Shortly after the first performance the composer sent the manuscript score to the conductor
Fritz Busch in Germany, and it disappeared in the upheaval of the outbreak of the
First World War. Butterworth, aided by Toye, and the critic
E. J. Dent, reconstructed the score from the orchestral parts, The symphony went through several revisions before reaching its final form. Vaughan Williams revised it for a performance in March 1918, conducted by
Adrian Boult. and again in 1919–1920, a version which
Albert Coates premiered at the Queen's Hall. Richard Tiedman commented, "The 1913 score is more meditative, dark-shaded and tragic in tone, almost
Mahleresque in its inclusiveness. By 1933 Vaughan Williams's concept of symphonic architecture was becoming more aligned with a
Sibelian logic and severity." The final version is around twenty minutes shorter than the original, as some indicative timings show:
1914 version: •
London Symphony Orchestra/
Richard Hickox:
61:19 (I: 15:04; II: 16:16; III: 11:04; IV: 18:50) •
Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra/
Eugene Goossens (rec 1941):
38:45 (I:11:06: II:9:22; III: 5:09; IV: 13:15) [This performance makes no cuts, but does not play the repeat in the third movement.]
1933/36 revision: •
Queen's Hall Orchestra/
Sir Henry Wood (rec 1936):
37:09 (I:11:40: II:8:39; III: 5:21; IV: 10:49) •
London Philharmonic Orchestra/
Sir Adrian Boult (rec 1971):
43:03 (I: 14:24; II: 9:32; III:7:07; IV:12:00) The reception accorded to the Chandos recording of the 1914 score persuaded Ursula Vaughan Williams to authorise a live performance of the original version. In November 2003,
Richard Hickox conducted the original 1914 score with the London Symphony Orchestra at the
Barbican, in the first live performance of this version since 1918.
The Proms presented an additional live performance of the 1914 version on 19 July 2005, with Hickox conducting the
BBC National Orchestra of Wales. ==Recordings==