Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958) - The Captain's Apprentice | Norfolk Folk Song

Subscribers:
528
Published on ● Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Ghf1XHGKJQ



Category:
Let's Play
Duration: 3:37
563 views
24


#RVW150
Enjoy this live excerpt from Apocryphonia's October concert, 'Tracing the Tunes, Ralph Vaughan Williams and the English Folk Song', in celebration of the composer's 150th Birthday.

'The Captain's Apprentice' is from Book 2 of the English Folk Song Society's 'Folk Songs of England', which features arrangements of Essex, Norfolk and Cambridgeshire folk songs by Ralph Vaughan Williams.

Published in 1908, this tune was used as part of his Norfolk Rhapsody, alongside other folk songs performed during this concert.

This melody has a haunting, powerful and almost ancient otherworldly quality to it. Vaughan Williams' arrangement is simple; mostly chord underlay and a few minor arpeggios, yet everything fits exactly where it should to turn this already powerful song into something even more captivating. There's something about those chords; perhaps it's how their placement outlines the melody's changing time signatures, perhaps it's how they seem to create a seemingly perfect harmonic wash of sound to lay below the melody. They sound like they should have been there all along.

The song is about a Captain who takes an orphan Apprentice to his ship. He mistreats him out of spite, eventually leading to his death. He is condemned to hang by his crew and expresses remorse for his horrible acts, imploring others to act better.

Those with power are often the most cruel. They often cannot see how cruel they are because of the blinding nature of power. When one is forced to witness the devastation of their own cruelty it is generally too late.

There are more verses to this song, but they were not included in the book. They go into further, more gruesome detail about the despicable actions of the Captain towards the Apprentice, and how the ship's crew apprehended and condemned the Captain to death for his crimes.

Alexander Cappellazzo - Tenor
Ivan Jovanovic - Piano
Ryan Harper - Audio/Video

This concert was made possible by the support of the Canada Council for the Arts, and the Vaughan Williams Charitable Trust. Thank you!




Other Videos By Alexander Cappellazzo


2023-06-09Hymn of Remembrance to Sanguinius - [Warhammer 40k Themed Music, Horus Heresy Opera]
2023-03-31Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Il Mio Tesoro from 'Don Giovanni' | Toronto City Opera, 2023
2023-01-18Stelutis Alpinis (Arturo Zardini) - Isonzo Gameplay with Music
2023-01-12Don Giovanni - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Ennio Morricone/Spaghetti Western Soundfont Style)
2022-12-22Ralph Vaughan Williams - Hugh's Song of the Road from 'Hugh the Drover' | Live Recording
2022-12-20Vicente Lusitano (1520–1561) - Elisabeth Zachariae [World Premiere Recording] | Diapente Quintet
2022-12-16Alexander Cappellazzo Live Stream
2022-11-24Ralph Vaughan Williams - Cruelty Has A Human Heart, The Divine Image, Eternity | Ten Blake Songs
2022-11-07Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893) - 'Eugene Onegin' (1879) | Lensky's Aria, Duet and Duel Scene
2022-11-04You're a Submarine Captain, but "Nelly - Dilemma (ft. Kelly Rowland)" is your sonar.
2022-11-02Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958) - The Captain's Apprentice | Norfolk Folk Song
2022-11-01Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958) - Oh Who is That, That Raps at My Window? | Sussex Folk Song
2022-09-29Recording Goof Reel - Sept 2022
2022-09-17Samuel Coleridge Taylor (1875-1912) - Eleanore, Op. 37 No. 6 | Live Concert Recording
2022-09-05Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance - Apple Bottom Jeans
2022-08-27Georges Bizet (1838-1875) - Agnus Dei (Intermezzo from the "L'Arlesienne Suite No. 2)
2022-07-08The Death Aria of Sanguinius - [Warhammer 40k, Horus Heresy Fan-Opera]
2022-05-16(Preview) Death Aria of Sanguinius from 'The Death of Sanguinius'- [Warhammer 40k Themed Music]
2022-04-21Benjamin Britten (1913 - 1976) 'As Representing our Local Council / Mayor's Aria' - 'Albert Herring'
2022-04-11Opera Singing Lore vs Gameplay
2022-03-15Francesca Caccini (1587- after 1641) - Pastore's Aria, (La Liberazione di Ruggiero)