Symphony No. 9 (Vaughan Williams) Explained

The Symphony No. 9 in E minor was the last symphony written by the English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams. He composed it during 1956 and 1957, and it was given its premiere performance in London by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Sir Malcolm Sargent on 2 April 1958, in the composer's eighty-sixth year. The work was received respectfully but, at first, without great enthusiasm. Its reputation has subsequently grown, and the symphony has entered the repertoire, in the concert hall and on record, with the majority of recordings from the 1990s and the 21st century.

In his early sketches for the symphony, Vaughan Williams made explicit reference to characters and scenes in Thomas Hardy's Tess of the d'Urbervilles. By the time the symphony was complete he had deleted the programmatic details, but musical analysts have found many points in which the work nonetheless evokes the novel.

Background and first performances

By the mid-1950s Vaughan Williams, in his eighties, was regarded as the Grand Old Man of English music, greatly as he disliked the term.[1] Between 1910 and 1955 he had composed eight symphonies, and early in 1956, before the premiere of the Eighth, he began to think about and make sketches for a ninth.[2]

During the early stages of the composition of the symphony, Vaughan Williams conceived first a musical depiction of Salisbury, the Plain and Stonehenge[3] and then an evocation of Thomas Hardy's Tess of the d'Urbervilles, set in the same surroundings. The programmatic elements disappeared as work progressed.[4] Existing sketches show that in the early stages of composition certain passages related to specific people and events in the novel: in some of the manuscripts the first movement is headed "Wessex Prelude" and the heading "Tess" appears above sketches for the second movement.[4] By the time the work was complete, the composer was at pains to characterise it as absolute music:

The work was commissioned by and dedicated to the Royal Philharmonic Society. It was complete by November 1957 when a piano arrangement was played to a group of the composer's friends, including the composers Arthur Bliss and Herbert Howells and the critic Frank Howes.[5] A fortnight before the premiere, Vaughan Williams arranged (and paid for) a three-hour rehearsal at which the symphony was played through twice; after hearing the piece he made some minor adjustments in preparation for the premiere.[6] [7]

Sir Malcolm Sargent conducted the first public performance at a Royal Philharmonic Society concert at the Royal Festival Hall, London on 2 April 1958, the central item in the programme, between Kodály's Concerto for Orchestra and Berlioz's Harold in Italy.[8] He again conducted the symphony on 5 August 1958 at a broadcast BBC Proms concert.[9] The work received its North American premiere on 10 August, conducted by William Steinberg at the Vancouver International Festival.[10] Leopold Stokowski conducted the US premiere at Carnegie Hall, New York, on 25 September,[11] and Sir John Barbirolli conducted the Philadelphia Orchestra in the work in December of that year.[12]

Music

The orchestral forces required are:

The symphony is in four movements. Timings in performance vary considerably: at the premiere Sargent and the Royal Philharmonic took 30m 25s, which is nearer than most subsequent performances on record to the composer's metronome markings, but is felt by some critics to be too fast in places. In preparation for the first commercial recording of the work in August 1958, Sir Adrian Boult discussed the ending of the last movement with Vaughan Williams, which he felt was too abrupt. Vaughan Williams suggested that he could play that section "a good deal slower" if he wished while he considered Boult's suggestion that he add 20 or 30 measures.[13] [14] Timings of studio recordings of the work have ranged from 29m 45s (Kees Bakels, 1996) to 40m 43 (Andrew Manze, 2018), with 34 minutes or so a more typical duration.[15]

1. Moderato maestoso

In the composer's published analysis the Moderato first movement is described as not in strict sonata form but obeying the general principles of statement, contrast and repetition.[16] The symphony opens in E minor, in time, with a held unison E in four octaves, followed by a slow theme for low brasses and winds over the sustained E. This leads to the first solo entrance of the three saxophones in a solemn theme in triads over a quiet E minor chord. The clarinets, accompanied by harp chords, introduce a gentler theme in G minor that elides into the G major that conventional sonata form would suggest. This returns in fuller form later in the movement, forming the recapitulation section, and now played by a solo violin, before the movement returns to the opening theme and ends with a saxophone cadence (à la Napolitaine, in the composer's phrase).[17]

