Vaughan Williams: Willow-Wood

Vaughan Williams: Willow-Wood

by Vaughan Williams / Williams / R
Vaughan Williams: Willow-Wood

Vaughan Williams: Willow-Wood

by Vaughan Williams / Williams / R

Compact Disc

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Overview

Forty years ago British serialist Elisabeth Lutyens could deride the compositions of Ralph Vaughan Williams as "cowpat music," but his reputation seems to be on the rise. CDs of obscure Vaughan Williams compositions in various genres have appeared, and the centerpiece of this Naxos release of mostly choral pieces is "Willow-Wood," a work that has not been heard since its premiere in 1909. Designated a cantata for baritone and orchestra, it also includes a women's chorus. One can understand why the work has been neglected: it exudes a musty Edwardian odor with its swooping vocalises for the female chorus and its lengthy Dante Gabriel Rossetti text, the very epitome of what modern poets were reacting against in their striving toward concision. However, these qualities make "Willow-Wood" a bit exotic after all this time, and baritone Roderick Williams performs it to the hilt, articulating the text with superb clarity and shaping the 14-minute cantata coherently. "Willow-Wood" is the second track on the album, and the rest of the music, only somewhat better known, is chronologically arrayed around it. "Toward the Unknown Region" is a 1903 choral setting of a text by Walt Whitman, and American listeners will smile at this very British rendering of Whitman's chants democratic. But the two early works make a convincing pair, pointing toward the composer's mature language in their use of pentatonicism and modality, their charmed orchestration, and their hints of a mystical mood. The only instrumental work on the album, "Five Variants of Dives and Lazarus," is a lyrical work on a level with the big Vaughan Williams hits and treats folk music as subtly as anything he ever wrote; perhaps its neglect is due to uncertainty over the pronunciation of its title (say "DIVE-eez"). The program of the CD as a whole is convincing, and the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Choir & Orchestra under David Lloyd-Jones, even if they do not have the shimmering, churning quality of some of the classic Vaughan Williams performances, put across everything the music has to offer. This disc is highly recommended for those who know the symphonies and other major Vaughan Williams pieces and want to understand this twentieth century British giant better.

Product Details

Release Date: 11/15/2005
Label: Naxos
UPC: 0747313279821
Rank: 35233

Tracks

  1. Toward the Unknown Region, for chorus & orchestra
  2. Willow-wood, cantata for baritone or mezzo-soprano, female chorus & orchestra or for voice & piano
  3. The Voice out of the Whirlwind, motet for chorus & organ or orchestra
  4. Variants (5) of 'Dives and Lazarus' for string orchestra & harp (or harps)
  5. The Sons of Light, cantata for chorus & orchestra~Darkness and Light
  6. The Sons of Light, cantata for chorus & orchestra~The Song of the Zodiac
  7. The Sons of Light, cantata for chorus & orchestra~The Messengers of Speech

Album Credits

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