Ralph VAUGHAN WILLIAMS (1872-1958)
          Symphony No.5 in D major (1938-43) [39:01]
          Symphony No.8 in D minor (1953-55) [29:23]
          Hallé/Sir Mark Elder
          rec. live, 9 November 2011 and in rehearsal, Bridgewater Hall, Manchester, 
          England (Sym 5); 3 February 2012, BBC Studios, MediaCityUK, Salford, 
          England. (Sym 8)
          HALLÉ CD HLL 7533[68:24]
        
          
            Vaughan Williams’ Fifth Symphony was premiered on 24 June 1943. It 
            had been written over the previous five years. Here in the midst of 
            the ravages of war, was a vision of Peace Eternal. The symphony uses 
            themes taken from music Vaughan Williams had been writing for many 
            years for a dramatization of Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress.
             
            This symphony means a great deal to me personally for its beautiful 
            mysticism, especially implicit in the Romanza movement helped 
            me to recover from a serious illness in the mid-1970s. I was listening 
            then to Sir John Barbirolli’s celebrated 1962 EMI recording. To my 
            mind its emotional and spiritual intensity has never been surpassed, 
            not even by this new album which is very good. It can be ranked for 
            its undoubted merits with any of the leading recordings of this glorious 
            symphony. These merits I will come to a little later in this review.
             
            The Romanza slow third movement must be played with the utmost 
            warmth and sensitivity. Michael Kennedy has said that it can be placed 
            alongside the Larghetto of the Elgar Second Symphony as the 
            high peaks of English romantic symphonic art. It is in this sublime 
            movement that most of the Pilgrim music occurs. The agitation at its 
            centre is Pilgrim’s cry “Save Me Lord! My burden is greater than I 
            can bear”. The music culminates in an impassioned Alleluia and it 
            fades away into one of the most magical and radiant codas in all music: 
            high tremolando strings shimmer over distant horn-calls and the lower 
            strings then reply in compassionate contemplation.
             
            Sir Mark Elder just misses Barbirolli’s impassioned intensity but 
            his reading has great merit nonetheless. The clarity of the recording 
            is excellent; instrumental balance and individual virtuosity in all 
            departments impress. Elder suggests further shades of meaning particularly 
            in the scherzo movement which comes off quite brilliantly. The impish 
            humour is cleverly drawn but not overstated or made brash to overbalance 
            the basic religiosity of the work.
             
            It was Barbirolli who, in 1956, premiered the 8th Symphony and it 
            was to ‘Glorious John’, as RVW described Barbirolli, that the Symphony 
            was dedicated. I like to think of this symphony as being very like 
            Beethoven’s eighth symphony - Beethoven’s Little Symphony. Both have 
            much energy and high spirits. Vaughan Williams’ score is remarkable 
            for its youthful outlook. He could still keep on surprising us even 
            in his eighties! The orchestration is supremely imaginative; in fact 
            I would suggest that this work is RVW’s Concerto for Orchestra - all 
            the players have virtuoso parts. Much emphasis is given to the percussion 
            section: RVW uses vibraphone, xylophone, tubular bells, glockenspiel 
            and three tuned gongs that dominate the outer movements. The first 
            movement’s opening mood set by trumpet and celesta is extraordinary. 
            The second movement is I think an affectionate parody of English brass 
            band music. The third movement for strings returns us to Thomas Tallis 
            country - the Hallé strings shine beautifully here. The Finale is 
            a tour de force for the percussion section. Elder’s reading 
            is first class.
             
            Although this new recording cannot displace the Barbirolli readings 
            – especially of RVW’s glorious Fifth, this new album has much to commend 
            it.
              
          Ian Lace
          See also reviews by John 
            Quinn, Michael 
            Cookson, Michael Greenhalgh