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Vaughan Williams' Orchestral Works

  • In the Fen Country - Symphonic Impression for Orchestra (1904)

  • Norfolk Rhapsody No.1 in E minor (1906)

  • Norfolk Rhapsody No. 2 in D minor (1906)
    A slow movement and scherzo, that was to have been the 2nd part of a "Norfolk Symphony", a work based upon Norfolk folk tunes. However RVW abandoned the project and the work lay unperformed since 1914. Fortunately the manuscript has recently been resurrected, and in 2002 it was recorded for the first time.

  • "The Wasps" Suite (1909)
    Taken from the incidental music to the play; see entry in Stage Works.

  • Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis (1910)

  • Charterhouse suite (1920)
    An arrangement for strings of Six Short Pieces for Pianoforte, by James Brown and RVW.

  • English Folk Song Suite (1924)
    Arranged by Gordon Jacob, see entry in Brass Band and Military Band Music.

  • Prelude and Fugue in C minor (1930)
    Arranged by RVW from the organ original, see also Keyboard Works.

  • Fantasia on "Greensleeves" (1934)
    Adapted from opera "Sir John in Love" by Ralph Greaves.

  • Two Hymn Tune Preludes (1936)
    Uses the hymn tunes "Eventide" and "Dominus regit me".

  • Serenade to Music (1938)
    An orchestral version of the choral original; see entry in Choral Music.

  • Five Variants of "Dives and Lazarus" (1939)

  • Prelude to "49th Parallel" (1940)
    Adapted by RVW from his score to the film; see also Film Music.

  • Household Music - Three Preludes on Welsh Hymn Tunes (1940-1)
    Arranged by RVW from the original version for string quartet; see Chamber Music.

  • "Coastal Command" Suite (1942)
    Adapted by Muir Mathieson from RVW's film score; see also Film Music.

  • Sea Songs (1942)
    Arranged by RVW from the military band original; see Brass Band and Military Band Music.

  • Suite from "Story of a Flemish Farm" (1943)
    Adapted by RVW from his score to the film; see also Film Music.

  • Partita for Double String Orchestra (1946-8)

  • Suite from "Folk Songs of the Four Seasons" (1949)
    Arranged for small orchestra by Roy Douglas from RVW's cantata; see also Choral Music.

  • Concerto Grosso for String Orchestra (1950)

  • Prelude on an Old Carol Tune (1952)
    Founded on incidental music from "The Mayor of Casterbridge"; see also Radio Works.

  • Three portraits from "The England of Elizabeth" (1955)
    Adapted by Muir Mathieson from RVW's film score; see also Film Music.

  • Two Shakespeare Sketches from "The England of Elizabeth" (1955)
    Adapted by Muir Mathieson from RVW's film score; see also Film Music.

  • Variations for Orchestra (1957)
    Arranged by Gordon Jacob, for original version see Brass Band and Military Band Music.

  • Flourish for Glorious John (1957)
    A present from RVW to conductor Sir John Barbirolli; only recently published.


See also the list of Unpublished Orchestral Works


Background Information


Concerto Grosso for String Orchestra

Composed : 1950
Movements : I - Intrada
II - Burlesca
III - Sarabande
IV - Scherzo
V - March and Reprise
Duration : 14 minutes

This piece was written for a performance by the Rural Music Schools Association which took place in 1950 under the direction of Sir Adrian Boult, ( and featuring a massed string orchestra of 400 players ). This is why the strings are split into 3 sections : concertino - the skilled players, tutti - the intermediates, and ad lib - the beginners.

"People often mistake Vaughan Williams as a "folk-y" composer, as if he wrote nothing more in his life than variations on "O Waly, Waly." His music ranges far wider than that, into very sophisticated realms. He originally wrote this string piece for all levels of string players : professionals, intermediates, and beginners who could play only open strings - even so, it's no pushover. The rhythmic problems alone will raise a player's hair. For some reason, it hasn't been performed or recorded much, and yet it's fully the equal of a work like Elgar's Introduction and Allegro or Stravinsky's Concerto in D. While not as intense as the Tallis Fantasia, it nevertheless has its passionate moments. Adrian Boult, usually so reliable in Vaughan Williams, misses the boat and turns in a lackluster performance. Norman Del Mar does considerably better." -- Steve Schwartz

