A Sea Symphony
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A Sea Symphony is a choral symphony by Ralph Vaughan Williams, written between 1903 and 1909. Vaughan Williams's first and longest symphony, it was first performed at the Leeds Festival in 1910, with the composer conducting. The symphony's maturity belies the composer's relative youth when it was written (he was 30 when he first began sketching it). One of the first symphonies in which a choir is used throughout the work and is an integral part of the musical texture, A Sea Symphony helped set the stage for a new era of symphonic and choral music in England during the first half of the 20th century. The work is sometimes referred to as the Symphony No. 1.
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[edit] History
From 1903-1909, Ralph Vaughan Williams worked intermittently on a series of songs for chorus and orchestra that were to become his most lengthy project to date and his first true symphony. Originally titled The Ocean, A Sea Symphony was first performed in 1910 at the Leeds Festival on the composer's 38th birthday. This is generally cited as his first large-scale work; although Grove lists some 16 other orchestral works composed by Vaughan Williams before he completed A Sea Symphony, including two with chorus; the vast majority of those are juvenalia or apprentice works that have never been published and are long since withdrawn from circulation. Nevertheless, Vaughan Williams had never before attempted a work of quite this duration, or for such large forces, and it was his first of what would eventually be nine symphonies. Like Brahms, Vaughan Williams delayed a long time before composing his first symphony, but remained prolific throughout the end of his life: his final symphony was composed from 1956-58, and completed when he was 85 years of age.
[edit] Structure
At approximately 70 minutes, A Sea Symphony is the longest of all Vaughan Williams’ symphonies. Although it represents a departure from the traditional Germanic symphonic tradition of the time, it follows a fairly standard symphonic outline: fast introductory movement, slow movement, scherzo, and finale. The four movements are:
- A Song for All Seas, All Ships (baritone, soprano, and chorus)
- On the Beach at Night, Alone (baritone and chorus)
- Scherzo: The Waves (chorus)
- The Explorers (baritone, soprano, semi-chorus, and chorus)
The first movement lasts roughly twenty minutes; the inner movements approximately eleven and eight minutes, and the finale lasts roughly thirty minutes.
[edit] Text
The text of A Sea Symphony comes from Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass. Though Whitman's poems were little known in England at the time, Vaughan Williams was attracted to them for their ability to transcend both metaphysical and humanist perspectives. Whitman's use of free verse was also beginning to make waves in the compositional world, where fluidity of structure was beginning to be more attractive than traditional, metrical settings of text. Vaughan Williams sets the following poems in A Sea Symphony:
- Movement 1: “Song of the Exposition” and “Song for all Seas, all Ships"
- Movement 2: "On the Beach at Night Alone"
- Movement 3: "After the Sea-ship", taken in its entirety
- Movement 4: "Passage to India"
[edit] Music
[edit] Orchestration
The symphony is scored for soprano, baritone, chorus and a large orchestra consisting of two flutes, piccolo, two oboes, English horn, two clarinets, E-flat clarinet, bass clarinet, two bassoons, contrabassoon, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, two harps, organ, and strings.
In order to facilitate more performances of the work, the full score also includes the provision that it may be performed by a reduced orchestra of two flutes (second doubling piccolo), one oboe, English horn, two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, one harp, and strings.
The baritone soloist sings in movements 1, 2, and 4, and the soprano soloist sings only in 1 and 4.
[edit] Influences
Comparisons to Stanford, Parry, and Elgar, as in the Grove article, are expected. Not only were the four writing during the same era and in the same country, Vaughan Williams studied with both Stanford and Parry at the Royal College of Music, and his preparations for composing A Sea Symphony included study of both Elgar's Enigma Variations (1898-99) and his oratorio The Dream of Gerontius (1900).
A Sea Symphony is among the best-known of a host of sea-related pieces being written around the same time in England, some of the most famous of which are Stanford's Songs of the Sea (1904) and Songs of the Fleet (1910), Elgar's Sea Pictures (1899), and Frank Bridge's The Sea (1910). Debussy's La Mer (1905) may also have been influential in this apparent nautical obsession.
Vaughan Williams studied with Ravel for three weeks in Paris in 1908. Though he worked chiefly on orchestration, this was to provide quite a contrast to the Germanic tradition handed down through Stanford and Parry at the RCM, and perhaps began to give Vaughan Williams a greater sense for colour and a freedom to move chords as block units. His partiality towards mediant relationships, a unifying harmonic motive of A Sea Symphony, may have been somewhat liberated by these studies, and this harmonic relationship is now considered symptomatic of his style in general. A Sea Symphony also makes use of both pentatonic and whole tone scales, now often considered idiomatic features of French music of the period. Almost certainly, this music was in Vaughan Williams’ mind as he finished work on A Sea Symphony in 1908-1909, though it should be noted that Ravel paid him the great compliment of calling him “the only one of my students who does not write my music.”
