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</script><h1>Three Shakespeare Songs<h2><h2>Composer: <a href="http://en.instr.scorser.com/C/String+ensemble/Ralph+Vaughan+Williams/All/Alphabeticly.html">Williams Ralph Vaughan</a></h2><h2>Instruments: <a href="http://en.instr.scorser.com/SS/Mixed+chorus/All/All.html">Mixed chorus</a> </h2><h2>Tags: <a href="http://en.instr.scorser.com/SS/String+ensemble/All/Secular+choruses.html">Secular choruses</a> <a href="http://en.instr.scorser.com/SS/String+ensemble/All/Choruses.html">Choruses</a> </h2><div class="clear10"></div><h2>Download free scores:</h2><a rel="nofollow" href="http://en.instr.scorser.com/D/23788.html" target="_blank"">Complete Score PDF 0 MB</a><div class="clear10"></div><div class="clear10"></div><script async src="https://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js?client=ca-pub-7958472158675518"
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</script><div class="clear10"></div><div class="clear10"></div><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Shakespeare_Songs">Wikipedia</a><div class="p">Three Shakespeare Songs is a piece of classical choral music written for an a cappella SATB choir. It was written in 1951 by the British classical composer <a href="http://en.instr.scorser.com/C/String+ensemble/Ralph+Vaughan+Williams/All/Popularity.html">Ralph Vaughan Williams</a>. The work comprises three short pieces which are settings of text from two plays by the English playwright William Shakespeare. It is published by Oxford University Press.</div><div class="p">In 1951 the British Federation of Music Festivals (of which Vaughan Williams was president) held its annual National Competitive Festival during the Festival of Britain. The festival included a choral competition in which choirs from around the United Kingdom would demonstrate their technical abilities by performing test pieces. Vaughan Williams's associate composer, Cecil Armstrong Gibbs, tried to persuade him to compose a new test piece. Vaughan Williams was reluctant at first, and was of the opinion that the choirs should perform established test pieces rather than introducing a new composition. Disappointed that Vaughan Williams had apparently failed to answer his letter, Armstrong Gibbs appeared to have given up on the idea:</div><div class="p">Soon afterwards I was stricken down with some illness and was in bed when a fat envelope, registered and bearing the Dorking postmark, was brought up. Inside was the MS. (manuscript) of the Three Shakespeare Songs dedicated to me and the briefest of notes which ran: "Dear Armstrong. Here are three Shakespeare settings. Do what you like with them... Yours ever R.V.W."</div><div class="p">The songs were premiered in the Royal Festival Hall on 23 June 1951, conducted by Armstrong Gibbs.</div><div class="p">Stylistic comparisons have been made with Vaughan Williams's <a href="http://en.instr.scorser.com/CC/String+ensemble/Ralph+Vaughan+Williams/Symphony+No.+6.html">Sixth Symphony</a> which was composed only four years earlier, notably of the second song, The Cloud-Capp'd Towers. Although the published version begins in the key of F# minor, the composer's original holograph was in E minor, which is also the key of the Sixth Symphony. The shifting between E minor and E♭ minor triads, as heard on the words "shall dissolve" has been compared to the conclusion of the Epilogue movement of the symphony. Vaughan Williams himself later suggested that the meaning of the symphony's last movement could be summed up in the lines from The Tempest: "We are such stuff / As dreams are made on; and our little life / Is rounded with a sleep."</div><div class="p">The text of each song is derived from plays by William Shakespeare:</div><div class="p">The first song is a setting of Ariel's Song to Ferdinand from The Tempest. It refers to Ferdinand's father — Alonso, King of Naples — who is presumed drowned in a shipwreck and whose body undergoes a magical transformation in the ocean depths.</div><div class="p">The Tempest, Act 1 scene 2:</div><div class="p">Full fathom five thy father lies,Of his bones are coral made;Those are pearls that were his eyes:Nothing of him that doth fade,But doth suffer a sea-change Into something rich and strange.Sea-nymphs hourly ring his knell:Ding-dong.Hark! now I hear them, – ding-dong bell.</div><div class="p">The second song also uses lines from The Tempest, spoken by the sorcerer Prospero to conclude the masque at the wedding of his daughter Miranda to Prince Ferdinand. The characters, Prospero announces, will all fade away, and this play within a play itself becomes a metaphor for the transience of real life, the globe symbolising both the World and the Globe Theatre in London.</div><div class="p">The Tempest, Act IV scene 1</div><div class="p">The cloud-capp'd towers, the gorgeous palaces,The solemn temples, the great globe itself,Yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolve,And, like this insubstantial pageant faded,Leave not a rack behind: We are such stuffAs dreams are made on, and our little lifeIs rounded with a sleep.</div><div class="p">Text from A Midsummer Night's Dream forms the basis of the third song, the Fairy's Song to Puck. The furiously rhythmic verse evokes the mythology of Titania, the Fairy Queen.</div><div class="p">A Midsummer Night's Dream, Act II scene 1</div><div class="p">Over hill, over dale,Thorough bush, thorough briar,Over park, over pale,Thorough flood, thorough fireI do wander everywhere.Swifter than the moonè's sphere;And I serve the fairy queen,To dew her orbs upon the green.The cowslips tall her pensioners be;In their gold coats spots you see;Those be rubies, fairy favours,In those freckles live their savours:I must go seek some dew-drops here,And hang a pearl in every cowslip's ear.</div></body></html>