David McFall R.A. (1919 - 1988)

Sculptor

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1961/1 Dr Ralph Vaughan Williams OM


37½" x 36" high


Bronze (cast by Fiorini foundry) bas relief


Posthumous portrait for the Leith Hill Festival Memorial Committee Dorking. Unveiled 11/4/1961 at Dorking Halls, Dorking.  Further casts are in The Church of St Martin, Dorking, Surrey, commemorating the many concerts RVW conducted there, and where the composer's memorial service took place, and at Charterhouse School.


Exhibited Royal Academy Summer Exhibition 1961 Catalogue No. 1267













                        Ralph Vaughan Williams



The Leith Hill Musical Festival has been held annually in Dorking, Surrey since 1905 and has grown into one of the country's leading choral events.  From the beginning, and for nearly 50 years, the Festival Conductor was the world famous composer Ralph Vaughan Williams.  The festival was founded in 1905 by Evangeline Farrer and Margaret Vaughan Williams, whose famous brother Ralph was Festival Conductor for nearly 50 years.


Vaughan Williams is arguably the greatest composer Britain has seen since the days of Henry Purcell. In a long and extensive career, he composed music notable for its power, nobility and expressiveness, representing, perhaps, the essence of 'Englishness'.  Vaughan Williams was born in 1872 in the Cotswold village of Down Ampney. He was educated at Charterhouse School, then Trinity College, Cambridge. Later he was a pupil of Stanford and Parry at the Royal College of Music after which he studied with Max Bruch in Berlin and Maurice Ravel in Paris.  At the turn of the century he was among the very first to travel into the countryside to collect folk-songs and carols from singers, notating them for future generations to enjoy. As musical editor of The English Hymnal he composed several hymns that are now world-wide favourites (For all the Saints, Come down O love Divine). Later he also helped to edit The Oxford Book of Carols, with similar success.

Vaughan Williams volunteered to serve in the Field Ambulance Service in Flanders for the 1914–1918 war, during which he was deeply affected by the carnage and the loss of close friends such as the composer George Butterworth.


Before the war he had met and then sustained a long and deep friendship with the composer Gustav Holst. For many years Vaughan Williams conducted and led the Leith Hill Music Festival, conducting Bach’s St Matthew Passion on a regular basis. He also became professor of composition at the Royal College of Music in London.


In his lifetime, Vaughan Williams eschewed all honours with the exception of the Order of Merit which was conferred upon him in 1938. He died on 26th August 1958 and his ashes are interred in Westminster Abbey, near Purcell.


In a long and productive life, music flowed from his creative pen in profusion. Hardly a musical genre was untouched or failed to be enriched by his work, which included nine symphonies, five operas, film music, ballet and stage music, several song cycles, church music and works for chorus and orchestra.


Cast unveiled at Charterhouse School with McFall’s son and widow















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