Main content
Sorry, this episode is not currently available

Adventures Abroad

Donald Macleod charts Vaughan Williams's progress as the young composer seeks out Max Bruch in Berlin with the aim of broadening his musical skills.

Donald Macleod charts Vaughan Williams's progress as the young composer seeks out Max Bruch in Berlin with the aim of broadening his musical skills.

Ralph Vaughan Williams is one of the UK's most significant musical figures. This month, Donald Macleod takes a fresh look at this much-loved composer as part of Radio 3's 'Vaughan Williams Today' season, marking the 150th anniversary of his birth Donald will be telling Vaughan Williams's life story and exploring his music in fascinating detail over the course of four weeks and twenty programmes. Interleaved with Donald's in-depth narrative accounts, some of our leading authorities on Vaughan Williams will be joining him to share new perspectives. They'll be unpacking the overlooked and less well-known aspects of a composer whose body of work and diverse interests have made such an enduring imprint on British cultural life.

The first week of this landmark series focuses on Vaughan Williams's formative years, and his earliest works. It could be said that Vaughan Williams was pre-destined to be a leading figure in the musical life of Great Britain. He was born in 1872 with, in his own words, "a small silver spoon in his mouth" and his mother was part of the Wedgwood and Darwin dynasties. Charles Darwin was Vaughan Williams's great uncle. Raised, after his father's early death, in the matriarchal family home Leith Hill Place in Surrey, young Ralph was encouraged in the pursuit of knowledge from an early age. The values he was exposed to growing up are reflected in his social awareness later on. He wrote music for every kind of setting, from the concert hall to the village hall. We’ll follow his development from his very first attempt at writing music, Robin's Nest, to the assurance of his London Symphony.

In today's programme, Donald recounts how Vaughan Williams and his new bride made the most of their stay in Germany, filling their days with trips to the State Opera, concerts and visits to museums and galleries.

The Water Mill
Roderick Williams, baritone
Iain Burnside, piano

The last invocation for soprano, baritone and violin with piano
Mary Bevan, soprano
Johnny Herford, baritone
Thomas Gould, violin
William Vann, piano

A Sea Symphony
III: The Waves
I: A song for all Seas (excerpt)
Hallé Choir
Hallé Youth Choir
Schola Cantorum
Ad solem
Hallé Orchestra
Mark Elder, conductor

The Garden of Proserpine (excerpt)
Jane Irwin, soprano
Joyful Company of Singers
Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra
Paul Daniel, conductor

Five mystical songs
Love bade me welcome
Simon Keenlyside, baritone
Graham Johnson, piano

The Wasps – Overture
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Adrian Boult

59 minutes

Music Played

  • Ralph Vaughan Williams

    The Water Mill (Four Poems by Fredegond Shove)

    Performer: Iain Burnside. Singer: Roderick Williams.
    • NAXOS : 8.-557643.
    • NAXOS.
    • 17.
  • Ralph Vaughan Williams

    The last invocation

    Performer: Thomas Gould. Performer: William Vann. Singer: Mary Bevan. Singer: Johnny Hereford.
    • ALBION : ALBCD 029.
    • ALBION.
    • 8.
  • Ralph Vaughan Williams

    A Sea Symphony (1st mvt)

    Performer: Ad Solem. Singer: Katherine Broderick. Singer: Roderick Williams. Choir: Hallé Choir. Choir: Hallé Youth Choir. Choir: Schola Cantorum. Orchestra: Hallé. Conductor: Sir Mark Elder.
    • Halle : CD HLL-7542.
    • Halle.
    • 3.
  • Ralph Vaughan Williams

    A Sea Symphony (3rd mvt)

    Performer: Ad Solem. Singer: Katherine Broderick. Singer: Roderick Williams. Choir: Hallé Choir. Choir: Hallé Youth Choir. Choir: Schola Cantorum. Orchestra: Hallé. Conductor: Sir Mark Elder.
    • Halle : CD HLL-7542.
    • Halle.
    • 3.
  • Ralph Vaughan Williams

    The Garden of Proserpine

    Orchestra: Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. Choir: Joyful Company of Singers. Conductor: Paul Daniel.
    • ALBION : ALBCD-012.
    • ALBION.
    • 1.
  • Ralph Vaughan Williams

    Love bade me welcome (5 Mystical Songs)

    Singer: Simon Keenlyside. Performer: Graham Johnson.
    • NAXOS : 8.-557114.
    • NAXOS.
    • 14.
  • Ralph Vaughan Williams

    The Wasps (Overture)

    Orchestra: London Philharmonic Orchestra. Conductor: Adrian Boult.
    • Warner classics : 2079922.
    • Warner Classics.
    • 12.

Broadcast

  • Wed 4 May 2022 12:00

Beethoven Unleashed – the box set

Beethoven Unleashed – the box set

The complete set of Radio 3 Beethoven Unleashed podcasts, with Donald Macleod.

What was really wrong with Beethoven?

What was really wrong with Beethoven?

Georgia Mann and neurosurgeon Henry Marsh examine the composer's numerous health problems

Composers A to Z

Composers A to Z

Visit the extensive audio archive of Radio 3 programmes about Composers and their works.

Who knew? Five eye-opening stories from Composer of the Week

Who knew? Five eye-opening stories from Composer of the Week

The production team reflects on 5 of Donald Macleod’s best stories from the last 20 years

Five reasons why we love Parry's Jerusalem

What is the strange power of Jerusalem which makes strong men weep?

A man out of time – why Parry's music and ideas were at odds with his image...

The composer of Jerusalem was very far from the conservative figure his image suggests.

Composer Help Page

Find resources and contacts for composers from within the classical music industry.