David Vaughan Thomas or David Vaughan-Thomas[1] (15 March 1873 – 15 September 1934), born David Thomas,[2] and known also by his bardic namePencerdd Vaughan,[3] was a composer, organist, pianist and music administrator. His compositions are deeply influenced by the musical and literary traditions of his native Wales. Though his music is now little performed he has been described as "the leading native Welsh musician of [his] time"[4] and as "one of the most important composers in the transitional period of Welsh music from the Victorian era to our own times".[5] The broadcaster Wynford Vaughan-Thomas was his son.
He moved back to Wales and became a member of the Gorsedd at the 1911 National Eisteddfod, taking the additional surname Vaughan on this occasion.[2] He subsequently acted as adjudicator, and was Chief Musical Advisor for the 1926 National Eisteddfod in Swansea.[8] In 1919 he applied for the post of music director of the University of Wales, but controversially the decision was made to appoint Walford Davies instead.[5][2] Vaughan Thomas was a man of many talents. Apart from his mathematical gifts he was a poet, a scholar,[10] a pianist,[4] wrote articles and reviews for the magazine Welsh Outlook and for several music journals,[3] produced a report on the teaching of music in Welsh schools,[11] lectured, and acted as organist of Mount Pleasant Baptist Chapel, Swansea.[8] In 1927 he was made overseas examiner for Trinity College, London, and in this capacity he travelled to several Commonwealth countries.[12] It was on one such tour in South Africa that he died in Johannesburg.[13]
Music
Vaughan Thomas's music developed out of an early Victorianism[5] (some of his songs have been compared to those of Schubert and Brahms)[14] into a national style inspired by Welsh literature and folklore[2][15] and by the musical traditions of his country, such as penillion singing and the use of the harp for accompaniment.[8] His settings of Welsh poems adapt the traditional metres with great sensitivity.[16] His mature style has been described as "fastidious and cultivated",[17] and as being marked by a strong sense of harmony and careful craftsmanship.[8]
Vaughan Thomas's music has become a rarity in the concert hall. His song "Ysbryd y Mynydd" and his Saith o Ganeuon ar Gywyddau Dafydd ap Gwilym ac Erail (Seven songs on poems in cywydd metre by Dafydd ap Gwilym and others), praised in the 1950s for their originality and scholarship, remained popular long after his death,[14][16][2] but most of his works were no longer played by the 1980s.[19]
Saith o ganeuon ar gywyddau Dafydd ap Gwilym ac eraill (Various) (c. 1923). Contents: "Y Nos", "Y Gwlith", "Miwsig", "Elen", "Dau Filgi", "Claddu'r Bardd o Gariad", "Hiraeth am yr Haf"
Y Bwthyn Bach To Gwellt (Thomas Lloyd) (c. 1923)
Dirge in Woods (George Meredith) (1924)
Dwy Gân i Fariton (Wiliam Llŷn, Robert Ellis) (1926). Contents: "O Fair Wen", "Berwyn"
^Griffith, D. M. (March 1919). "A Vital Report". The Welsh Outlook. 6 (3): 78. Retrieved 13 February 2021.
^"Vaughan Thomas, David, 1873–1934". NLW Archives and Manuscripts. Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru/The National Library of Wales. n.d. Retrieved 11 February 2021.
Vaughan Thomas, Arthur Spencer; Chambers, Llewelyn Gwyn (1959). "Thomas, David Vaughan (1873–1934), musician". Y Bywgraffiadur Cymreig/Dictionary of Welsh Biography. Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru/National Library of Wales. Retrieved 10 February 2021.