The Pilgrim's Progress
Original production of The Pilgrims Progress
The Pilgrim’s Progress was an opera which Vaughan Williams spent over forty years of his life perfecting: he composed some of the incidental music for an amateur production in 1906, including the hymn-tune York, but the first performance was not given until April 1951 as part of the Festival of Britain, opening and closing with that same tune.
As a consequence, the music is wide-ranging in style, from the robust Fourth Symphony to the meditative beauty of the Tallis Fantasia, and from the passionate London Symphony to the enigmatic final symphony, No. 9.
A self-professed agnostic, the subject matter might have seemed a somewhat unusual choice for Vaughan Williams; yet he wrote in a letter in May 1951 that he wanted the music to “apply to anybody who aims at the spiritual life”; and certainly the uplifting message of the music is a universal one.
See 'Pilgrim's Progress' performed live:
Fri 20 June 2008, 7:30pm
Sadler's Wells, London (find out more)
Sun 22 June 2008, 4:00pm
Sadler's Wells, London (find out more)
The Philharmonia Orchestra and Richard Hickox are honoured to dedicate these performances to the memory of Ursula Vaughan Williams (1911-2007).
Find our more about The Pilgrim's Progress in our film below. This film is part of our free podcast series - click here to find out how to subscribe.

