Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis

Last updated

Curwen edition of the Tallis Fantasia orchestral score Tallis fantasia cover.jpg
Curwen edition of the Tallis Fantasia orchestral score

Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis, also known as the Tallis Fantasia, is a one-movement work for string orchestra by Ralph Vaughan Williams. The theme is by the 16th-century English composer Thomas Tallis. The Fantasia was first performed at Gloucester Cathedral as part of the 1910 Three Choirs Festival, and has entered the orchestral repertoire, with frequent concert performances and recordings by conductors and orchestras of various countries.

Contents

Background and first performance

Vaughan Williams did not achieve wide recognition early in his career as a composer, but by 1910, in his late thirties, he was gaining a reputation. [1] In that year the Three Choirs Festival commissioned a work from him, to be premiered in Gloucester Cathedral; this represented a considerable boost to his standing. [2] He composed what his biographer James Day calls "unquestionably the first work by Vaughan Williams that is recognizably and unmistakably his and no one else's". [3] It is based on a tune by the 16th-century English composer Thomas Tallis, which Vaughan Williams had come across while editing the English Hymnal , published in 1906. [4] Vaughan Williams conducted the London Symphony Orchestra in the first performance of the Fantasia, as the first part of a concert in Gloucester Cathedral on 6 September 1910, followed by Elgar's The Dream of Gerontius , conducted by its composer. [5] [n 1]

Music

Theme

First bars of Tallis's theme Thomas-Tallis-theme-used-by-RVW.tif
First bars of Tallis's theme

Like several of Vaughan Williams's other works, the Fantasia draws on the music of the English Renaissance. [9] Tallis's tune is in the Phrygian mode, characterised by intervals of a flat second, third, sixth and seventh; [4] the pattern is reproduced by playing the white notes of the piano starting on E. [10]

Parker's verse for which Tallis composed the tune used by Vaughan Williams Why-fumeth-Parker-metrical-Psalms.jpg
Parker's verse for which Tallis composed the tune used by Vaughan Williams

Tallis's theme was one of nine tunes he wrote for the Psalter of 1567 of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Matthew Parker. It was a setting of Parker's metrical version of Psalm 2, which in the King James Bible version begins, "Why do the heathen rage, and the people imagine a vain thing?", and is rendered by Parker as "Why fumeth in sight: The Gentils spite, In fury raging stout? Why taketh in hond: the people fond, Vayne things to bring about?". [n 2] The tune is in Double Common Metre (D.C.M. or C.M.D.). [12]

According to his biographer Michael Kennedy, Vaughan Williams came to associate Tallis's theme with John Bunyan's Christian allegory, The Pilgrim's Progress , a subject with which the composer had a lifelong fascination; he used the tune in 1906 in incidental music he composed for a stage version of the book. [13] For the Hymnal, he adapted the tune as a setting of Joseph Addison's hymn "When rising from the bed of death". [14] [n 3]

Fantasia

The term "fantasia", according to Frank Howes in his study of Vaughan Williams's works, referred to the 16th-century forerunner of the fugue "in that a thread of theme was enunciated and taken up by other parts, then dropped in favour of another akin to it which was similarly treated". [15] Vaughan Williams's fantasia draws on but does not strictly follow this precept, containing sections in which the material is interrelated, although with little wholly imitative writing, and antiphony in preference to contrapuntal echoing of themes. [15]

Reception

The premiere of the Fantasia received a generally warm welcome, with a few exceptions: Herbert Brewer, the Gloucester cathedral organist, described it as "a queer, mad work by an odd fellow from Chelsea". [34] The Musical Times reviewer said, "It is a grave work, exhibiting power and much charm of the contemplative kind, but it appears over long for the subject-matter". [35] Other reviews were more enthusiastic. The reviewer in The Daily Telegraph praised Vaughan Williams's mastery of string effect and added that although the work might not appeal to some because of its "seeming austerity", it was "extremely beautiful to such as have ears for the best music of all ages". [36] In The Manchester Guardian , Samuel Langford wrote, "The melody is modal and antique in flavour, while the harmonies are as exotic as those of Debussy … The work marks out the composer as one who has got quite out of the ruts of the commonplace". [37] In The Times, J. A. Fuller Maitland also commented on ancient and Debussian echoes, and observed:

Throughout its course one is never quite sure whether one is listening to something very old or very new. … But that is just what makes this Fantasia so delightful to listen to; it cannot be assigned to a time or a school, but it is full of the visions which have haunted the seers of all times. [38]

In 1954 Howes wrote:

The work in its definitive form has the solidity and grandeur of a cathedral, to which its strains seem to belong by a natural affinity. It has passed into the repertory of all the great orchestras of the world. Its intense Englishness has been no bar to international understanding, whatever may have been said along those lines about other of Vaughan Williams's compositions. [15]

Listeners of the British classical music radio station Classic FM have regularly voted the piece into the top five of the station's "Hall of Fame", an annual poll of the most popular classical music works. [39]

Recordings

Although the BBC first broadcast the Fantasia in 1926, and again over the following decade, conducted by the composer and Arturo Toscanini, [40] it was not until 1936 that the work was recorded for the gramophone. The fledgling Decca company recorded it with Boyd Neel conducting his orchestra under the supervision of the composer in January 1936, [41] a set described by The Gramophone as one of the outstanding records of the year. [42] Since then there have been more than fifty recordings by orchestras and conductors from various countries.

YearOrchestraConductor
1936Boyd Neel Orchestra Boyd Neel
1940 BBC Symphony Orchestra (BBC SO) Sir Adrian Boult
1945 NBC Symphony Orchestra Arturo Toscanini
1945 Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra Dimitri Mitropoulos
1946 Hallé Orchestra John Barbirolli
1952 Philharmonia Orchestra Herbert von Karajan
1952Stokowski Symphony Orchestra Leopold Stokowski
1952New Symphony Orchestra of London Anthony Collins
1953 New York Philharmonic Orchestra (NYPO) Dmitri Mitropoulos
1957 Philharmonic Promenade Orchestra Boult
1958NYPO Dmitri Mitropoulos
1959Philharmonia Sir Malcolm Sargent
1960 Symphony of the Air Leopold Stokowski
1961 Vienna State Opera Orchestra Boult
1962 Sinfonia of London Barbirolli
1963 Boston Symphony Orchestra Pierre Monteux
1963 Philadelphia Orchestra Eugene Ormandy
1964Morton Gould Orchestra Morton Gould
1965 Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra William Steinberg
1966 London Symphony Orchestra (LSO) Istvan Kertesz
1967 Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra Constantin Silvestri
1968 Utah Symphony Orchestra Maurice Abravanel
1970 London Philharmonic Orchestra (LPO)Boult
1972 Academy of St Martin in the Fields (ASMF) Neville Marriner
1973LPO Vernon Handley
1974New PhilharmoniaStokowski
1975LPOBoult
1975RPOStokowski
1976NYPO Leonard Bernstein
1979LSO André Previn
1980 City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra Norman Del Mar
1981 St Louis Symphony Orchestra Leonard Slatkin
1983ASMFMarriner
1984 English Symphony Orchestra William Boughton
1985 Orpheus Chamber Orchestra
1986LPO Bernard Haitink
1986LPO Bryden Thomson
1986 CBC Chamber Orch Alexander Brott
1988Royal Philharmonic Orchestra (RPO)Previn
1989 Israel Philharmonic Orchestra Dalia Atlas
1989RPO Sir Charles Groves
1989LSO Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos
1990BBC SO Sir Andrew Davis
1990 Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra (RLPO)Handley
1991 City of London Sinfonia Richard Hickox
1991 London Festival Orchestra Ross Pople
1991PhilharmoniaSlatkin
1991Consort of LondonRobert Haydon Clark
1992New Queen's Hall Orchestra Barry Wordsworth
1997LPO Roger Norrington
2001 New Zealand Symphony Orchestra James Judd
2002RPO Christopher Warren-Green
2004 Chamber Orchestra of Europe Douglas Boyd
2006 Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Robert Spano
2009 Budapest Strings Béla Báinfalvi
2010 Duisburg Philharmonic Orchestra Jonathan Darlington
2012Christ Church Camerata Geza Szilvay, David Banney
2014Hallé Sir Mark Elder
2016 Trondheim Soloists Øyvind Gimse, Geir Inge Lotsberg
2016RPO Pinchas Zukerman
2016LSO String EnsembleRoman Simovic
2018 Aurora Orchestra Nigel Short
2019RLPO Andrew Manze
2020 London Chamber Orchestra Warren-Green
2021LSO Antonio Pappano
2021City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla
2022 Park Avenue Chamber Symphony David Bernard
2023Sinfonia of London John Wilson
2023PhilharmoniaOliver Zeffman