2. Andante sostenuto

The slow movement, marked Andante sostenuto, opens in G minor, time, with a theme for the solo flügelhorn. According to the musicologist Alain Frogley and others, the composer's original programmatic conceptions are essentially unaltered in the score despite his deletion of the labelling of themes, and in the opening it is possible to hear the sound of the wind blowing through Stonehenge.[18] [19] [20] Later in the movement the music evokes Tess, the pursuing constabulary, her arrest and the bell striking eight before her hanging.[20] [21] Vaughan Williams, avoiding mention of the original programme, describes the flügelhorn theme as "borrowed from an early work of the composer's, luckily long since scrapped, but changed so that its own father would hardly recognize it". He continues: The movement closes on a pianissimo chord of C major sustained across four bars.[22]

3. Scherzo

The scherzo third movement is marked Allegro pesante, and moves between and time. After an opening fortissimo brass discord, accompanied by a rhythmic pattern on the side drum, the saxophones play the first main theme, which is followed by a second theme, in, and, reverting to, a third. A subsidiary theme is developed in canon. The music is interrupted by a repetition of the opening dissonance, out of which the solo B saxophone and the side drum bring the movement to a quiet end.[23]

4. Finale

The last movement, marked Andante tranquillo, is in two distinct sections, the first in repeated binary form and the second a sonata allegro with coda.[24] The first section begins with a long cantilena on the violins and then the violas, with clarinet counterpoint. The second theme, for horns, is followed by a repetition of both themes, before a short phrase that occurs throughout the movement introduces the second section, a viola theme, soft at first and becoming louder and contrapuntal, for full orchestra before ending on an E major triad, fortissimo but fading away to silence.[25]

Critical reception

According to Vaughan Williams's biographer Michael Kennedy, after the first performances, "there was no denying the coolness of the critics' reception of the music. Its enigmatic mood puzzled them, and more attention was therefore paid to the use of the flügel horn and to the flippant programme note."[26] The flügelhorn player at the premiere remarked that all the press coverage was about the instrument, to the detriment of serious discussion of the symphony as a work.[27] An example of what Kennedy describes as the composer's flippancy in his programme note concerns the instrumentation:In the American journal Notes, R. Murray Schafer commented that although most libraries would wish to acquire the score because of Vaughan Williams's reputation as a symphonist, "I find it difficult...to discover much more than a numerical value in the work". He complained about the saxophones and flügelhorn: "all this extra color seems to be employed simply in thickening the middle-orchestra texture. ... The formal mastery is still present, but I don't think it saves the work."[28] Other critics in America were more impressed. In the Musical Courier, Gideon Waldrop described the symphony as "a work of beauty ... lyricism, sheer tonal beauty and thorough craftsmanship were in evidence throughout" and in The New York Times, Harold C. Schonberg wrote that "the symphony is packed with strong personal melody from beginning to end ... A mellow glow suffuses the work, as it does the work of many veteran composers who seem to gaze retrospectively over their careers ... the Ninth Symphony is a masterpiece".[11]

In the decades following his death, the music of Vaughan Williams was to a considerable extent ignored by musical academics and critics, although not by the public: his music remained popular in the concert hall and on record.[29] [30] In the mid-1990s the critical and musicological tide turned in his favour.[31] So far as the Ninth Symphony was concerned, the earlier view that it said nothing new began to be supplanted by the recognition that although it was, as The Times put it in 2008, "the synthesis and summation of all that had gone before", the music was visionary, violent, elusive and ambiguous.[32] In 2011, in a note for the San Francisco Symphony, Larry Rothe wrote, "Like Beethoven's final symphony, this one portrays huge conflicts and superhuman striving. Then, in its midst, a light-drenched seascape unfolds, but the vision retreats as suddenly as it appeared. Vaughan Williams had not composed music so angry and assertive since his Sixth Symphony".[33] Frogley and others believe that the work became better understood once the programmatic element became widely known.[13] [34]

