Not finding what you're looking for? Just email us at hello@ficksmusic.com or call us at +1 215-592-1681

Ralph Vaughan Williams

Vaughan Williams: Songs of Travel

¥8,800
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Item is backordered and shipping time is unknown right now.

Boosey & Hawkes  |  SKU: HPS1570  |  Barcode: 9790060133060
  • Composer: Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958)
  • Format: Study Score
  • Instrumentation: Piano, Baritone
  • Work: Songs of Travel (1904)
  • ISMN: 9790060133060
  • Size: 7.2 x 10.2 inches
  • Pages: 86

Description

First publication of the orchestral cycle Songs of Travel , setting poems of Robert Louis Stevenson. Three of the nine orchestrations are by the composer, dating from 1905; the remainder were scored by his assistant Roy Douglas in 1960, two years after the composer's death. Among the latter was the hitherto lost epilogue "I have trod the upward and the downward path." in his memoir Working with Vaughan Williams Douglas wondered: "Should I score them in my own style (the answer was clearly no), in the style of the orchestrations he had made in 1905, or in the way he might have scored them in 1958 (which would have been vastly different)? The final result was a typically British compromise, but I took care to use in my scoring only those instruments which he had used in 1905."

Boosey & Hawkes

Vaughan Williams: Songs of Travel

¥8,800

Description

First publication of the orchestral cycle Songs of Travel , setting poems of Robert Louis Stevenson. Three of the nine orchestrations are by the composer, dating from 1905; the remainder were scored by his assistant Roy Douglas in 1960, two years after the composer's death. Among the latter was the hitherto lost epilogue "I have trod the upward and the downward path." in his memoir Working with Vaughan Williams Douglas wondered: "Should I score them in my own style (the answer was clearly no), in the style of the orchestrations he had made in 1905, or in the way he might have scored them in 1958 (which would have been vastly different)? The final result was a typically British compromise, but I took care to use in my scoring only those instruments which he had used in 1905."

View product