A London Symphony
A London Symphony is the second symphony composed by Ralph Vaughan Williams. The work is sometimes referred to as Symphony No. 2, though the composer did not designate that name for the work. First performed in 1914, the original score of this four-movement symphony was lost and subsequently reconstructed. Vaughan Williams continued revisions of the work into its final definitive form, which was published in 1936.
Instrumentation
The work is scored for:- Woodwinds: three flutes, two oboes, cor anglais, two clarinets, bass clarinet, two bassoons, contrabassoon
- Brass: four horns, two trumpets, two cornets, three trombones, tuba
- Percussion: timpani, bass drum, snare drum, triangle, tam-tam, sleigh bells, cymbals, glockenspiel
- Strings: harp, and strings.
Structure
The symphony is in four movements.
;1. Lento – Allegro risoluto
The symphony opens quietly, and after a few nocturnal bars, the Westminster chimes are heard, played on the harp.
;2. Lento
The movement opens with muted strings playing ppp. Vaughan Williams said that the slow movement is intended to evoke "Bloomsbury Square on a November afternoon".
;3. Scherzo
In the composer's words, "If the listener will imagine himself standing on Westminster Embankment at night, surrounded by the distant sounds of The Strand, with its great hotels on one side and the "New Cut" on the other, with its crowded streets and flaring lights, it may serve as a mood in which to listen to this movement." In the definitive score, the movement revolves around two scherzo themes, the first marked fugato and the second straightforward and lively.
;4. Finale – Andante con moto – Maestoso alla marcia – Allegro – Lento – Epilogue
The finale opens on a grave march theme, punctuated with a lighter allegro section, with full orchestra initially forte and appassionato. After the reappearance of the march, the main allegro theme of the first movement returns. Following this, the Westminster Chimes strike again, this time the harp plays the first three-quarters of the hour chimes, and there is a quiet Epilogue, inspired by the last chapter of H.G. Wells's novel Tono-Bungay:
The last great movement in the London Symphony in which the true scheme of the old order is altogether dwarfed and swallowed up... Light after light goes down. England and the Kingdom, Britain and the Empire, the old prides and the old devotions, glide abeam, astern, sink down upon the horizon, pass – pass. The river passes – London passes, England passes.
History and versions
The symphony was composed from 1912 to 1913. It is dedicated to Vaughan Williams's friend and fellow composer George Butterworth who was subsequently killed by a sniper on the Somme during World War I. It was Butterworth who had first encouraged Vaughan Williams to write a purely orchestral symphony. Vaughan Williams recorded that:"We were talking together one day when he said in his gruff, abrupt manner: 'You know, you ought to write a symphony'. I answered... that I'd never written a symphony and never intended to... I suppose Butterworth's words stung me and, anyhow, I looked out some sketches I had made for... a symphonic poem about London and decided to throw it into symphonic form... From that moment, the idea of a symphony dominated my mind. I showed the sketches to George bit by bit as they were finished, and it was then that I realised that he possessed in common with very few composers a wonderful power of criticism of other men's work and insight into their ideas and motives. I can never feel too grateful to him for all he did for me over this work and his help did not stop short at criticism."
The work was first performed on 27 March 1914 at Queen's Hall, conducted by Geoffrey Toye. The performance was a success. Shortly afterwards, the composer sent the score to the conductor Fritz Busch in Germany, and the original score disappeared in the upheaval of the outbreak of World War I. The second performance was given in Harrogate on 12 August 1914 by the Harrogate Municipal Orchestra under Julian Clifford. There was a short score, which had been prepared by Bevis Ellis, Francis Toye and George Butterworth, so it is possible that version was used instead. The composer, aided by Geoffrey Toye, Butterworth and the critic E. J. Dent, reconstructed the score from the orchestral parts, and the reconstruction was performed on 11 February 1915 by the Bournemouth Municipal Orchestra under Dan Godfrey.
The symphony went through several revisions before reaching its final form. Vaughan Williams revised it for a performance in March 1918, and again in 1919–1920. This second revision became the first published version, and was recorded for the gramophone in 1925 by the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Sir Dan Godfrey. It was also recorded in 1941 by the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra conducted by Sir Eugene Goossens. It had already received its American premiere on 20 December 1920 when the New York Symphony Orchestra played it under the baton of Albert Coates. It is most unlikely that OUP sanctioned the use of the 1920 version in Goossens' recording, since Vaughan Williams had withdrawn it and all scores of the 1933 revision carry the statement:
However, the Cincinnati/Goossens recording was made at a period during World War II when communications between Britain and the USA were difficult, and a "rogue" set was used. In fact, the 1920 version was already in the public domain in the US, having been published before 1923, so it may simply have been cheaper to record that version. It was still possible to buy scores and parts of the 1920 version in the USA until early in the 21st century, although this is no longer the case.
