RVW’s Letters

ABOUT THE LETTERS

Ralph Vaughan Williams’s correspondence - with his friends, family, pupils and fellow musicians - paints an intriguing portrait of the man, as well as providing fascinating insights into his major preoccupations: musical, personal and political.

The VWF database includes transcripts of over 5,000 items of annotated correspondence, fully indexed and searchable, which can all be read online. It includes all the letters of Ralph Vaughan Williams known to the editors and is an ongoing project. Find out more about the database.

The text of letters written by Ralph Vaughan Williams remains in the copyright of the Vaughan Williams Foundation and may not be further reproduced without the prior written consent of the Foundation.

Featured Letter

from Vaughan Williams, Ralph, 1872-1958 to Boult, Adrian, 1889-1983

Letter No. VWL1877

Letter from Ralph Vaughan Williams to Adrian Boult (BBC)

Letter No.: VWL1877


The White Gates
Dorking

March 5 [1945]

Dear Adrian

Thank you and your players very much for all the trouble they are taking over my string passages.1  Peterkin2 is much upset over the proposed alterations which will have to be altered in each part, of course. He says it has been played by many orchestras all over the world & no one has complained up to now.  Between ourselves do you think there is the necessity to alter & is P.B.3 making a fuss about nothing.  As to playing it pp – I always find that string quavers in the scherzo are, if anything, not prominent enough.
To my limited knowledge of the violin P.B’s passages do not seem easier than mine – but of course he knows best – but some of his alterations do not fit & I cannot use them as they stand
All this in confidence
You kindly sent me 2 proposed alterations – the cor anglais in the scherzo I have altered;  the other, I think, must be a wrong reference.
You say “Final 5 before (4) first cello surely should be E not F last note – but at that place the last note is D and the cellos are not divided!4
Thank you all v. much
Yrs

RVW


1.  This refers to passages in Symphony (No. 5) in D Major (Catalogue of Works 1943/2).
2.  Norman Peterkin, Head of the Music Department at Oxford University Press.
3.  Paul Beard, leader of the BBC Symphony Orchestra.
4. Boult’s suggestion meant 5 bars before Fig. 4 in the Romanza, where the upper note in the second cellos on beat 3 remained as an F when the printed score appeared in 1946. This remained unchanged until the 2008 edition where it is changed to an E (as Boultsuggests!). On 14 March 1945, Vaughan Williams wrote to Norman Peterkin at OUP asking him to take in Paul Beard’s suggested revisions (VWL1878).

A teacher's advice is not meant to be taken like a Pill but thought about & then: 1) adopted, or (2) rejected, or (perhaps best of all) (3) a 3rd course suggests itself from thinking the matter over.

RVW letter to GRACE WILLIAMS 1920

New York on the 26th, lecture at Yale on the 1st. Sail on the 4th. Ralph is terrifically well and bouncy and THRIVES on milkshakes and butterscotch sundaes.

UVW letter from New York to Michael and Eslyn Kennedy 1954

Most of Stravinsky bores me. I wish he even shocked me: especially the Rite of Spring...but I do like Symphony of Psalms, Les Noces, and the Suite for Violin and Pianoforte, of which I once heard a record under very peculiar circumstances, of which I will tell you one day.

RVW letter to MICHAEL KENNEDY 1957

You have never lost your invention but it has not developed enough.  Your best – your most original and beautiful style or ‘atmosphere’ is an indescribable sort of feeling as if one was listening to very lovely lyrical poetry.

GUSTAV HOLST letter to RVW 1903