Symphony no. 6, in E minor, by Ralph Vaughan Williams

This is one of my favourite symphonies, but also one of the most uncomfortable and difficult to listen to in one complete sitting. VW wrote this after the end of the Second World War. I feel very much that he was very afraid for mankind, for us as individuals and as a species. This symphony is a warning, in the same way that Orwell's 1984 is a warning (both of them were released in the same year, in fact - 1948). There is a ray of hope in this work. At the end of the first movement the turmoil subsides and a glowing, beautiful vision of Eden appears in a gently rocking theme for strings. But it is eventually crushed by the same towering chords that opened the symphony. After this, all is nightmare and chaos. The finale is quiet, played 'pianissimo' throughout. However, it is not calm and is far from peaceful. It sounds lost, wayward, desolate. Critics at the time thought VW was describing a post-nuclear world, which used to irritate the composer. However, I do think he is speaking of desolation, but it's an inner desolation. He is describing to us a world without love, where we are cut off from each other and wandering. This is terrifying; and it is made all the more powerful by that brief glimpse of hope in the first movement. VW seems to say that there is an answer to this, that there is hope for us all. But what really chills me to the bone is that he also seems to be saying we didn't bother to listen. The symphony's 4 movements play without a break: 2nd movement begins at 7' 25 3rd movement begins at 16' 21 4th movement begins at 22' 25 This is a white hot and mesmerizing performance from the BBC Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Andrew Davis... http://www.amazon.co.uk/Vaughan-Willi...