Recommended Recordings :
  • Bournemouth Sinfonietta; Norman Del Mar. EMI CDC 7 47812 2.
  • London Philharmonic Orchestra; Adrian Boult. Angel (lp) S-37211


    Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis

    Composed : 1910. Revised : 1913, 1919
    Tempo : Largo sostenuto
    Duration : 15 minutes

    "Vaughan Williams's first indisputable masterpiece and one of the great works for string orchestra written by anybody. Long before Stravinsky's neoclassic essays, Vaughan Williams looks back across centuries and shakes hands with the great Tudor composer Thomas Tallis. Further, Vaughan Williams does not merely exercise himself with recreating a surface style. Instead, the effect seems to transcend time, as a modern composer builds a modern work out of older materials and procedures. The string writing is at once audacious and assured, written with the ascoutics of Gloucester Cathedral in mind, which was where it was first performed. In fact, three independent ensembles make up the orchestra: a large group, a smaller 9-player ensemble, and a string quartet. This allows Vaughan Williams to play with both intimate and incredibly rich (and clear) textures. In fact, it's built somewhat like a great sermon : starting quietly and climbing to heaven by degrees, taking the listener along."

    "Other orchestral works of this period seem to borrow the Fantasia's string sound, in particular the Wasps Suite, the 5 Mystical Songs, and the 2nd Symphony. The composer's string writing became leaner as he got older - for his idiom changed and broadened as well. Still, I regret a bit that he never returned to these gorgeous sounds. Many have recorded this work; I find Boult's performance disappointing and Marriner's very thin." -- Steve Schwartz

    See also Steve's listener's guide for a detailed analysis of this work.

    Recommended Recordings :
  • Sinfonia of London, John Barbirolli. EMI CDC 7 47537-2
  • Philharmonia Orchestra, Malcolm Sargent. EMI (lp) SP 8676
  • New York Philharmonic, Leonard Bernstein. MYK 38484


    Fantasia on Greensleeves

    Composed : 1928. Arranged by Ralph Greaves in 1934
    Tempo / Key : Lento, F minor
    Duration : 5 minutes
    Other versions : Instrumental : Solo piano, piano duet, violin/cello/viola and piano, organ.
    Choral : Solo voice/duet and piano, unaccompanied male voices, mixed choir.

    "This very popular piece comes from an entr'acte and bits from RVW's marvellous opera "Sir John in Love". Despite its title, it's no fantasia, but a pretty straightforward setting of the tune Greensleeves, surrounding a vigorous section on the folk song "Lovely Joan." It's the middle section where Vaughan Williams did most of his work (the song appears very briefly in the opera), and one cannot give him a higher compliment than it enhances the beauty of the title tune. There are many recordings of this piece, and you can scarcely go wrong with any of them, but the Barbirolli CD is highly recommended." -- Steve Schwartz

    Recommended Recording :
  • Sinfonia of London; John Barbirolli. EMI CDC 7 47537-2


    5 Variants of Dives and Lazarus

    Composed : 1939
    Movements : Introduction and theme - adagio, B modal minor
    Variant I - B modal minor
    Variant II - Allegro moderato, B modal minor
    Variant III - D modal minor
    Variant IV - L'istesso tempo
    Variant V - Adagio, B modal minor
    Duration : 13 minutes

    This work is scored for string orchestra and harp, (preferably two), using as its basis a folk tune that RVW had discovered over 30 years earlier. The folk tune can be heard in several parts of the British Isles, although it is known by different names; for example, in Ulster it is the basis of the folksong "The Star of the County Down". Although as RVW states on the score: "These variants are not replicas of traditional tunes, but rather reminiscences of various versions in my own collection and those of others".

    "Constant Lambert, the British music critic and composer, once remarked that the only thing you could do to vary a folk song was to play it louder. Vaughan Williams, among others, proved him wrong. Delius, for example, used a simple variation technique. Vaughan Williams, more than any other British composer of his time, absorbed folk songs into his artistic psyche to such an extent, he not only wrote his own folk songs, but he was able to join them to large symphonic structures. Nowhere is this clearer than in the 5 Variants. This work is not theme and variations in the conventional sense. The folk song "Dives and Lazarus" is taken for a winding walk, pulled, and turned until it becomes an eleven-minute symphonic movement, without a trace of artistic self-consciousness." -- Steve Schwartz

    Recommended Recording :
  • The Jacques Orchestra; David Willcocks conducting. EMI CDC 7 49023 2


    In the Fen Country

    Composed : 1904. Revised : 1905, 1907, 1935
    Duration : 14 minutes

    As the title suggests, this is a tone poem. It is also an early work, written in 1904, and like so many of RVW's works of the period it was not published. At this point in his musical career RVW was still developing as a composer and the piece waited 5 years after it was completed for its first performance. Despite being reorchestrated in 1935, this work was not published in the composer's lifetime and has only recently been resurrected.

