Welcome to the Vaughan Williams Foundation – one of the foremost sources of funding for recent and contemporary music in the UK
The Vaughan Williams Foundation is a grant-giving charity which upholds the values and vision of the celebrated composer Ralph Vaughan Williams and his wife Ursula Vaughan Williams.
Our principal aims are to honour RVW’s desire to support his fellow composers, and to help make his own work widely accessible to the general public.
VWF was founded in 2022, 150 years after the composer’s birth, and brings together the two charities originally set up by Ralph (RVW Trust) and Ursula (Vaughan Williams Charitable Trust).
Funding
VWF supports the work, performance and recording of British/Irish composers from the last 100 years; as well as projects which further the knowledge and understanding of the life and music of Ralph Vaughan Williams, and of the work of Ursula Vaughan Williams.
Applications are open to ensembles, organisations and individuals.
The Foundation also offers annual Vaughan Williams Bursaries for postgraduate composition students.
Vaughan Williams Bursaries
Congratulations to the seven composers who have received the 2024 Vaughan Williams Bursaries towards their masters studies in composition.
Over 260 Bursaries have been awarded for postgraduate study since 1984. Applications for the 25/6 academic year will open in autumn 2024.
RVW
Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958) is one of the greatest of British composers whose music, generosity and vision for community music making, continue to impact British musical life.
Find out more about the composer and explore our extensive archive of letters and photographs and catalogue of published works.
READ THE LATEST
THE LETTERS OF RALPH VAUGHAN WILLIAMS
Featured Letter
Get to know the man and his music
RVW’s wide-ranging correspondence – with family, pupils, fellow composers, conductors and performers – paints an intriguing portrait of the man, as well as providing fascinating insights into his major preoccupations: musical, personal and political.
Our searchable database includes over 5000 annotated transcriptions of his correspondence all available to read online.
Letter of the Day
Letter from Ralph Vaughan Williams to Cedric Thorpe Davie
Letter No.: VWL3178
The White Gates,
Dorking,
Surrey.
15th June, 1949.
Dear Cedric
Please quote the whole Symphony if you feel inclined to, but whatever you do, do not make acknowledgments.
Dear Robin Milford is always plastering his printed works with notes such as “This C natural is taken from Vaughan Williams’ Symphony”, or “The D flat in the third bar is a quotation from Elgar’s Gerontius”, or “I wish to acknowledge my indebtedness to Dr. R. O. Morris for the bar’s rest on Page 27”.
I am glad the Snobopolis Festival is recognising its own country at last.1
My love to Bruno
Yrs
RVW
1. For the 1949 Edinburgh Festival Davie made arrangements of folk music for Allan Ramsay’s The Gentle Shepherd. This pastoral drama of 1725 was usually staged as a ballad opera with Scots airs. Davie had also contributed incidental music to the 1948 Edinburgh Festival.