Recordings

YearOrchestraConductorLocationRef
1958Royal PhilharmonicSir Malcolm SargentRoyal Festival Hall, London[35]
1958London PhilharmonicSir Adrian BoultWalthamstow Assembly Hall, London[36]
1958unnamedLeopold StokowskiCarnegie Hall, New York[37]
1958Orquestra Sinfónica Nacional de PortugalPedro de Freitas BrancoTeatro Nacional de São Carlos, Lisbon,[38]
1969London PhilharmonicSir Adrian BoultKingsway Hall, London[39]
1971London SymphonyAndré PrevinKingsway Hall[40]
1989USSR State SymphonyGennady RozhdestvenskyPhilharmonia Building, Leningrad[41]
1990London SymphonyBryden ThomsonSt Jude's Church, Hampstead Garden Suburb, London[42]
1991PhilharmoniaLeonard SlatkinEMI Abbey Road Studios, London[43]
1994Royal Liverpool PhilharmonicVernon HandleyPhilharmonic Hall, Liverpool[44]
1995BBC SymphonyAndrew DavisSt Augustine's, Kilburn, London[45]
1996Bournemouth SymphonyKees BakelsArts Centre, Poole[46]
2000London PhilharmonicBernard HaitinkAbbey Road[47]
2008BBC SymphonySir Andrew DavisRoyal Albert Hall, London[48]
2016Bergen PhilharmonicSir Andrew DavisGrieg Hall, Bergen[49]
2018Royal Liverpool PhilharmonicAndrew ManzePhilharmonic Hall, Liverpool[50]
2021The HalléSir Mark ElderHallé St Peter's, Manchester[51]

Notes, references and sources

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Pople, p. 50; and Kennedy (2013), pp. 284 and 299
  2. Vaughan Williams, p. 369
  3. Kennedy (1980), p. 369
  4. Frogley (1987), pp. 49–50, 57
  5. Vaughan Williams, p. 385
  6. Vaughan Williams, p. 390; and Kennedy (1980), p. 342
  7. Swain, Jonathan. "Vaughan Williams 9th Symphony", Record Review, BBC Three, 8 February 2014. Event occurs at 47m 37s.
  8. "Philharmonic Concert", The Times, 3 April 1958, p. 3
  9. "Henry Wood Promenade Concert", Radio Times 1 August 1958, p. 31
  10. "Two Musical Works Get Premieres at Vancouver", Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, 13 August 1958, p. 4
  11. [Harold C. Schonberg|Schonberg, Harold C.]
  12. Schloss, Edwin R. "Orchestra Season Reviewed", The Philadelphia Inquirer, 26 April 1959, p. 85
  13. Frogley (2001), p. 21
  14. Book: Sir Adrian Boult talks about Ralph Vaughan Williams. Ralph Vaughan Williams O.M., 1872–1958 . Ralph Vaughan Williams Centenary Committee . 1971 . Rothwell . Barbara Yates . Dorking, UK . 21–22.
  15. Barber, Robin. "Symphony No. 9 – A Comparative CD Review", Journal of the RVW Society, No. 39, June 2007, p. 11
  16. Manning, p. 391
  17. Manning pp. 392–393
  18. Frogley, pp. 50–51
  19. Anderson, Keith (1998). Notes to Naxos CD 8.550738
  20. Horton, pp. 224–225
  21. Frogley, pp. 54–57
  22. Schwartz, p. 156
  23. Schwartz, p. 159
  24. Schwartz, pp. 159–160
  25. Schwartz, pp. 160–164
  26. Kennedy (1980), pp. 342–343
  27. McAneney, Anne. "David Mason", The Brass Herald, issue 18, May–July 2007, p. 38.
  28. [R. Murray Schafer|Schafer, R. Murray]
  29. Frogley (2001), p. 15
  30. Kennedy (2013), p. 296
  31. Frogley and Thompson, pp. 1–2
  32. Finch, Hilary, "Proms", The Times, 28 August 2008, p. 91
  33. Rothe, Larry (2011). "The Vaughan Williams Brand", San Francisco Symphony. Retrieved 30 December 2020
  34. Barr, John. "Vaughan Williams discarded programme in his Ninth Symphony", Journal of the RVW Society, No. 24, June 2002, p. 9
  35. [Pristine Audio]
  36. [Everest Records|Everest]
  37. Cala Records CACD 0539
  38. Portugalsom SP 4084
  39. [His Master's Voice|HMV]
  40. [RCA Red Seal Records|RCA Red Seal]
  41. [Melodiya]
  42. [Chandos Records|Chandos]
  43. [RCA Victor]
  44. EMI Eminence CD EMX 2230
  45. [Teldec]
  46. [Naxos Records|Naxos]
  47. [EMI Classics|EMI]
  48. [BBC Music Magazine]
  49. Chandos CHSA 5180
  50. ONYX ONYX4190
  51. Hallé HLD 7558