A Vaughan Williams Christmas
Kate Molleson explores Vaughan Williams’s experiences of Christmas
across his life
1 Stunde 18 Minuten
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vor 2 Jahren
“I’ve always loved carols,” Vaughan Williams wrote to Cecil Sharp
in 1911. Despite being called a “most determined atheist” by
Bertrand Russell at University, and in later life “a cheerful
agnostic”, the composer never lost his love for Christmas. It
dated back to childhood memories of singing carols from Stainer
and Bramley’s Christmas Carols New and Old at his home at Leith
Hill Place, Surrey. As an adult, his lifelong passion for the
Christmas period was demonstrated in his music - the Fantasia on
Christmas Carols, On Christmas Night based on Dickens’s A
Christmas Carol, the cantata Hodie and the nativity play The
First Nowell. His passion for collecting folk tunes in various
counties of England – armed with a trusty pencil and paper, or at
times a phonograph - also led to a plethora of carol settings
using these folk tunes, as Vaughan Williams himself said “Every
day some old village singer dies, and with him there probably die
half-a-dozen beautiful melodies, which are lost to the world for
ever: if we would preserve what still remains we must set about
it at once.” This week. Kate Molleson explores Vaughan Williams’s
experiences of Christmas across his life alongside some of his
best loved pieces, and the music he wrote to celebrate the
festive period.
Music Featured:
Dives and Lazarus The First Nowell (extract) Trad. The Murder of
Maria Marten Five Variants of ‘Dives and Lazarus’ Suite for Viola
and Small Orchestra – Group 1 The Wasps Overture I Saw Three
Ships Come In Willow Wood Folk Songs of the Four Seasons:
Orchestral Suite Trad. The High-low well The Holy Well (version
1) Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis As Joseph was Walking A
London Symphony (III. Scherzo) Fantasia on Christmas Carols
Symphony 3 (II. Lento) Trad. On Christmas Night Sussex Carol The
Lark Ascending Hodie (This Day): The Oxen On Christmas Night
(extract) Dona Nobis Pacem (III. Reconcilliation) Trad.
Ploughboy’s Dream O Little Town of Bethlehem Prelude: 49th
parallel Symphony No 5 in D Major (III. Romanza) God rest you
merry, gentlemen The First Nowell: IX: In Bethlehem City On
Wenlock Edge (V. Bredon Hill) Epithalamion (the bridal day) –
Procession of the bride Hodie (extract) Symphony No 7 (V.
Epilogue) Trad. Seven Virgins (Leaves of Life) The Seven Virgins
The First Nowell: XX. The First Nowell
Presented by Kate Molleson Produced by Sam Phillips for BBC Audio
Wales and West
For full track listings, including artist and recording details,
and to listen to the pieces featured in full (for 30 days after
broadcast) head to the series page for A Vaughan Williams
Christmas https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001t9wp
And you can delve into the A-Z of all the composers we’ve
featured on Composer of the Week here:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/3cjHdZlXwL7W41XGB77X3S0/composers-a-to-z
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