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VAUGHAN WILLIAMS – Fantasy on ‘Greensleeves’ (old English Folk Song) – FIVE CELLOS (or Cello Orchestra) AND HARP (or piano)

Other Identification:
“Greensleeves” is a traditional English folk song. It was first registered in September 1580, and the tune is found in several other late-16th-century and early-17th-century sources.
There has been a persistent belief over the years that Greensleeves was actually composed by Henry VIII for his lover and future queen consort Anne Boleyn – however, the piece is based on an Italian style of composition that did not reach England until after Henry’s death, making it much more likely to be Elizabethan in origin.
Greensleeves is also the tune for the classic Christmas carol ‘What Child Is This’. The 17th century English ballad, ‘Old England Grown New’ is another version of “Greensleeves”.
Ralph Vaughan Williams incorporated Greensleeves as the song ‘Alas, My Love, You Do Me Wrong’ for Mistress Ford in Act III of his 1928 opera ‘Sir John in Love’. Its contrasting middle section is founded on another folk tune: ‘Lovely Joan’. In 1934 this creation was arranged for strings and harp, with Vaughan Williams’s blessing, by Ralph Greaves (1889–1966); this becoming the so familiar ‘Fantasia on Greensleeves’. So, this is the base that David Johnstone uses for the present version, in which all cello voices share the melodic responsibility, and the harp adds nice colourings. He also adds as a suggestion extra repeated sections to add more concept of a concert piece, but these repeats are optional and personal.
Movements or sections: in ternary form
Instrumentation:
arranged and prepared for FIVE CELLOS (or Cello Orchestra) AND HARP by David Johnstone (possible with piano but harp is always to be preferred!)

The music is offered in 4 PDFs:
1 – General Score
2 – Parts for Cellos 1 and 2
3 – Parts for Cellos 3 to 5
4 – Harp-piano part
Approximate difficulty: MEDIUM
The technical level might be classed as moderate-to-difficult; is it true that thumb position is occasionally required, and in not the friendliest key – F minor, but, all in all, well playable by cellists of medium experience!
Dedicatee of this presentation (if applicable):
Fondly dedicated to the British Cello Society & Ollie Mansfield

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Johnstone Music has been performed by orchestras and conservatories worldwide, earning international recognition in cello repertoire.