The symphony is scored for two
flutes (one doubling
piccolo),
oboe,
cor anglais, two
clarinets, two
bassoons, two
French horns, two
trumpets, three
trombones,
timpani and
strings. The symphony is in the customary four-movement form: The composer provided
metronome markings for all four movements, but they are widely regarded as dubious: the composer did not observe them when he conducted the work, and he expressed approval of Boult's tempi, which were similar to his own. His musical assistant
Roy Douglas has suggested that Vaughan Williams simply miscalculated because he did not possess a metronome. In addition to the ''Pilgrim's Progress'' allusions, the score has echoes of Vaughan Williams's hymn tune "
Sine nomine", in the second subject of the first movement and at the end of the fourth movement.
I. Preludio The first movement, in
Frank Howes's analysis (1954), can be seen either as "an elaborate ternary form with coda" or "an exposition of two big groups of themes succeeded without development by a condensed recapitulation". This movement owes something to
sonata form, but does not display all its characteristics; the second
subject has been derived from the first subject. The movement opens with a pedal C in the bass, answered by a horn call outlining a
D major chord in a
dotted rhythm, which implies
mixolydian D. : { \new PianoStaff 4.\p( 8 | 4. 8 2) } \new Staff \relative c { \clef bass \key g \major \numericTimeSignature \time 4/4 1~ | 2. s4 } >> } The violins use the notes of the
pentatonic scale, making the key ambiguous.
Wilfrid Mellers believes this is why Vaughan Williams billed the movement as a Preludio, "which suggests an emergent state". The horn call motif fluctuates from major to minor, outlining the tonal ambiguity, moving between the mixolydian and
dorian modes, which becomes a characteristic of the movement. The bass's C pedal becomes the tonic when the key changes to either the
aeolian or dorian modes. The
modality then moves to E, with a new melody in the violins, which, although it does not include a sharpened seventh, outlines E major. The bass, now played
pizzicato, supports the melody both melodically and harmonically and the texture incorporates
suspensions and
passing notes, making the harmony richer. A sudden descent of a
semitone, an idea previously used in Vaughan Williams's works
Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis and
Job, marks a key change to three flats and also the
development section. The tempo accelerates to allegro for the development. The strings are used to imply the winds of nature, in a similar vein to that of Sibelius. This is punctuated by the brass and woodwind with the falling semitone motif, which gets larger intervallically to a major second and then a minor third. This section is a
canon; the
polyphony of which Mellers believes shows the randomness of nature. The key shifts down mediants, until it reaches
D minor, when the strings imitate Sibelius again, this time using
tremolo effects. For the recapitulation the tempo slows and the dynamics are reduced. The C pedal is reintroduced, but this time in a more melodic fashion. There is more development in the recapitulation. The movement ends in a similar way to the opening, with the horn call, but the key signature of two flats rather than one sharp is used. The bases descend to C via E, leaving the tonality of the movement still in question.
Arnold Whittall argues that "With respect to D Major, the Preludio might be regarded as a clear case of
Schoenbergian 'Schwebende Tonalität' ('fluctuating: suspended, not yet decided' tonality)", although Vaughan Williams stated that Schoenberg's music meant nothing to him.
II. Scherzo Vaughan Williams uses rhythm in the Scherzo to convey different effects. The focus of the movement is on the rhythm rather than the ambiguous tonality of the Preludio. Lionel Pike comments that "at times it seems more like a counterpoint of rhythms than of pitches." The movement begins with three
dotted minims in a fast time ( = 120), and then minims for four bars, which create
hemiolas and then
crotchets. This gives the illusion that the music is accelerating, and so the pulse does not settle. When the melodic line begins, the music is divided into five bar phrases. A sense of stability is established when the theme is repeated by the
viola and
double bass in stable two bar phrases. However, the violins enter with phrasing that does not conform to either pattern, thus adding more confusion. Using this rhythmic phrasing, the dorian line played on the violins and the aeolian woodwind line are differentiated rhythmically, as well as tonally. The rhythmical confusion is halted when the wind and strings alternate downward runs
antiphonally.
III. Romanza In the manuscript score Vaughan Williams headed this movement with words taken from Bunyan: Upon that place there stood a cross And a little below a sepulchre … Then he said "He hath given me rest by his sorrow and Life by his death" The third and fourth lines were later sung in the opera by Pilgrim. The movement may be considered the spiritual core of the work:
Frank Howes calls it "the heart of the symphony" and
David Cox calls it "a profound meditation on the three main musical elements presented at the outset". Howes comments that with its spiritual, meditative nature there is nothing "romantic" about this movement;
Michael Kennedy observes that with Vaughan Williams the term "is always a signal that the music was of special significance to him". The opening cor anglais solo is taken virtually without change. : \relative c' { \clef treble \time 3/4 \tempo "Lento" 4 = 66 r4 \times 2/3 { c8\p(-- c-- c-- } c-- d-- | e2) e4( | g4. f8 e[ d] | e d e4) fis( | g f! e8 d | e2)~\> e8\! } Rising fourths again appear as connecting passages.
IV. Passacaglia : \relative c { \clef bass \time 3/4 \key d \major \tempo "Moderato" 4 = 120 d\p( b8 a e'4 | d2 cis4) | b( a8 fis e4 | b'2 a4) | g4( fis8 e d4 | e b' a) | b2( cis4) | d } Although this movement begins with the repetitive bass line characteristic of the
passacaglia form, Vaughan Williams eventually abandons it. The triumphant primary melody of the passacaglia is used as Pilgrim's dialogue with Interpreter in the second half of "The House Beautiful" scene, while the fanfare motif recalls "The Arming of the Pilgrim" in Act II Scene 1. This ushers in a return of the themes from the first movement of the symphony, which are resolved into a quiet valediction played first by the woodwind and then by the upper strings. ==Premieres and publication==