphonies. He is particularly well known for evocative programme music that vividly depicts the rural landscape and wildlife (The Lark Ascending, The Wasps Overture). Vaughan Williams died in London in 1958.

The art of music above all the other arts is the expression of the soul of a nation.

Ralph Vaughan Williams

Three Pieces to Listen To

A Sea Symphony

An unusual symphony featuring a choir and soloists, this work is a thrilling evocation of the capricious faces of the sea, from serene to turbulent. Vaughan Williams takes a masterful approach to painting images through sound, drawing on nautical themes and experimenting with orchestration to create vivid colours and moods.

Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis

In this gorgeous work for double string orchestra, Vaughan Williams develops a simple, modal theme by the Renaissance composer Thomas Tallis, combining the solemnity of Tudor music with the passionate expressivity of late Romanticism. It is a timeless piece, evoking the stillness and sense of wonder of an ancient building.

Vaughan Williams wrote the Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis when he was a relatively young and little-known composer. The work was commissioned by the Three Choirs Festival for a concert at Gloucester Cathedral in 1910, which attracted 2,000 people – mainly drawn by the other piece on the bill, Elgar’s The Dream of Gerontius. Press critics were impressed, The Daily Telegraph calling the piece ‘extremely beautiful to such as have ears for the best music of all ages’. The young composers Herbert Howells and Ivor Gurney were in the audience and went into raptures about the new piece, Howells asking Vaughan Williams for his autograph. Only their teacher, Gloucester Cathedral’s organist, Herbert Brewer, struck a grumpy and discordant note, dismissing the Fantasia as a ‘mad work by an odd fellow from Chelsea’.

Symphony No 5

Written during World War II, the popular Fifth Symphony calls to mind peace rather than conflict, albeit with moments of vivacity. Though the American composer Aaron Copland rudely likened listening to it to ‘staring at a cow for 45 minutes’, it is a work that often feels almost spiritual in its serenity.

Wednesday 17 April 6.30pm, Barbican | Half Six Fix: Vaughan Williams 5

Thursday 18 April 7pm, Barbican | Ravel Piano Concerto in G and Vaughan Williams 5

The World in Vaughan Williams’ Day

Born in the Victorian age but living well into the era of the Welfare State, Vaughan Williams witnessed a tremendous amount of social, political and cultural change over the course of his long life. He lived through two World Wars, serving in France and Salonika in the First (when his hearing was damaged by the sound of constant gunfire) and writing music for propaganda films in the Second, something that reveals him to have been a modern figure who wasn’t afraid of responding to changing technology.

He had two famous ancestors, biologist Charles Darwin and potter Josiah Wedgwood, and was a contemporary of Serge Rachmaninoff, Maurice Ravel, Dmitri Shostakovich, Arnold Schoenberg and Gustav Holst, the latter becoming a lifelong friend. Vaughan Williams tended to keep his views on younger, more progressive, composers to himself, but was known to have adored J S Bach, Giuseppe Verdi and Richard Wagner, felt ambivalent about Gustav Mahler (whom he called ‘a tolerable imitation of a composer’) and hated the Romantics Hector Berlioz and Franz Liszt.

With the LSO

The LSO has premiered a number of major Vaughan Williams’ works. In 1910, the Orchestra presented the first performance of the Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis, with the composer himself conducting. We were also closely involved with the ‘London’ Symphony, giving the premiere of the first revised version (conducted by Adrian Boult) in 1918, and of the second revised version two years later. In 1938, members of the Orchestra participated in the premiere of Serenade to Music, with the combined London orchestras under Sir Henry Wood. And in 1946, we gave the first performance of the Concerto for Two Pianos and Orchestra, with Cyril Smith and Phyllis Sellick as soloists and Boult once again on the podium.

A Composer of Contradictions

Vaughan Williams is a figure of contradictions. Often seen as a cosy, conservative purveyor of nostalgia for a lost rural arcadia, he was in fact a politically left-leaning figure who saw himself first and foremost as a Londoner, campaigned for social justice, and wrote some decidedly forward-looking works. His music is often regarded as spiritual, yet he was a non-believer. He was a devotee of ‘serious’ literature, yet also an avid reader of Vogue. Those who knew Vaughan Williams well recalled a genial man, and orchestral musicians respected him, despite what was said to have been his rather ponderous conducting technique. On occasions where he became annoyed in rehearsal, he would apologise profusely afterwards. He could also be witty and self-deprecating: when asked by one player whether a note in the Fourth Symphony was correct, he replied, ‘Well, it’s B-flat. I know it looks wrong – and sounds wrong – but it’s right.’

Vaughan Williams’ Legacy

During the 19th century, Britain had often been dismissed as a ‘land without music’. Vaughan Williams was a significant figure in putting Britain back on the musical map, dedicating himself to challenging the fact that British composers were, as he put it, ‘unappreciated at home and unknown abroad’. He made a significant contribution to the development of almost every musical genre and produced a vast body of works that would stand the test of time. Some of his works are charming and immediately accessible, others more stylistically bold and ambitious. Vaughan Williams’ success paved the way for later British figures such as Benjamin Britten, while numerous present-day composers, including James Macmillan, Mark-Antony Turnage and Cheryl Frances-Hoad, have stated that Vaughan Williams influenced their work. He was a great advocate for women’s composition and taught many women students at the Royal College of Music.

Written by Alexandra Wilson

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