    It is one of the composer's first examples of great orchestral writing. Also significant is the fact that RVW had just begun to collect folksong from the south of England, and although no folk melody is quoted directly, the inspiration of the countryside is clear - the tranquil sound of the midsection anticipating "The Lark Ascending", written 10 years later.

    Recommended Recordings :
  • Academy of St. Martin in the Fields, Sir Neville Marriner. Philips 442 427 2
  • London Philharmonic Orchestra, Bryden Thomson. CHAN 8502


    Norfolk Rhapsody No.1 in E minor

    Composed : 1906. Revised : 1914
    Duration : 11 minutes

    When folksong meets classical music, it's usually as a rhapsody. You can thank Liszt for starting that. RVW gathered together a number of Norfolk folksongs and by all accounts had planned to write a symphony with them, but in the end he settled for constructing 3 "rhapsodies". The first in E minor was performed at the 1906 Proms, and the other 2 at Cardiff a year later. Intriguingly though, the composer withdrew all 3 works soon after. The first rhapsody was eventually revised and published in 1925, with a tender ending replacing the original lively finish. Unfortunately, the second and third rhapsodies were never published ... until 2002, when the 2nd Rhapsody was recreated from the remaining fragments and recorded for the first time by Chandos.

    If the missing two are half as good as the surviving rhapsody, it's a major loss. This is a great work, using themes from the Norfolk fishing village folksongs "The Captain's Apprentice" and "The Bold Young Sailor". You'll remember two things about this work, the lovely quiet passages with woodwind piping, and the jig-like cameo appearance of the snare drum halfway through. RVW did the nation a service by preserving this music.

    Recommended Recordings :
  • City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Norman Del Mar. EMI CDM 5 65131 2
  • Philharmonia Orchestra, Leonard Slatkin. RCA/BMG 09026 61193/96 2


    Partita for Double String Orchestra

    Composed : 1938 (as double trio for string sextet). Revised 1946-8
    Movements : I - Prelude; andante tranquillo
    II - Scherzo Ostinato; presto
    III - Intermezzo "Homage to Henry Hall"
    IV - Fantasia; allegro
    Duration : 21 minutes

    "Dissatisfied with its original form as a double string trio, Vaughan Williams recast it for string orchestra. It's another odd work, a very sophisticated study in rhythm, with movements honoring the British society band leader Henry Hall and, to my ears, Gustav Holst's Beni Mora. The best performance I've heard was Adrian Boult's for Everest (coupled with the Symphony No. 8). His second outing, for EMI, lacks the necessary rhythmic bite. Try Vernon Handley on EMI or Bryden Thomson on Chandos." -- Steve Schwartz

    Recommended Recordings :
  • London Philharmonic Orchestra; Adrian Boult. EMI CDM 7 69710 2.
  • Royal Liverpool Symphony Orchestra; Vernon Handley. EMI (Classics for Pleasure) CDM 641142.
  • London Symphony Orchestra; Bryden Thomson, cond. Chandos CHAN 8828


    Variations for Orchestra

    Composed : 1957. Arranged for orchestra by Gordon Jacob in 1960
    Variations : Introduction and theme - andante maestoso; I - poco tranquillo; II - tranquillo cantabile
    III - allegro; IV - allegro (canon); V - moderato sostenuto; VI - tempo di valse
    VII - andante sostenuto (arabesque); VIII - alla polacca; IX - adagio;
    X - allegro moderato (fugato); XI - chorale
    Duration : 12 minutes

    The fact that this piece was arranged by Gordon Jacob gives away its origins : it was originally written for Brass Band. This short, rarely heard piece is a set of 11 variations on an original theme, which were written in 1957 for the British National Brass Band Championships. The composer experimented with Brass several times in his final years, the Tuba concerto and 8th and 9th symphonies are good examples, and this makes equally interesting listening.

    Recommended Recording:
  • Academy of St. Martin in the Fields, Sir Neville Marriner. Philips 442 427 2


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