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    Vaughan Williams

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    Vaughan Williams: 15 facts about the great composer

    Best known for The Lark Ascending, Ralph Vaughan Williams wrote nine symphonies, operas, film scores and was an avid collector of English folk songs.

    1. Ralph Vaughan Williams child composer

      1. The young Ralph Vaughan Williams

      Born in the village of Down Ampney, Gloucestershire, Ralph Vaughan Williams was related to Charles Darwin (Ralph's great-uncle) and the ceramics giant Josiah Wedgwood (his great-great-grandfather). Young Ralph studied piano and violin and collected traditional folk songs from an early age. These tunes went on to inspire many of his subsequent works.

    2. Royal College of Music Kensington London

      2. At the Royal College of Music

      Vaughan Williams studied at the Royal College of Music in London, pictured, alongside Gustav Holst and Leopold Stokowski. He also spent a short time continuing his studies in Berlin with Max Bruch.

    3. Vaughan Williams church Down Ampney

      3. A Pilgrim's Progress

      The composer's father Arthur was ordained vicar of All Saints church in Down Ampney, pictured. Despite being agnostic, Vaughan Williams edited The English Hymnal in 1904, composed some stunning Christian choral music, and wrote an opera of The Pilgrim’s Progress.

    4. Vaughan Williams young man

      4. Vaughan Williams - A committed socialist

      The composer never took his privileged background for granted and worked all his life for democratic and egalitarian ideals. He viewed music as being part of everyone’s everyday life, rather than being the preserve of an elite.

    5. Maurice Ravel composer

      5. Influenced by Ravel

      In 1907-1908, Vaughan Wiliams studied orchestration in Paris with Ravel. It inspired one of his most fruitful periods of composition. 1910 saw the premieres of his A Sea Symphony and the Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis.

    6. Thomas Tallis composer Vaughan Williams

      6. Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis

      The theme from Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis, pictured, was discovered by Vaughan Williams when he was commissioned to put together the 1906 edition of the English Hymnal. His orchestration of it resulted in an unmistakably British sound and has remained one of his most popular pieces.

    7. Lark Ascending Vaughan Williams

      7. The Lark Ascending

      Vaughan Williams’ most popular piece, The Lark Ascending, was written in 1914 but the outbreak of World War I meant he had to put its premiere on hold. It was given in 1921 by the violinist Marie Hall – the woman for whom Vaughan Williams had written it.

    8. Vaughan Williams army

      8. Vaughan Williams at war

      Aged 41 when World War I began, Vaughan Williams served in France and Salonika. Prolonged exposure to gunfire began a process of hearing loss that eventually caused severe deafness in his old age.

    9. The Regimental Band of the Coldstream Guards

      9. English Folk Songs Suite

      Vaughan Williams was rather sentimental about military bands which he recognized as being crucially important to the UK’s cultural and community life. So in 1923 he composed English Folk Songs Suite for them.

    10. Ralph Vaughan Williams

      10. A renaissance in old age

      The composer conducted the London Philharmonic Orchestra in the premiere of his Symphony No.5, dedicated to Sibelius, on 24 June 1943. It offered calming relief from the rigors of London life during the Second World War. As he was already 70, many considered the symphony to be his swan song but Vaughan Williams entered another period of experimental compositions.

    11. Sir John in Love Vaughan Williams

      11. Fantasia on Greensleeves

      The four-minute long Fantasia on Greensleeves appeared originally in Vaughan Williams's 1928 opera Sir John in Love. The piece also incorporates a folk song called ‘Lovely Joan’ which Vaughan Williams came across in Sussex.

    12. Merchant of Venice

      12. Serenade to Music

      Vaughan Williams' Serenade to Music for 16 vocal soloists and orchestra was composed in 1938. The text is adapted from a discussion about music and the music of the spheres in Act V of Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice, pictured.

    13. Vaughan Williams Ursula composer

      13. Ursula and Ralph Vaughan Williams

      Vaughan Williams was married first to Adeline Fisher. After her death in 1951, he married poet Ursula Wood, pictured, who worked on the libretti for his choral work The Sons of Light as well as the opera The Pilgrim's Process and a Christmas cantata, Hodie.

    14. Vaughan Williams old age

      14. Final days

      Vaughan Williams was still composing great music into his 80s. At the age of 85, he was set to supervise the first recording of his Ninth Symphony with Sir Adrian Boult conducting. But his death on 26 August 1958, the night before the recording sessions were to begin, prompted the conductor to announce to the musicians that their performance would be a memorial to the composer.

    15. Ralph Vaughan Williams

      15. Ralph Vaughan Williams' popularity increases

      Since Classic FM began broadcasting in 1992, the popularity of Vaughan Williams has grown steadily each year with The Lark Ascending often topping the annual Hall of Fame poll from 2007 onwards.

    Vaughan Williams News

    See more Vaughan Williams News

    Vaughan Williams' lost work

    Lost work by Vaughan Williams to be given a world premiere by the Royal Scottish National Orchestra

    Composer Ralph Vaughan Williams

    There’s a new No. 1 in the Classic FM Hall of Fame – and it’s by Vaughan Williams

    Tha Lark Ascending Vaughan Williams

    The Lark Ascending tops the Hall of Fame 2017 – here's why we love it

    Vaughan Williams Music

    See more Vaughan Williams Music

    Jennifer Pike Lark

    Why does everyone love The Lark Ascending? Violinist Jennifer Pike explains its magic.

    Ocean waves

    Vaughan Williams: Symphony No.1, 'A Sea Symphony'

    Tchaik 5

    Ralph Vaughan Williams: The Wasps

    Vaughan Williams Album Reviews

    See more Vaughan Williams Album Reviews

    Pinchas Zukerman Elgar Vaughan Williams

    Pinchas Zukerman: Elgar and Vaughan Williams

    Elgar

    Solent_VW

    The Solent - Fifty Years of Music by Ralph Vaughan Williams

    elgar vaughan williams kansas city album cover

    Elgar & Vaughan Williams: Kansas City Symphony/Michael Stern

    Elgar

    Vaughan Williams Guides

    See more Vaughan Williams Guides

    Jane Jones and the Earl of Wessex

    Vaughan Williams - ‘O Taste and See’: Full Works Concert Highlight of the Week

    Palmer_harvest

    When Vaughan Williams composed for the Women's Institute

    Vaughan Williams

    8 reasons why we love Vaughan Williams

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