Ralph Vaughan Williams - Oboe Concerto - III. Finale [Scherzo]

Loading...

Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
Upgrade to the latest Flash Player for improved playback performance. Upgrade now or more info.
15,013
Loading...
Alert icon
Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon

Uploaded by on Oct 7, 2009

Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958)
Oboe Concerto in A minor with Strings (1944) 1. Rondo Pastorale: Allegro moderato
2. Minuet And Musette
3. Finale [Scherzo]

Pigeonholed by many as an English nationalist composer, Vaughan Williams is under-appreciated despite his nine masterful symphonies. His compositions, like those of Dvorák and Bartok, were influenced and colored by the nationality of their composer, but were not dominated by it. Vaughan Williams sought to free English music from foreign domination so that it would truly be the music of the English people. It took a strong man to reject the overpowering German Romantic tradition. Undaunted, Vaughan Williams did just that; his music derives its character from English folk song and the English choral tradition. As an old man he said, to this day, the Beethoven idiom repels me. Rejected by Elgar, he took lessons from both the Frenchman Maurice Ravel and the German Max Bruch, but absorbed technique, not their style.
The last fifteen years of Vaughan Williamss life brought with them unprecedented creativity. In 1953, he told a friend: I have so much music in my head I know I will never have time to write it down. Perhaps it was his experience writing film music that accounts for the new energy, expansiveness and rich sonorities in his late work.
The Concerto for Oboe was written in 1944 for the virtuoso Leon Goossens. The intended premiere on July 5, 1944 was cancelled due to German bombing. The Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Malcolm Sargent, gave the first performance in Liverpool on September 30, 1944.
Composed on the threshold of Vaughan Williams late style, the oboe concerto originates from a discarded sketch for the scherzo of his Symphony #5 in D major. Thus, the concerto shares the same style as the fifth symphony rather than being imbued with his late orchestral sound.
This concertos formidable difficulties are a challenge to the soloist; it must be handled deftly to avoid sounding awkward. However, between its poignancy and occasional chattering, the oboes finest attributes are exploited. Vaughan Williams eliminates the orchestral ritornello dictated by classic rondo form, according the soloist little opportunity for rest. The oboe, unlike the piano, isnt a great concerto instrument. Not only can its distinctive timbre tire the ear, but also the orchestra easily overwhelms it. In order to expose the solo line, Vaughan Williams reduces the orchestra to 11 stands for much of the movement: there are only 30 bars of full tutti.
A lightweight first movement, the Rondo Pastorale is deliberately small. The plastic Rondo features the oboe with a rather innocuous melody in the Dorian mode. The goal of this movement is the cadenza. The weight of the concerto is in the finale. ~ J. Sundram

Category:

Music

Tags:

License:

Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 1 dislikes

Link to this comment:

Share to:

Top Comments

  • Vaughan Williams, my favorite. What a great way of showing off the technical side of the oboe whilst giving opportunities to shine through with beauty. I often find the best concertos have lots of passages where the soloist is playing passages that are not really difficult (Opening of Tchaik piano Concerto No. 1, the big block chords). Vaughan Williams, you have my soul.

  • The section starting at 3:36 is one of the most beautiful things I've very heard. It's just exquisite.

see all

All Comments (14)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • That bit just before the end is a total nightmare to play-trust me on this ;-).

  • who is the oboist?

    thanks for posting this! :)

  • What a lovely, wholly English little piece this is. Thanks so much for the reduction score -- you can come turn pages for me any time. Beautiful job coordinating the visual and sound.

    Sounds like Tolkien's Shire in the big lyric passages, doesn't it? That whole generation . . .

  • What a lovely, wholly English little piece this is. Thanks so much for the reduction score -- you can come turn pages for me any time. Beautiful job coordinating the visual and sound.

  • Get the audio from this tune at searchripgrab doht cohm.

  • 5:47 - 6:02 might just be the most wonderful thing I've ever heard. Amazing piece, they really don't make 'em like this anymore.

  • I love this work. The one oboe concerto I like as much is the Cummings. It is a pity that only an excerpt of the last movement is posted of that concerto.

  • Love the ending from 6:15 on especially at the 3/2 ... so very sweet. Sends chills up my back

  • this is so wonderful

Loading...

Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more