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articles / Pop Culture

Four Ways of Expressing Romance

Pop CultureThe State of the Arts

bird-valentine-6x9

For Valentine’s Day, a day of romance, a look at one composer’s wide interpretation of what a “Romance” should sound like: Ralph Vaughan Williams covered the high, (very) low, familiar, and off the beaten path in four works with that name or description.

 

Four Ways of Expressing Romance
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The first, and best known of them is the work known as The Lark Ascending – but its full title adds “Romance for Violin and Orchestra”. The solo line floats above the orchestral accompaniment like a bird over the English countryside.

Vaughan Williams’ Romance for Viola and Piano was only discovered among his works after his death – it shows that there’s room for romance even for the much-maligned viola… But the two remaining works are for instruments that get even less respect (or less frequent opportunities to shine in front of an orchestra) – the harmonica, and the tuba. The 1951 Romance in D-flat for Harmonica and Orchestra was written for virtuoso Larry Adler, and it remains one of the few large-scale works in the repertoire. A few years later, in 1954, and a few octaves lower, the slow movement of the Tuba Concerto in F Minor is labelled “Romanza” (as he also called a movement in his fifth symphony.)  Proving that for Vaughan Williams, every instrument deserves a little romance.

Pop CultureThe State of the Arts
Written by:
Jeffrey Freymann
Jeffrey Freymann
Published on 09.19.2017
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