RalphVaughan Williams: Symphony Number Five
Ralph Vaughan Williams, descended from the famous Wedgwood and
Darwin families,
was born at Down Ampney, Gloucestershire in 1872. In 1890 he
entered the Royal
College of Music, and in 1892 he entered Trinity College,
Cambridge. One of the
greatest of the British composers, a prolific writer of music,
folksong
collector, and champion of British cultural heritage, he died
aged 85 in 1958.
His ashes are interred in Westminster Abbey alongside the
nation's greatest
artists and poets. Symphony No. 5 in D
Introduction
The symphony contains a lot of material from RVW's then
unfinished opera, The
Pilgrim's Progress. When he began the Fifth Symphony, RVW thought
he may never
finish the opera, and didn't want to waste any good ideas. The
symphony does not
have a programme, it is absolute music. It is in four movements:
a "Preludio"
first movement, a Scherzo, a "Romanza" slow movement, and a
"Passacaglia" finale.
First Movement : Preludio
From the very beginning, RVW puts the key signature of this
movement into doubt.
The movement opens with a horn call in D, set against a firm base
(or bass?) of
octave C's. Could it be that in the great traditions of British
musical
'amateurism', RVW got his transposition wrong? Or is this a
deliberate feature
of the music, intended to blur the tonality? Musicologists prefer
the latter
explanation. This is by no means an unusual feature of his music,
when he was
asked what the 4th symphony was about, RVW replied "It is about
F-minor",
alluding to his sometimes hazy tonalities, often augmented by his
use of modal,
mainly pentatonic melodies, which, with no leading note, often
help to 'fudge'
the tonality. Apart from the horn call, the brass is seldom used,
and the
texture is light and airy. The first violins then enter, high on
the E string,
doubled at the octave below by the seconds in an introduction,
before their main
theme at (1), doubled by flutes. The triplets add rhythmic
variety, as well as
providing a distinctly 'folkie' feel. During the course of the
movement, the
distinctive dotted rhythm of the horns hardly ever leaves us.
There are some
rather abrupt key changes. i.e. Eb to E at (5). We are taken into
the Allegro by
a sudden change in mood. The music darkens with a slightly
sinister version of
the horn call in the bassoons. We then enter the Allegro, with a
scurrying in
the strings, whilst the wind begins a downward progression of
notes, which
builds to a climax, with strings in semiquavers, until we reach
the original
tempo once more, as the music winds down, back to the horn call.
Some
development of ideas takes place, before the music once again
winds down. The
horn calls are answered by single notes in woodwind, and the
movement ends as
mysteriously as it began - the horns fade into the distance, in
the key of D,
but we are left, somewhat perturbed by the pianissimo cello C
against the viola
D.
The movement is plainly 20th century, with many dissonances, yet
the movement,
for the most part, sounds serene, with a sinister undertone that
barely breaks
the surface. Much of this softening comes from RVW's
orchestration: he tends to
work in distinct "chunks" of sound. In the opening measures, for
example, the
low cellos and basses are separated from the higher horns in
range and sound
colour.
Second Movement : Scherzo
The movement starts with rising string fourths, which seem to
come from nowhere.
This time, it is the time signature of the movement that we must
look out for.
The piece starts in dotted minims, but then the note values
become minims,
before the seventh bar, in which a rather jaunty tune begins, and
continues
through a rather melancholy unison entry by flute and bassoon.,
which is
continued in woodwind, until we reach a short staccato section,
just before (2),
where there is a rather absurd quaver dialogue between woodwind
and strings.
More staccato work from strings leads to a rather fat sounding
appoggiated
dotted minim passage for oboe and cor anglais. Here we get
passages of two
against three, in the tune. After the double bar after (14), we
get that nimble
staccato passage back, this time pianissimo, it all has a rather
tongue - in -
cheek feel to it, accentuated by the slightly heavy bass. The
strings endure
another scurrying passage, then after (17), a new, almost
fatalistic downwards
theme is introduced, which gradually gains in intensity, until it
is eventually
played tutti. The first theme, with its rising fourths re -
enters pp, and this
movement ends suddenly, with a cheeky downwards run, from the
'top' of the
strings, to the 'bottom'.
Strings play largely at the unison or octave throughout this
movement, and winds
are usually reduced to solos or duets. When there is a lot of
woodwind, the
strings drop out, fitting in with the contrasting planes of sound
discussed in
the first movement.
Third Movement : Romanza
An almost ethereal chord progression in (heavily) divisi strings
announces a
melody, which begins with the almost obligatory triplet rhythm in
the cor
anglais. Rising 4ths then lead to a broad tune in the strings,
which subsides
into the flute, oboe, cor anglais, and clarinet playing the
rising 4ths once
more. This leads to a repeat of the opening section, but scored
the opposite way
round, with woodwind playing the chords, and the melody , still
pp, in the
strings. It is scored very low fr the violins - in fact, the
first four Gs must
be played open, with no vibrato to soften them. Very
agricultural. We then get a
bigger statement of the broad tune, followed by some birdsong -
like passages
from woodwind, which develop thematically until we reach the Poco
Meno Mosso at
(7), where rustling strings accompany the first theme on horns,
then trumpets.
Brass chords lead us back to the main string tune, which leads on
to the 'big
tune', and the climax of this movement. A solo violin reminds us
of the
woodwind's birdsong theme. The ethereal string chords reappear,
with a horn
melody over the top, and muted strings finally send this
movement to sleep.
Fourth Movement : Passacaglia
The passacaglia theme begins, as usual, in the bass a
descending line. A bit
in, a rising counter-melody sneaks in through the upper parts.
This reaches a
small climax after 5 repetitions, at which point the bass
fragments into
pizzicato. Three more repetitions follow, rising to a 'fanfare'
section. This
plays against the passacaglia's counter-melody.
At this point, RVW gives up the passacaglia We get an imitative
section on the
passacaglia, which again leads to the fanfare. The fanfare
combines with the
passacaglia and the counter-melody, with shimmering strings.
The fanfare reaches a climax which quickly leads to an agitated
version of the
passacaglia on clarinet and other woodwind, against tremelando
strings (pp). The
rumblings grow to three 'outcries' of this version. We then hear
a disturbed
version of the counter-melody, leading to a large climax on the
original
passacaglia theme.
This breaks into music from the first movement, the Preludio,
signifying that we
have come full circle, and the end is near. Various themes from
the first
movement float make special guest appearances, which leads to a
quiet extended
fantasia on the counter-melody, fanfare, and passacaglia. The
movement ends
with the violins playing extremely high minims - a very serene
ending.
. Ralph Vaughan Williams: Symphony Number Five
Ralph Vaughan Williams, descended from the famous Wedgwood and
Darwin