Symphony No. 8 (Vaughan Williams)
Ralph Vaughan Williams's Symphony No. 8 in D minor was composed between 1953 and 1955. Sir John Barbirolli, its dedicatee, conducted the Hallé Orchestra in the premiere at the Kings Hall in Manchester, on 2 May 1956. It is the shortest of the composer's nine symphonies, and is mostly buoyant and optimistic in tone. Background and first performancesBy the mid-1950s Vaughan Williams, in his eighties, was regarded as the Grand Old Man of English music, much though he disliked the term.[1] Between 1903 and 1952 he had composed seven symphonies, and in 1953 he started sketching out another.[2] Progress was slowed by his busy schedule, including a long spell lecturing and conducting in the US in the second half of 1954,[3] but by January 1955 the symphony was substantially complete.[4] While it was in the final stages of composition the composer and his wife went to a performance of Turandot at Covent Garden, at which Vaughan Williams became fascinated by the tuned gongs extensively used in Puccini's score, and he added them to the already large percussion section required for the symphony.[5] The work was not written to commission, but Sir John Barbirolli, conductor-in-chief of the Hallé Orchestra, asked Vaughan Williams for a new piece, and the composer offered him the symphony.[4] Conductor and orchestra gave the composer a private run-through of the work in February 1956,[6] and the premiere was scheduled for Manchester in May. The composer inscribed the manuscript, "For Glorious John, with love and admiration from Ralph" and the published score is headed "Dedicated to Sir John Barbirolli".[7] The first performance was given by the Hallé, conducted by Barbirolli, at the Kings Hall in Manchester on 2 May 1956. It was recorded by the BBC and subsequently released on disc.[8] The same orchestra and conductor gave the London premiere at the Royal Festival Hall on 14 May.[7] The Philadelphia Orchestra conducted by Eugene Ormandy gave the work its US premiere on 5 October 1956.[9] The following year, on 30 June, Leopold Stokowski conducted the London Symphony Orchestra in the work at the Festival Hall.[10] Charles Munch conducted the Boston Symphony Orchestra in a series of performances of the work, beginning on 31 October 1957.[11] MusicVaughan Williams's earlier symphonies either had titles (A Sea Symphony, A London Symphony, Pastoral Symphony, Sinfonia antartica) or were published as Symphony in F minor, in D major and in E minor. Those in the latter group were widely referred to as Symphonies No 4, 5, and 6, but Vaughan Williams disapproved: "I have never put numbers to my symphonies and don't want to start now".[12] In the end the new work was published, by the Oxford University Press, as "Symphony No 8 in D minor".[13] The Eighth is the shortest of Vaughan Williams's nine symphonies, a typical performance taking just under half an hour.[14] StructureThe symphony is scored for an orchestra with conventional woodwind, brass, and string sections (enlarged by an extra harp) but an augmented percussion section.
The work is in four movements. 1. FantasiaThe opening movement, in D minor, has the subtitle Variazioni senza tema – variations without a theme. The critic and musicologist Michael Kennedy writes that the movement is "among the most highly and skilfully organised" that Vaughan Williams wrote, "with rich and diverse thematic material".[15] As the composer noted, the movement can be analysed in terms of traditional sonata form, with the opening moderato freely recapitulated as the allegro vivace sixth section, and the chorale-like third section as the largamente seventh.[16] There are three principal motifs, all closely related: two rising fourths for trumpet, answered by vibraphone; a phrase for flute in jig time; and a descending figure for strings. Kennedy writes that the variations illustrate various facets of the composer's style: "The second, presto, plays around with all three motifs; the third is a chorale-like tune in A minor for strings and harp with a subsidiary theme for oboe and cello".[15] The themes of both variations, and of the fourth (an allegretto in 6 2. Scherzo alla marciaThis movement, in C minor, is labelled "per stromenti a fiato" – for wind instruments – and is scored for woodwind and brass only.[17] Although it contains 181 bars as opposed to the 111 of the slow movement its fast pace makes it the shortest movement of the symphony in performance, usually playing for under four minutes.[14][18] Like the first movement, it has three main themes: one for bassoons, one for trumpet and one for flutes and other high woodwind. A fugato section is followed by a trio in pastoral vein, and a brief return of the scherzo brings the movement to a close.[19] 3. CavatinaThe third movement, a cavatina in E minor, is scored for strings only. This movement, in a five-part rondo form, has a meditative character; Kennedy calls it a "beautiful old-age reverie of farewell to Tallis and larks ascending".[15] The main theme bears a resemblance to the traditional chorale that Vaughan Williams, as editor, included in the English Hymnal as "O sacred head sore wounded".[20] The tune is used in Bach's St Matthew Passion, a work close to Vaughan Williams's heart, and he said that its appearance in the symphony was "a mix-up in my mind".[15] The theme, in E minor, is given to the cellos accompanied by occasional pianissimo chords and pizzicato bass; the second subject, in A♭, is played by the violins. The central interlude of the movement is a rhapsodic episode with violin solo, and in the recapitulation and coda, dominated by a solo cello line, the first and second subjects are combined. The movement closes quietly in E major.[21] 4. FinaleThe D major / D minor finale is headed Toccata to indicate its virtuoso and exuberant character. After a loud stroke of the gong and bell the full orchestra states the first theme, alternating with the same theme played by tuned percussion. A lyrical theme follows, played by violins against a repeated woodwind figure. As the movement progresses to its climax the large percussion section dominates – the composer said the piece employed "all the 'phones and 'spiels known to the composer".[22] The Eighth is the only of Vaughan Williams's symphonies other than the Fourth to end loudly. The others all have quiet conclusions, some fading to Vaughan Williams's much favoured marking niente – "nothing".[23] Critical receptionThe Manchester Guardian reported after the premiere, "It is not often that the entire audience in an English concert hall gets on its feet to cheer, particularly after a new work",[24] and the Eighth has remained one of the composer's most popular symphonies.[25] In 2008, the music critic of The Times wrote, "With its witty variations in search of a theme, its sparky scherzo and its toybox of a toccata, the symphony sounds like the work of a young man at the height of his powers".[26] After the US premiere, the critic Edwin H. Schloss called the symphony "a work of stimulating originality – music of a freshness, exuberance and warmth", the scherzo "pert, garrulous and brimming with delightful humor" and the cavatina "music of great lyric loveliness". Schloss reported that the work was greeted "with a torrent of applause".[9] When Ormandy and the orchestra took the work to New York Douglas Watt found it "sunny, lively, expertly tailored and winning".[27] The New York Music Critics' Circle named the piece as the best new symphony of the year.[28] Reviewing the first recording to be issued of the work the critic Harold C. Schonberg concluded that Vaughan Williams "could well be today's major symphonist".[29] Among assessments in the 21st century, Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2001) says of the piece: The Eighth, in D minor, has a comparative lightness of heart and a capacity for humour, but these qualities are shot through with sadness and anxiety, even in the rumbustious finale; melodic allusions to Holst and Bach suggest that a thread of remembrance for the fallen of World War I, and for absent friends in general, runs through the work.[30]
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