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  • Ralph Vaughan Williams (born October 12, 1872, Down Ampney, Gloucestershire, England—died August 26, 1958, London, England) was an English composer in the first half of the 20th century, and the founder of the nationalist movement in English music. Vaughan Williams studied at Trinity College, Cambridge, and in London at the Royal College of Music under two major figures of the late 19th-century renaissance of English music, Sir Charles Stanford and Sir Hubert Parry.
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  • Vaughan Williams had a modest private income, which in his early career he supplemented with a variety of musical activities.
  • Down Ampney, the picturesque Cotswold village of Vaughan Williams’s birth, is also the hymn-tune to which we sing ‘Come down, O Love divine’ .
  • One of the finest biographies of Ralph Vaughan Williams is James Day’s 1961, Vaughan Williams, one in the series, The Master Musicians, which is a concise, yet...
  • At the outbreak of World War I in 1914, Vaughan Williams enlisted in the British army and served in Salonika and in France as an officer in the artillery.
  • Vaughan Williams: Fantasia on Greensleeves. The New Queen's Hall Orchestra - Topic. ... Vaughan Williams: Five Variants of "Dives and Lazarus".
  • At the premiere of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor's 1st symphony, Gustav Holst played the trombone and Ralph Vaughan Williams played the triangle.
  • Ralph Vaughan Williams ( ( listen); 12 October 1872 – 26 August 1958) was an English composer. His works include operas, ballets, chamber music, secular and...
  • Ralph Vaughan Williams is a paragon of duality: a perfect synthesis of old and new, of tradition and innovation, of light and dark.
  • The Vaughan Williams Foundation is a grant-giving charity which upholds the values and vision of the celebrated composer Ralph Vaughan Williams and his wife...
  • Ralph Vaughan Williams was an English composer in the first half of the 20th century, and the founder of the nationalist movement in English music.