While he was working on his fourth symphony in 1933, Vaughan Williams made time to revise A London Symphony yet again. He regarded this version, which was published in 1936, as the definitive one, and it is this version that entered the repertoire, being played in concert and on record by many conductors.
In 2001, a new commercial recording appeared on Chandos of the original 1914 score, following assent from the composer's widow, Ursula Vaughan Williams, for a recording only, without live performances. The new recording of the original 1914 score attracted attention from various music critics, including some commentary that the composer had cut many bars of interesting music. Richard Tiedman commented:
Andrew Clements has separately remarked:
The main differences between the first and last versions may be summarised as follows:
- First movement: One bar was cut from the 1914 version.
- Slow movement: 52 bars of the 1914 score were cut in 1933/36, chiefly from the quiet coda.
- Scherzo: At the end of the original is a dark andantino passage, of which no trace survives in the definitive version.
- Finale: In the 1914 score, the central E minor section, familiar in the definitive text, is interrupted by an orchestral "cry of anguish" based on the opening theme, after which the allegro resumes. After the conclusion of the allegro section, the 1914 score has a long andantino section for strings and woodwinds later dismissed by Vaughan Williams as "a bad hymn tune". Finally, the original Epilogue extends to 109 bars.
Version | Mvt I | Mvt II | Mvt III | Mvt IV | Epilogue | Total |
1914 | 408 | 202 | 386 | 227 | 109 | 1322 |
1920 | 407 | 162 | 398 | 173 | 85 | 1225 |
1933 | 407 | 150 | 398 | 162 | 60 | 1177 |
The final version is more than twenty minutes shorter than the original, as some indicative timings show:
1914 version:
- London Symphony Orchestra/Richard Hickox: 61:19
- London Symphony Orchestra/Dan Godfrey : 44:39
- Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra/Eugene Goossens : 38:45
- Queen's Hall Orchestra/Sir Henry Wood : 37:09
- London Philharmonic Orchestra/Sir Adrian Boult : 43:03
In his liner note commentary to the Chandos recording of the original version, Michael Kennedy placed the status of the original score as subordinate to the final 1936 published version:
Recordings
- Dan Godfrey – London Symphony Orchestra – Columbia 78s L 1717–22
- Henry Wood – Queen's Hall Orchestra – Decca 78s X 114–8
- Eugene Goossens – Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra – RCA Victor 78s 11 8375–8379 in set M 916
- Dmitri Mitropoulos – NBC Symphony Orchestra - Pristine Audio XR PASC 234
- Adrian Boult – London Philharmonic Orchestra – Decca LXT 2693
- John Barbirolli – Hallé – Pye Red Label CCL 30134
- Malcolm Sargent – Chicago Symphony Orchestra - CSO CD 4677 00-07
- John Barbirolli – Hallé – HMV ASD 2360
- Adrian Boult – LPO – HMV ASD 2740
- Andre Previn – LSO – RCA Red Seal SB 6860
- Vernon Handley – LPO – Classics for Pleasure CFP 40286
- Andre Previn – Royal Philharmonic Orchestra - Telarc CD 80138
- Bernard Haitink – LPO - EMI CDC 7 49394 2
- Bryden Thomson – LSO - Chandos CHAN 8629
- Gennady Rozhdestvensky – USSR StSO – Melodiya CD 10-02170-2
- Owain Arwel Hughes – Philharmonia - ASV CD DCA 634
- Leonard Slatkin – Philharmonia - RCA Victor Red Seal 09026-61193-2
- Vernon Handley – Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra - EMI Eminence CD EMX 2209
- Andrew Davis – BBC SO - Teldec 4509-90858-2
- Kees Bakels – Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra - Naxos 8.550734
- Roger Norrington – LPO - Decca 467 047-2
- Richard Hickox – LSO - Chandos CHAN 9902
- Christopher Seaman – Melbourne SO - ABC Classics 476 8363
- Mark Elder – Hallé – - Hallé CD HLL 7529
- Christopher Seaman – Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra - Harmonia Mundi HMU 807567
- Martin Yates – Royal Scottish National Orchestra - Dutton Epoch CDLX 7322
- Andrew Manze – RLPO - Onyx 4155
- Martyn Brabbins – BBC SO - Hyperion CDA 68190