Following volumes 1 & 2, which featured
such famous scores as Scott of the Antarctic and The 49th
Parallel, Volume 3 of the complete Vaughan Williams’ film music has rather
less familiar fare to offer. A version of the nine-part (seven track) suite
from The Story of a Flemish Farm did appear on a Marco Polo album of
Vaughan Williams’ film music in June 1995 with Andrew Penny conducting the RTE
Concert Orchestra. Vintage recordings of music from the film also appeared,
along with themes from the second score featured on the current disc, The
Loves of Joanna Godden on a GEM album released in 2002. That disc also
featured The 49th Parallel, Scott of the Antarctic, Coastal
Command and Adrian Boult’s premiere recording of VW’s 6th
Symphony.
The Flemish Farm is a now almost forgotten WWII adventure dated from 1943. At the
time the production was sufficiently notable for the music to be performed by
the LSO under Muir Mathieson. The full score no longer exists, and has not been
reconstructed for this release. Rather the recording uses the suite the
composer himself prepared and conducted in 1945. Highlights include the
patriotic opening, ‘The Flag Flutters in the Wind’, the resolute and noble ‘The
Major Goes to Face his Fate’ and the rousing finale ‘The Wanderings of the
Flag’. ‘Dawn in the Old Barn – The Parting of the Lovers’ is a touching love
scene, while ‘The Dead Man’s Kit’ features a most moving solo violin theme,
heroic fanfare and pastoral idyll. In total it is a notable if largely
understated, even lugubrious score. There are few bold gestures to immediately
capture the attention, but as always with Vaughan Williams the music is
impeccably crafted.
In November 2000 when I reviewed the album Vaughan Williams: Symphony No.6 / Film Music
I wrote:
“The album ends
with an eight-minute suite from the almost forgotten 1947 film, The Loves
of Joanna Godden. This was a drama of life on Romney Marsh at the
beginning of the century and the music is both pastoral and dramatic, and also
given the necessity of compiling highlights into a short suite, somewhat
disconnected. It is still a treat for VW fans to hear this hitherto very rare
music, though it would be nice if someone would arrange a longer suite from
this score.”
Well, now someone has. That someone is
Stephen Hogger, and he has crafted a new fifteen minute work that expands on
the ten selections used in the 1948 suite and receives its premiere recording
on this album. The result is much more cohesive and satisfying. The music
contains suggestions of VW’s Symphony No.6, which he was finishing at the same
time as composing this score, and also clear parallels with his music for Scott
of the Antarctic (1948), with cold strings and ethereal wordless female
chorus. Romney Marsh may not be the deep frozen South, but it can get pretty
bleak in winter…
There is a sombre folk-like quality to much
of the writing, the music in the suite focusing on the landscape aspects of the
drama to the extent that, as Michael Kennedy comments in his booklet notes, the
selections do not sound episodic, ‘but more like a tone-poem’. Indeed, in the
stark, brooding nature of much of the suite one can even hear an English echo
of Sibelius’ forbidding landscapes. Perhaps the fact that VW completed the
score before the film was finished, and therefore clearly wasn’t writing to
picture, accounts for the particularly folk-impressionistic feel to the music.
The tender pastoral-romantic closing theme is especially lovely and as a whole
this is the strongest music on this disc and the best reason for purchasing it.
Bitter Springs, a highly rated adventure about a trek through the Australian
Outback, could not have been more different, and was a marked departure for
Ealing studios. The film starred Tommy Trinder and ‘Chips’ Raffety (who was
also in The Loves of Joanna Godden), with music again performed by the
Philharmonia Orchestra under the baton of Ernest Irving. In this case though Irving did rather more than conduct. In fact the entire score was arranged, orchestrated
and in some instances composed by Irving based upon 38 bars of thematic
material supplied by VW. The virtually 26 minute suite, edited again by Stephen
Hogger and presented here in its premiere recording, contains 16 cues, of which
the following are based on VW’s music: ‘Main Titles and Opening Music’,
‘Rocks’, ‘First Desert’, ‘Waterhole’, ‘End of the Trek’, ‘Housewarming’,
‘Hunters’ and ‘Round Up’. Which is to say almost two thirds of the music. There
is certainly a characteristic VW feel to these cues, which are grouped largely
at the beginning of the film, with ‘Housewarming’ and ‘Hunters’ in the middle,
Irving handling the third act apart from the finale entirely himself. In the
main he does not attempt to pastiche VW in his own compositions, and his
portrait of ‘Kangeroos’ is delightful. Even so, it does seem strange that four
of the last five tracks on an album entitled The Film Music of Ralph Vaughan
Williams Volume 3 should be by someone else entirely. The music that is based
on VW’s material is dependable, but not especially memorable or sufficiently
striking to make this suite worth seeking out for itself by other than VW
completists.
Of the
three scores represented on this disc no one could seriously argue they were
among Vaughan Williams finest music, or even his best film music. The Story
of a Flemish Farm contains much that is good, especially the electrifying
finale, but could never be described as essential Vaughan Williams. Bitter
Springs is an enjoyable listen, but is something of a barrel-scraping
exercise in so far as VW only contributed 38 bars of material to the project.
Which leaves The Loves of Joanna Godden as the highlight of the album.
Yet even this is hardly vital, but something akin to a tone poem which might
one day find a better home as a filler on a disc with the sixth or seventh
symphonies. This is Vaughan Williams, the finest English classical composer of
the last century, and therefore far from negligible, but I could not seriously
recommend anyone purchasing this disc without first acquiring the two previous
volumes in the series.
Gary Dalkin
Rating: 3