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              I was about to write that the Vaughan Williams 
                symphonies are now securely part of the concert repertoire. That 
                would have been wrong. In fact the symphonies remain comparative 
                rarities (except perhaps the Sea Symphony - a favourite 
                of choral societies); not, it is true, as rare as the Bax symphonies 
                but certainly not all that common. 
              
              Where Vaughan Williams' 'Nine' are securely established 
                is in the record catalogue with cycles of the nine by Thomson 
                (Chandos), Previn (RCA-BMG), Boult (1950s Decca; 1960s-70s EMI), 
                Bakels (part Naxos); Slatkin (BMG); Davis (Teldec), Haitink (EMI), 
                Handley (EMI). Hickox's original versions series is emerging with 
                tortoise-like progress from Chandos (numbers 6 and 8 just issued, 
                Sept 2003).
              
              This book is laid out with one chapter per symphony, 
                an Introduction, a prelude and epilogue and a 4 page Bibliography. 
                Each symphony chapter is divided into sections one section for 
                each movement.
              
              The target audience for this book is one that 
                is musically literate in a technical sense or perhaps for people 
                studying towards musical literacy. The general enthusiast without 
                the ability to read and analyse music will soon be swamped in 
                references to transpositions, Mixolydian and Lydian modes, the 
                Phrygian diatessaron, hemiola, sudominants, chord types and tonal 
                structure. Of course as an out-and-out lay enthusiast of RVW you 
                may be prepared to weather these technical doldrums for the more 
                approachable material Dr Pike has to pass on. I hope so. I am 
                sure that enthusiasts without technical knowledge have much to 
                learn if they are prepared to stagger studiously through these 
                pages with full score and recordings to hand. You will already 
                have guessed that while I can just about follow a full score the 
                writer has no knowledge of musical analysis or of structure. The 
                book's academic legitimacy is proclaimed through careful footnoting. 
              
              
              The introduction makes some probing remarks. 
                Pike banishes the image of RVW as a countryman. He would never 
                have left London but for Adeline's protracted illness and he returned 
                in 1953 after her death. His 'field days' with Holst were aborted 
                when Holst died in 1934 and their place was taken by an inner 
                sanctum of friends: Howells. Bliss and Finzi. While he was late 
                in starting them (he was 42 when he finsihed a Sea Symphony) 
                they then remained a cyclic obsession until death intervened with 
                a completed Ninth in 1958. The Sea Symphony is fairly enough 
                described as uneven and exploratory. Its success is embedded in 
                its choral and solo requirements making it a natural mark for 
                choral societies. For listeners it has it longueurs although the 
                use of Whitman's text is one of its strengths. Dr Pike comments 
                on the London Symphony beinbg an enormous advance technically 
                on the previous one. Dr Pike does not mention the original version 
                now recorded by Chandos with Hickox. 
              
              The Pastoral is very unusual because of 
                its predominance of slow music. Howells wrote of the composer's 
                courage in writing such a work. Frank Howes (not exactly an uncritical 
                enthusiast of the British musical renaissance) recalled the best 
                performance he had ever heard being one conducted by George Dyson 
                in Hereford Cathedral. The acerbic Fourth was the first symphony 
                written without Holst's frank counsel. Instead Bax (the dedicatee), 
                R.O. Morris and Boult served as 'critical friends'. Why Dr Pike 
                lists Bax's Third Symphony as an example of similarly violent 
                works I do not know. I would agree that Rubbra's First is in that 
                category but the Bax Third is a tapestry of gaudy colours and 
                subtle emotional and illustrative poetry and even in its few demonstrative 
                climactic moments the issue is colour rather than violent conflict. 
                The linkage between Sibelius, the Fifth Symphony and Pilgrim's 
                Progress is duly made. It is Sibelius's Sixth that seems the closest 
                relative among the Finnish seven. 
              
              The Sixth is treated in the usual great detail. 
                I noted a comparison between the desolation of Holst's Egdon 
                Heath and the epilogue of the Sixth. He comments that of the 
                the middle symphonies they are prophetic of war (4), peace (5) 
                and the dangers of atomic weapons (6). He goes on to say that 
                if the Fifth is about a journey to the Celestical City, No 6 is 
                a journey into a bitter despairing void. Pike brackets the Eighth 
                with Beethoven's Eighth, Prokofiev’s Classical, Schulhoff’s Second, 
                Shostakovich’s Ninth and Havergal Brian's Ninth (Pike was and 
                may yet still be an office-bearer with the Havergal Brian Society). 
                We are reminded that the only major work between the 8th and 9th 
                is the motet A Vision of Aeroplanes. The Ninth represents 
                a return to the serious intention. It was written in Majorca and 
                at Joy Finzi's home in Newbury between 1956 and 1957. The preoccupations 
                and inspirations it reflects include Hardy's Wessex and specifically 
                Tess of the D'Urbervilles, the British cathedrals and the 
                Solent (itself the subject of an early RVW tone poem - now how 
                about a recording of that). In the two page epilogue Pike 
                makes the point that every one of the symphonies contrasts with 
                its predecessor and that RVW took to heart Whitman's exhortation 
                to 'steer for the deep waters only'. The book examines the structure 
                of each symphony relating the works to the European models of 
                symphonic and sonata form. 
              
              Martin Anderson's Toccata Press is very much 
                a one man band. Progress of its books towards publication is at 
                a snail 's pace but when they do appear they are invariably of 
                rewarding content and superb finish. I look forward with no patience 
                at all to Michael Crump's book on the Martinu symphonies and Colin 
                Scott-Sutherland's major study of the life and works of Ronald 
                Stevenson. Let's hope that they are not as long in the mill as 
                Diana McVeagh's Finzi biography for OUP (and will that EVER see 
                the light of common day?).
              
              This book's emphasis is on the technical side 
                which is all to the good as a corrective given the opprobrium 
                pitched at Vaughan Williams over his alleged clumsiness, technical 
                ineptitude and amateurism.
              
              I did not detect any typos apart from one in 
                the bibliography on p. 339 where correspondance appears 
                rather than the correct correspondence. 
              
              This is the second in the Symphonic Studies series. 
                if you were wondering, the first was Brian Newbould's 'Schubert 
                and the Symphony'. No.3 will be Michael Crump's book on the Martinu 
                Symphonies.
              
              This is an extremely well presented and intricate 
                dissection and commentary on Vaughan Williams' nine symphonies.
              
              Rob Barnett