Notes, references and sources

Notes

  1. Frank Howes in his book about Vaughan Williams (1954) says that the work had one prior performance, conducted by Thomas Beecham in London in 1909, but this is evidently an error. The Gloucester performance was the premiere, according to the published score, [6] and to studies of Vaughan Williams by Ursula Vaughan Williams, Ryan Ross, Alain Frogley and Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians , and contemporary newspapers recorded a Queen's Hall performance in February 1913 as the work's first performance in London. [7] [8]
  2. Musically, the same biblical passage is also familiar in Handel's Messiah : "Why do the nations so furiously rage together, And why do the people imagine a vain thing?" [11]
  3. The Hymnal notes that Horatius Bonar's hymn "I heard the Voice of Jesus Say" and many other D.C.M. hymns may also be sung to this tune. [12]
  4. Vaughan Williams's metronome markings for this and other works have been called into question. [19] [20] He did not observe them himself when conducting his works, and was present at recordings by Boyd Neel and Sir Adrian Boult where he did not object to slower tempi than marked. [21] His musical assistant Roy Douglas has suggested that Vaughan Williams simply miscalculated because he did not possess a metronome. [22]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ralph Vaughan Williams</span> English composer (1872–1958)

Ralph Vaughan Williams was an English composer. His works include operas, ballets, chamber music, secular and religious vocal pieces and orchestral compositions including nine symphonies, written over sixty years. Strongly influenced by Tudor music and English folk-song, his output marked a decisive break in British music from its German-dominated style of the 19th century.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">String orchestra</span> Musical ensemble

A string orchestra is an orchestra consisting solely of a string section made up of the bowed strings used in Western Classical music. The instruments of such an orchestra are most often the following: the violin, which is divided into first and second violin players, the viola, the cello, and usually, but not always, the double bass.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Herbert Howells</span> English composer, organist and teacher (1892–1983)

Herbert Norman Howells was an English composer, organist, and teacher, most famous for his large output of Anglican church music.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Greensleeves</span> English folk song

"Greensleeves" is a traditional English folk song. A broadside ballad by the name "A Newe Northen Dittye of ye Ladye Greene Sleves" was registered by Richard Jones at the London Stationers' Company in September 1580, and the tune is found in several late 16th-century and early 17th-century sources, such as Ballet's MS Lute Book and Het Luitboek van Thysius, as well as various manuscripts preserved in the Seeley Historical Library in the University of Cambridge.

English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams wrote his Symphony No. 5 in D major between 1938 and 1943. In style it represents a shift away from the violent dissonance of his Fourth Symphony, and a return to the gentler style of the earlier Pastoral Symphony.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Three Choirs Festival</span> Annual music festival held in England

The Three Choirs Festival is a music festival held annually at the end of July, rotating among the cathedrals of the Three Counties and originally featuring their three choirs, which remain central to the week-long programme. The large-scale choral repertoire is now performed by the Festival Chorus, but the festival also features other major ensembles and international soloists. The 2011 festival took place in Worcester from 6 to 13 August. The 2012 festival in Hereford took place earlier than usual, from 21 to 28 July, to avoid clashing with the 2012 Summer Olympics. The event is now established in the last week of July. The 300th anniversary of the original Three Choirs Festival was celebrated during the 2015 festival, which took place from 25 July to 1 August in Hereford (the landmark 300th meeting of the Three Choirs does not fall until after 2027 due to there being no Three Choirs Festivals for the duration of both World War I and World War II and COVID-19. The 2023 Festival will take place in Gloucester from 22 to 29 July.

Joseph Horovitz was an Austrian-born British composer and conductor best known for his 1970 pop cantata Captain Noah and his Floating Zoo, which achieved widespread popularity in schools. Horovitz also composed music for television, including the theme music for the Thames Television series Rumpole of the Bailey, and was a prolific composer of ballet, orchestral, brass band, wind band and chamber music. He considered his fifth string quartet (1969) to be his best work.