[edit] Motives
Musically, A Sea Symphony contains two strong unifying motives. The first is the harmonic motive of two chords (usually one major and one minor) whose roots are a third apart. This is the first thing that occurs in the symphony; the brass fanfare is a B flat minor chord, followed by the choir singing the same chord, singing Behold, the... The full orchestra then comes in on the word sea, which has resolved into D major. The second motive is a melodic figure juxtaposing duplets and triplets, set at the opening of the symphony (and throughout the first movement) to the words And, on its limitless heaving breast... In the common method of counting musical rhythms, the pattern could be spoken as 'one two-and three-two-three four', showing that the second beat is divided into eighth notes (for on its) and the third beat is divided into triplets (for limitless).
[edit] Reception and legacy
The impact of A Sea Symphony manifests itself not only in the life of the composer (his first symphony and first work of such an immense scale), but also in the newfound support and appreciation of the English symphony and 20th century English music in general. Hugh Ottaway's book, Vaughan Williams Symphonies presents the following observation in its introduction:
- “The English symphony is almost entirely a twentieth-century creation. When in 1903 Vaughan Williams began to sketch the songs for chorus and orchestra that became A Sea Symphony, Elgar had not yet emerged as a symphonist. And, extraordinary though it may seem, Elgar's First (1908) is the earliest symphony by an English composer in the permanent repertory. . . By the time Vaughan Williams had completed his Ninth [Symphony] – in 1958, a few months before his death at the age of 85 – the English symphony . . . had become a central figure of our musical revival. To say that Vaughan Williams played a major part in bringing this about is to state the obvious: throughout much of the period he was actively involved in English musical life, not only as a composer but as a teacher, conductor, organiser and, increasingly, advisor of young men.” (5)
In the Grove article on Vaughan Williams, Ottaway and Frogley call the work:
- “…a triumph of instinct over environment. The tone is optimistic, Whitman's emphasis on the unity of being and the brotherhood of man comes through strongly, and the vitality of the best things in it has proved enduring. Whatever the indebtedness to Parry and Stanford, and in the finale to Elgar, there is no mistaking the physical exhilaration or the visionary rapture.”
Ursula Vaughan Williams, in what has become the definitive biography of her husband Ralph Vaughan Williams, writes of his philosophy in a more general sense:
- “…he was aware of the common aspirations of generations of ordinary men and women with whom he felt a deep, contemplative sympathy. And so there is in his work a fundamental tension between traditional concepts of belief and morality and a modern spiritual anguish which is also visionary.”
[edit] References
- Day, James. Vaughan Williams, 3rd ed. New York: Oxford University Press, 1998. First published 1961.
- Dickinson, A. E. Vaughan Williams. London: Faber and Faber, 1963. Republished in facsimile by Scholarly Press, Inc. St. Clair Shores, MI.
- Foss, Hubert. Ralph Vaughan Williams. New York: Oxford University Press, 1950.
- Frogley, Alain, ed. Vaughan Williams Studies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996.
- Kennedy, Michael. The Works of Ralph Vaughan Williams. London: Oxford University Press, 1964.
- Ottaway, Hugh. Vaughan Williams Symphonies. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1972.
- Ottaway, Hugh and Alain Frogley. “Vaughan Williams, Ralph.” Grove Music Online. ed. L. Macy, http://www.grovemusic.com/ (subscription access)
- Schwartz, Elliot S. The Symphonies of Ralph Vaughan Williams. Amherst: The University of Massachusetts Press, 1964.
- Vaughan Williams, Ursula. R.V.W. A Biography of Ralph Vaughan Williams. London: Oxford University Press, 1964.
- Whitman, Walt. Leaves of Grass, (“Deathbed edition” 1891-92). London: J. M. Dent Ltd., 1993. First published 1855.
[edit] Further reading
- Clark, F. R. C. “The Structure of Vaughan Williams’ ‘Sea’ Symphony.” The Music Review 34, no. 1 (February 1973): 58-61.
- Heffer, Simon. Vaughan Williams. Boston: Northeastern University Press, 2000.
- Howes, Frank. The Music of Vaughan Williams. London: Oxford University Press, 1954.
- Mellers, Wilfrid. Vaughan Williams and the Vision of Albion. London: Barrie & Jenkins, 1989. See esp. chap. 1, “The Parlour and the Open Sea: Conformity and Nonconformity in Towards the Unknown Region and A Sea Symphony.”
- Vaughan Williams, Ursula and Imogen Holst, eds. Heirs and Rebels: Letters written to each other and occasional writings on music by Ralph Vaughan Williams and Gustav Holst. London: Oxford University Press, 1959.
[edit] Notable recordings
- Adrian Boult, conductor; Dame Isobel Baillie, soprano; John Cameron, baritone; with London Philharmonic Choir; London Philharmonic. Decca, p1953
- Robert Spano, conductor; Christine Goerke, soprano; Brett Polegato, baritone; Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and Chorus. Telarc, p2002. (Winner of Grammy Award for Best Classical Album in 2003)
- Vernon Handley, conductor; Joan Rodgers, soprano; William Schimmel, baritone; Royal Liverpool Philharmonic and Choir. EMI, p1988
- Bernard Haitink, conductor; Felicity Lott, soprano; Jonathan Summers, baritone; with London Philharmonic Choir; Cantilena; London Philharmonic. EMI, p1989
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