Vaughan Williams · On Wenlock Edge
On Wenlock Edge
On Wenlock Edge
Shropshire is where wenlock edge
the poet “A.E housmen” wrote a series of poems called “A shropshire Lad”
trying to make the connection of humans vs nature?
man agaisnt time
the poem tells a story about a blustering gale blowing on wenlock edge,we can hear the dangerous weather in the opening bars
lots of word painting(heaving hill in music)
the words hurt him put in high agitated pitches
its a synthesis(its basically like fusion but dont say fusion)
syntethis of english german,folk
harmony avoiding a key(put this in harmony)
harmony here is actually modal wwhich is based on pentanoic
instrumentation(sonority)
cello playing quite high and using tenor cleff
unusual instrumentation(piano quintet with a voice(piano quintet alone is NOT unusual))
there are similarities with the ravel string quartet
creating an atmosphere
creates a unique sonority which really captures the storm
instrumental techniques (tremolo-creates wind, aggressive, instablity,trills(not melodic writing by effects writing),
piano ostinato. Unrelenting continuous semiquavers
burst, flurries
rapid hemidemisemiquavers - purely painting no melodic harmonic function
bar 54 it says colla voce -(the piano follows the voice)
the cello is in a high tesitura -(sense of heigh elevation) - not grounded
triple stopping (extended technique)- used as a percussive rather than melodic -gives emphasis on the words
theres pizzicato + arco
sol Ponti cello ( playing up the bridge of the cello)
words syllabic
lots of word painting, bar 49 “life blew high” octave leap “high”
structure
strophic, follows stanzas of the poem(strophic very common in folk music) could d be seen as
- intro bars 1-6
- verse 6-16
- Interlude 16-21 - based on melodic material from intro
- verse 2: 21-31
- interlude bar 31-33
- verse 3 34-44
- verse 4 bar 45-55
- Interlude 55-58
- Verse 5 58-68
- closing section 69 to end
verse 1s and 2 are similar
verses 3 and 4 are similar
5 are hybrid
tonality
modal, pentatonic, creates ambiguity and instability
veers towards a g minor, has a g minor feel but its modal
even when there are g chords theres no 3rds(no major or minor feel) - tudor music
lack of a third gives it tudor music
- first chord Ebmajor 1stinversion gives us the impression that we are not in G
- is it dorian?
- is it Aelinian?
its quite cinemtaic,evokes an image
ab first inversion
- paralle intervals(makes him avoid tonality?,no indication whever its G minor or what tonality)
not rooted in tonality
piano triplet plays whole tone scale in piano
right hand of the piano is playing sextuplets only 5 notes(G A C D F) (pentatonic avoididng major minortonality) that plays throughout
avoiding major minor tonality
bar 11 bitonalaty,LH Ab,Bb and C. RH G A C D F- creates disconance on “gale”
becomes more and more ambigous
gets increasingle chromatic
from 74-end we ends up with just D and G - could confirm that its g minor(thought not sure)
texture
melody dominated homophony
sometimes cello and left hand(piano) double the voice - “to reinforce the melody, gives weight to the melody”
pentatonic ostinato in piano creating continuous movement
layers of trills
- 2nd violin
- violas
- cello
violin interjections - flurios
piano start trilling(second verse) - storm is developing, constant movement
and then it becomes more sparse, verse 3 and 4 is texturally different - much more spare(alternates between voice ans strings)(less accompaniment)
in verse 5 theres lots of tremolo and in the end its very sparse
in general the functional is of the texture is to enhance the atmosphere
melody
vocal range is D - G(an octave above) - perfect 11th
comfortable range - not particularly virtuosic
lots of chromaticism which creates tension
in verse 3 bar 40 theres a rising sequence with chromaticism which heightens drama
first and second verse scalic(folk music) based on the pentatonic
there are some leaps of 4ths and 5ths
11-12 stays on the same note - persistent gale(wind)
dissonance and word paintinng “ashed under uricon” tritone
ends on an E natural.
verse 3 very monotonous (voice) its in a low tesitura and it could be reflecting the roman town
tempo rhythm and metre
4 4 - allegro moderato
theres a poco rit -bar 61
rythm of melody follows speech rythms
lots of triplets and dotted rythms - in acconpainment
sextuplets,hemidemisemiquavers
voice simple
lot of movement even though tempo is not fast
harmony
essentially consonant(opositive of dissonance)
avoids conventions of functional harmony
parralell harmony - impressionism
Ab -Cm/ab -Bb(first inversion)- (triplet) ( bar 1)
bar 3 false relation(Db - D)
bar 54 on the words “Now ‘tis’ F natural in the same as Fb(all you need to say there are false relations)
quarter harmony in bar 3
bitonality creats dissonance
lot of chromaticism apart from the endd where theres open 4ths very much in contrast with false relations and notty complex sus chords and bitonality and you end up with this simple mediavle hes really modern but ancient at the same time
dynamics
overall theres extreeme dynamics pp to ff
lots of crescendos and diminuendos which reflect the swelling and surging of the wind along with the tremlos
overalll things i wrote down later(find where to put it)
in bar 33 beat 3 theres a militaristic motif(like a battle call)
overall adjactives to describe : frenzied,flickers,flourishing,vivid,surgig,swaying tremlolo,surging arpeggios,stormy trills,to time to time there are distant flickers (like lightning)
wider listening “Sea Symphony” - Vaughan Williams’
“Morning “ from Peer gynt by Edvard Grieg