<i>In the Fen Country</i>

In the Fen Country is an orchestral tone poem written by the English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams. Vaughan Williams had completed the first version of the work in April 1904. He subsequently revised the work in 1905 and 1907. It is Vaughan Williams' earliest composition not to be withdrawn.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Symphony No. 8 (Vaughan Williams)</span> Symphony in four movements composed by Ralph 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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Symphony No. 9 (Vaughan Williams)</span> Musical work, premiered in 1958

The Symphony No. 9 in E minor was the last symphony written by the English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams. He composed it during 1956 and 1957, and it was given its premiere performance in London by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Sir Malcolm Sargent on 2 April 1958, in the composer's eighty-sixth year. The work was received respectfully but, at first, without great enthusiasm. Its reputation has subsequently grown, and the symphony has entered the repertoire, in the concert hall and on record, with the majority of recordings from the 1990s and the 21st century.

The Mass in G minor is a choral work by Ralph Vaughan Williams written in 1921. It is the first Mass written in a distinctly English manner since the sixteenth century. The composer dedicated the piece to Gustav Holst and the Whitsuntide Singers at Thaxted in north Essex, but it was first performed by the City of Birmingham Choir on 6 December 1922. Though the first performance was in a concert venue Vaughan Williams intended the Mass to be used in a liturgical setting. R.R Terry directed its first liturgical performance at Westminster Cathedral.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">R. O. Morris</span> English composer

Reginald Owen Morris, known professionally and by his friends by his initials, as R.O. Morris, was a British composer and teacher.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Thomas Dunhill</span> English composer

Thomas Frederick Dunhill was a prolific English composer in many genres, though he is best known today for his light music and educational piano works. His compositions include much chamber music, a song cycle, The Wind Among the Reeds, and an operetta, Tantivy Towers, that had a successful London run in 1931. He was also a teacher, examiner and writer on musical subjects.

Musical tributes or homages from one composer to another can take many forms. Following are examples of the major types of tributes occurring in classical music. A particular work may fit into more than one of these types.

Beni Mora is a three-movement suite of music in E minor for large orchestra, by Gustav Holst. The first performance was at the Queen's Hall, London, on 1 May 1912, conducted by the composer. The work was inspired by music Holst heard in Algeria during a holiday in 1908. The constant repetition of one theme from Arabic folk music in the last movement has been described as a precursor of modern minimalism. The piece also includes dance rhythms and wistful, slow sections, and makes strong use of woodwinds and percussion. Beni Mora has been recorded several times by British orchestras, most recently in 2011.

This is a summary of 1913 in music in the United Kingdom.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">English Pastoral School</span>

The English Pastoral School, sometimes called the English Nationalist School or by detractors the Cow Pat School, is an informal designation for a group of English composers of classical music working during the early to mid 20th century, who sought to build a distinctively English style of music by composing in a style informed by Tudor music and English folk music, and often explicitly evoking the English countryside. The leading composers associated with the school were Ralph Vaughan Williams, Frederick Delius and Gustav Holst, with other notable figures including George Butterworth, John Ireland, Frank Bridge, Edmund Rubbra, Gerald Finzi, Herbert Howells, Ernest John Moeran and Peter Warlock.

<i>The Lark Ascending</i> (Vaughan Williams) Musical composition by English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams

The Lark Ascending is a short, single-movement work by the English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams, inspired by the 1881 poem of the same name by the English writer George Meredith. It was originally for violin and piano, completed in 1914, but not performed until 1920. The composer reworked it for solo violin and orchestra after the First World War. This version, in which the work is chiefly known, was first performed in 1921. It is subtitled "A Romance", a term that Vaughan Williams favoured for contemplative slow music.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Carnegie Collection of British Music</span>

The Carnegie Collection of British Music was founded in 1917 by the Carnegie Trust to encourage the publication of large scale British musical works. Composers were asked to submit their manuscripts to an anonymous panel. On the panel at various times were Hugh Allen, Granville Bantock, Arnold Bax, Dan Godfrey, Henry Hadow and Donald Tovey. Up to six works per year were chosen for an award – publication at the expense of the Trust, in conjunction with music publishers Stainer & Bell. Unfortunately the war delayed things for the earliest prizewinners. The first to be published was the Piano Quartet in A minor by Herbert Howells.. By the end of 1920 some 13 works were available. 30 were out by the end of 1922, and when the scheme finally closed in 1928 some 60 substantial works that might not otherwise have seen the light of day had been issued under the Carnegie Collection of British Music imprint.

