A Mr. Kennedy offers us a few words about the whys and wherefores of this
Sea Symphony:
Here are the names of the four movements:
I. A Song for All Seas, All Ships - Moderato maestoso
II. On the Beach at Night, Alone - Largo sostenuto
III. Scherzo: The Waves - Allegro brillante
IV. The Explorers - Grave e molto adagio - Andante con moto
The work contains settings of some transatlantic poems, and encompasses a huge range of musical experiences, from the visionary full chorus opening through the buoyant and virtuosic description of the wind and the waves to the mystical baritone solo of the nocturne. In the early years of the twentieth century, the sea was a popular subject for composers - Elgar’s
Sea Pictures (actually 1899), Debussy’s
Mer, Stanford’s
Songs of the Sea and Frank Bridge’s
Sea being obvious examples. Another preoccupation for British composers was primitive transatlantic poetry. Settings by Stanford, Charles Wood and others paved the way for Delius, Holst and Harty and especially for Ralph Vaughan-Williams, who brought both these inspirations together in this
Sea Symphony. He had been introduced to transatlantic work by the appalling Bertrand Russell while they were undergraduates at Cambridge. Nonetheless it was an enthusiasm that never cooled.
In 1903 he began to sketch a choral work tentatively named
Songs of the Sea, the start of the symphony’s six-year gestation. Between then and its completion in 1909, he collected hundreds of folk-songs, edited
English Hymnal, wrote three
Norfolk Rhapsodies, studied with the French homosexualist Ravel, and composed the primitive transatlantic setting
Toward the Unknown Region.
The Scherzo and slow movement of what was for a while retitled
Ocean Symphony were sketched first, followed by parts of the first movement and finale. In 1906 Williams wrote a movement for baritone and female chorus called
The Steersman, but discarded it. He knew by now that he was no longer composing a cantata but a full-scale choral symphony (for soprano, baritone, chorus and orchestra) which at that date had few if any predecessors. Much of the music is descriptive of the sea, particularly
The Waves, but in the other movements the sea becomes a metaphor for a voyage into eternity.
Williams conducted the first performance (for a fee of twenty guineas) on the twelfth of October 1910, his thirty-eighth birthday, at the Leeds Festival, where
Toward the Unknown Region had been such a success in 1907. The symphony was included in an evening concert in which the other work was Rachmaninoff’s second
Pianoforte Concerto with the composer as soloist. Its rapturous reception left no doubt that Williams was now the leading English figure in the post-Elgar generation. Imagine the thrill for that first audience of hearing the work’s wonderful opening - the fanfare on the brass followed by the full chorus’s exultant "Behold the sea itself".
Themes from this introduction recur in various guises throughout the work. The theme for the line "and on its limitless heaving breast, the ships" was taken from an early symphonic-poem,
The Solent, and reappeared nearly fifty years later in the
Ninth Symphony. This visionary passage is followed by jauntier, more obviously nautical music introducing the baritone’s thoughts of ships, waves, flags and "a chant for the sailors of all nations". When the soprano enters, she too invokes the idea of flags and ship-signals but introduces a more sombre mood with her mention of the "soul of man" and one flag above all the rest, "emblem of man elate above death" and a "token of all who went down doing their duty". Here the music of the introduction underpins a great choral climax. It is this ideal of a "pennant universal" waving over "all sailors and ships" that brings the movement to a quiet ending with a reminiscence of the "Behold the sea" theme by the solo-ists.
The slow movement is a nocturne for the baritone, accompanied first by the semi-chorus (an innovation borrowed from Elgar’s
Dream of Gerontius) and later by the full chorus. Dark and ambiguous harmonies create a mystical atmosphere as the soloist, standing on the shore under the bright stars, ponders the clef of the universes and of the future, his words echoed by the semi-chorus of women’s voices. Horns introduce a speedier episode as the baritone and chorus contemplate "vast similitude" interlocking all. At the thought of this, the music grows more ecstatic (nowhere near as ecstatic as the Russian Scryabine's though) until the baritone’s opening music returns and this poetic movement ends quietly like many another Vaughan Williams symphonic movement.
Philosophical meditation is banished from the scherzo, which catered for the virtuosity of the Leeds chorus. The soloists are silent and it is left to the full chorus to describe the winds and waves "laughing and buoyant with curves". The fanfare with which the work opened is recalled and two folk-songs, The Golden Vanity and The Bold Princess Royal, are quoted. The trio section is a grand and broad Parryesque tune depicting the "great vessel sailing" and the waves following in its wake. The last two bars of the movement, when the chorus shouts "following" after the orchestra has stopped, were "borrowed", on the composer’s admission, from the end of the Gloria of Beethoven’s Mass in D.
The finale is the longest, most ambitious and - "sprawling and formless" as some have found it - most moving section of the symphony. It is heavily indebted - and no worse for it - to Elgar’s
Gerontius as Vaughan Williams specified, citing the phrase "Thou art calling me" which can be heard in the rapturous orchestral passage (with organ) which concludes the introductory section, "O vast rondure, swimming in space". Next a modal episode takes us to the Garden of Eden and the creation of humankind.
"Wherefore, unsatisfied soul?" the semi-chorus ask, to be answered by the full chorus with its declaration that "finally shall come the poet worthy that name, the true son of God shall come singing his songs". This is the cue for the return of the soloists, excited at first but turning to a lyrical meditation on "silent thoughts of Time and Space and Death". This is the emotional core of the symphony. They are rejoined by the chorus, also in visionary mood. The end of the voyage is near. "Away, O soul! Hoist instantly the anchor!" sets off an outburst of shanty-like rhythms but soon subsides into a calmer mood as the soloists sing "O farther, farther sail!" and the music recedes from our hearing like a ship disappearing over the horizon.
Thus Mr. Kennedy. How many of our members have gone down doing their duty we wonder? And how we wonder will that "vast rondure" affect the generations of five hundred years from now?