Wednesday 28 April 2021

Introducing Grace Williams (1906-77)

Grace Williams’s music exhibits “an expert command of the orchestra, an eloquent poetry, a gift for picturesque description and, though never folky, an identifiable Welsh inspiration.” She displayed a mastery of orchestral writing and composing for voices and was highly regarded as an excellent all-round musician. The Times obituary reminded readers that Williams always knew and spoke her own mind: she formed her own opinions and stuck to them. 

It is unfortunate that only a small proportion of her music has been recorded.  Her considerable catalogue includes two symphonies, several orchestral suites and symphonic poems, concertos for piano, violin, trumpet and oboe, as well as choral works, numerous vocal compositions and a small corpus of chamber and instrumental pieces.

Stylistically, Grace Williams’s earlier music owes much to her teacher, Ralph Vaughan Williams and to a certain extent, the late Romanticism of Richard Strauss. On the other hand, she did not quote folk tunes to any great extent. After 1955 she began to gain confidence in her own musical language which became more nationalistic and began to be influenced by “the rhythm and cadences of Welsh oratory, poetry and musical tropes. This maturity is apparent in the Second Symphony and Penillion, both for orchestra.

Brief Biography:
  • Born on 19 February 1906 at Barry, Glamorgan, Wales.
  • Educated at Barry Grammar School and studied for BMus at University College Cardiff.
  • Entered Royal College of Music, London and became a pupil of Ralph Vaughan Williams. They  became lifelong friends.
  • Fellow students included Dorothy Gow, Elizabeth Maconchy and Imogen Holst.
  • In 1930, Williams received the Royal College of Music Octavia Travelling Scholarship. She went to Vienna to study with Egon Wellesz.
  • Worked in London at the BBC where she specialised in educational programmes.
  • From 1931 to 1946, Williams taught at Camden School for Girls in London and at Southlands College of Education.
  • Composed film scores for the Strand Film Company and the British Transport Films, including Letter to Wales, featuring Donald Houston.
  • The feature film Blue Scar (1949) was the first British film to have a score written by a woman.
  • Returned to Barry, where she pursued a free-lance career working for the Welsh Region of the BBC.
  • On 10 May 1951 she destroyed many of her early manuscripts.
  • Her opera The Parlour, based on a Guy Maupassant story was premiered 5 May 1966, at the New Theatre, Cardiff.
  • In 1969, Williams composed Castell Caernarfon, an orchestral fanfare for the Investiture of the Prince of Wales.
  • Late works included Missa Cambrensis soloist, chorus and orchestra (1971) and the cantata Fairest of Stars for soprano and orchestra (1973)
  • Final work, Two Choruses completed in 1975. This “sea music” set poems by Rudyard Kipling and Thomas Beddoes.
  • Died in her hometown on 10 February 1977.
Six Selected Works:
I have chosen six works from Grace Williams’s catalogue that are easy to obtain on CD, streaming, YouTube or download:
  1. Suite for nine instruments (1934)
  2. Fantasia in Welsh Nursery Tunes (1940)
  3. Sea Sketches for string orchestra (1944)
  4. Symphony No.2 (1956, rev.1975)
  5. Carillons for oboe and orchestra (1965, rev. 1973)
  6. Fairest of Stars for soprano and orchestra (1973)
Bibliography:
For basic information, Grove’s Dictionary of Music and Musicians provides a general overview of her life and work. Wikipedia also offers basic information. A great starting point for more detailed study is the fourth volume of Composers of Wales: Grace Williams by Malcolm Boyd (University of Wales Press, 1980). This 100-page monograph include biographical details, brief notes about many of her compositions, a Catalogue of Works and a very short list of then-available gramophone recordings.

There have been several short and typically general studies in a variety of periodicals, including the Anglo-Welsh Review, Welsh Music and the Musical Times.  A major study of three women composers was published by Ashgate in 2012:  Lutyens, Maconchy, Williams and Twentieth-Century British Music A Blest Trio of Sirens by Rhiannon Mathias. In this volume Mathias “traces the development of these three important composers through analysis of selected works. The book draws upon previously unexplored material as well as radio and television interviews with the composers themselves and with their contemporaries. The musical analysis and contextual material lead to a re-evaluation of the composers' positions in the context of twentieth-century British music history.” Another important book was published in 2019. This is a collection of letters between Elizabeth Maconchy and Grace Williams. At the time of writing, there is not a dedicated biography or study of Grace Williams and her music.

An excellent website devoted to Grace Williams’s life and work is available here. (Accessed 6 March 2021). This includes biography, musical performances, manuscripts, a discography and photographs.

If you can only hear one CD:
A great introduction to Grace Williams’s music is Lyrita SRCD 323. This album collects several pieces originally released on recordings made under the auspices of the Welsh Arts Council.  The five works are Fantasia on Welsh Nursery Tunes, Carillons for oboe & orchestra, Penillion, the Trumpet Concerto and Sea Sketches.

And finally, if you can only listen to one work:

Sea Sketches may not be Grace Williams’s masterpiece, yet it makes a good introduction to her musical achievement. It is immediately approachable.  The composer always had a fondness for the sea. There are five movements in this suite: ‘High Wind’, ‘Sailing Song’, ‘Channel Sirens’, ‘Breakers’ and ‘Calm Sea in Summer’.  Even the most superficial hearing reveals an obvious resemblance to the Four Sea Interludes from Benjamin Britten’s opera Peter Grimes. Both works were being composed around the same time, so I guess there was little chance of cross fertilisation. Perhaps the opening movements of the Sketches, ‘High Wind’ may have its inspiration in one section of Britten’s Les Illuminations (1940)?  The composer dedicated the piece to her parents, “who had the good sense to set up home on the coast of Glamorgan”. The entire work reflects Williams’s impressions of the coast at this location.  Williams explained, “I’ve lived most of my life within sight of the sea, and I shall never tire of looking at it and listening to its wonderful sounds. It must have influenced my music–its rhythms and long flowing lines and its colours must have had an effect, not only on my sea music, but on other works not directly associated with the sea.”

The opening movement is characterised by violent gusts and swells but calms down towards the close. The ‘Sailing Song’ could represent a trip round the bay from the popular seaside resort of Barry Island. Here the sea is calm, and the sun is shining. ‘Channel Sirens’ may be a play on words. Its sinuous melody might simply suggest mechanical warning devices for sailors. On the other hand, it could refer to the mysterious Morgen, legendary Welsh sea-creatures who surely haunt these waters. More strenuous music is heard in ‘Breakers’. This short movement depicts waves crashing on the shore stirred up by strong winds. ‘Calm Sea in Summer’ acts as an epilogue. It is really a Nocturne, that presents a mood of contentment. Perhaps a quiet late-night stroll along the prom deserted, except for lovers?

Grace Williams Sea Sketches can be heard on Lyrita SRCD 323. This recording has been uploaded to YouTube. (Accessed 6 March 2021). 

1 comment:

E.Freestone said...

I am Grace Williams's niece, and I have 2 serious corrections to make:- 1) she lived in Barry, not Barry Island, which is only a part of the town. Her local beach, to which she walked every day, was Cold Knap, a dramatic sweep of grey pebbles - no donkeys in sight!
2) re.Channel Sirens, this is nothing to do with alluring maidens or ancient legends. It is the mournful, mysterious sound of the Nash Point foghorn, distinctive and vividly memorable to me, as a child staying in her house, lying in bed. The sound, though melancholy, was strangely comforting, and could be heard all along the Glamorgan coast on a foggy night.
Eryl Freestone