References

  1. Howes, pp. 86–87; and Ottaway, Hugh, and Alain Frogley. "Vaughan Williams, Ralph", Grove Music Online, Oxford University Press, 2001. Retrieved 24 December 2020 (subscription required)
  2. Ursula Vaughan Williams, p. 88
  3. Day, p. 25
  4. 1 2 Howes, p. 87
  5. "Three Choirs Festival", The Musical Standard, 3 September 1910, p. 143
  6. Vaughan Williams, R. "Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis", Serenissima Music, 2011. Retrieved 24 December 2020
  7. "Balfour Gardiner Concerts", Pall Mall Gazette, 10 February 1913, p. 5 and "Latest News", The Scotsman, 12 February 1913, p. 9
  8. Ursula Vaughan Williams, p. 88; Ross, p. 162; Frogley and Thomson, p. 82; and Shaw, Watkins, and John C. Phillips. "Three Choirs Festival", Grove Music Online, Oxford University Press, 2001. Retrieved 24 December 2020 (subscription required)
  9. Mellers, pp. 49–50
  10. Foreman, Lewis (2019). Notes to Onyx CD 4212
  11. "Messiah libretto", Handel Institut. Retrieved 24 December 2020
  12. 1 2 Dearmer and Vaughan Williams, p. 63
  13. 1 2 3 Kennedy, Michael (2014). Notes to Hallé CD CDHLL 7540
  14. Frogley and Thompson, p. 90
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 Howes, p. 91
  16. Howes, p. 90
  17. Ralph Vaughan Williams, p. 2
  18. 1 2 Atlas (2011), p. 119
  19. Adams, Byron. "The stages of revision of Vaughan Williams's Sixth Symphony", The Musical Quarterly, Fall 1989 (subscription required)
  20. Atlas (2010), pp. 24–25
  21. Culshaw, p. 121; Boult, Sir Adrian "Vaughan Williams and his Interpreters", The Musical Times, October 1972, pp. 957–958 (subscription required); and Notes to Somm CD SOMMCD 071 (2007) and Decca CD 00028947860464 (2013)
  22. Douglas, p. 66
  23. Notes to Parlophone 0724356724051 (Barbirolli); Parlophone 0077776401751 (Boult); Parlophone 0077774939454 (Haitink); Onxy ONYX4212 (Manze) and CDHLL7540 (Elder)
  24. "Classical Net - Vaughan Williams - Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis, A Guide".
  25. Ralph Vaughan Williams, p. 3
  26. Ralph Vaughan Williams, p. 4
  27. "Classical Net - Vaughan Williams - Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis, A Guide".
  28. "Classical Net - Vaughan Williams - Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis, A Guide".
  29. Ralph Vaughan Williams, pp. 9–17
  30. "Classical Net - Vaughan Williams - Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis, A Guide".
  31. "Classical Net - Vaughan Williams - Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis, A Guide".
  32. Atlas (2011), p. 118
  33. Atlas (2011), p. 141
  34. Hurd, p. 24
  35. "The Gloucester Festival", The Musical Times, 1 October 1910, p. 650
  36. "Gloucester Festival", The Daily Telegraph, 8 September 1910, p. 7
  37. Langford, Samuel. "Gloucester Musical Festival", The Manchester Guardian, 7 September 1910, p. 6
  38. "Music", The Times, 7 September 1910, p. 11
  39. "Hall of Fame 2014 and "Hall of Fame 2020", Classic FM. Retrieved 26 December 2020
  40. "Vaughan Williams Fantasia Thomas Tallis", BBC Genome. Retrieved 24 December 2020
  41. Stuart, Philip. Decca Classical, 1929–2009, AHRC Research Centre for the History and Analysis of Recorded Music. Retrieved 5 September 2014
  42. "Some records of the year", The Gramophone, December 1936, p. 279

Sources

Books

Journals

  • Atlas, Allan (2010). "On the Structure and Proportions of Vaughan Williams's Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis". Journal of the Royal Musical Association. 135 (1): 115–144. doi:10.1080/02690401003597797. JSTOR   43741608. S2CID   191641106.(subscription required)
  • Atlas, Allan (Autumn 2011). "On the proportions of the passacaglia (fourth movement) of Vaughan Williams's Fifth Symphony". The Musical Times. 152 (1916): 19–32. JSTOR   23037971.(subscription required)

Further reading

See also