Is Gustav Holst a one hit wonder with THE PLANETS?

Started by arpeggio, October 22, 2017, 07:32:58 PM

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Is Gustav Holst a one hit wonder with THE PLANETS?

YES
3 (14.3%)
NO
17 (81%)
NO OPINION
1 (4.8%)

Total Members Voted: 20

Voting closed: January 20, 2018, 06:32:58 PM

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Quote from: vandermolen on April 23, 2022, 11:16:42 PM
I very much agree John - his other work has been overshadowed by the popularity of The Planets. In particular the First Choral Symphony (although there was no second one), The Perfect Fool Ballet Music, Egdon Heath, The Hymn of Jesus, Hammersmith, Beni Mora, Suites for Military Band and The Cloud Messenger etc.

Absolutely! As a fan of Holst's "other" works, I can happily say that these people who only know The Planets are sorely missing out on some amazing works.

Lisztianwagner

Maybe The Planets could be considered Holst's masterpiece, but it definitely isn't the only great work he composed: for example, A Somerset Rhapsody, The Golden Goose, Indra, Two Songs without Words, Choral Hymns from the Rig Veda, Egdon Heath and the St. Paul's Suite are absolutely brilliant, beautiful compositions.
Holst had an amazing ability of orchestration, with bold chords, colourful timbric variations and a fine use of the expressive possibilities of the English folk songs; his music is simple, yet at the same time deep and evocative. It's rather sad that he is mostly remembered just for one of his works, because he was more than that.
"You cannot expect the Form before the Idea, for they will come into being together." - Arnold Schönberg

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Quote from: Lisztianwagner on April 25, 2022, 05:36:29 AM
Maybe The Planets could be considered Holst's masterpiece, but it definitely isn't the only great work he composed: for example, A Somerset Rhapsody, The Golden Goose, Indra, Two Songs without Words, Choral Hymns from the Rig Veda, Egdon Heath and the St. Paul's Suite are absolutely brilliant, beautiful compositions.
Holst had an amazing ability of orchestration, with bold chords, colourful timbric variations and a fine use of the expressive possibilities of the English folk songs; his music is simple, yet at the same time deep and evocative. It's rather sad that he is mostly remembered just for one of his works, because he was more than that.

I quite agree, Ilaria. All of those works you mentioned are gorgeous.

vandermolen

Quote from: Lisztianwagner on April 25, 2022, 05:36:29 AM
Maybe The Planets could be considered Holst's masterpiece, but it definitely isn't the only great work he composed: for example, A Somerset Rhapsody, The Golden Goose, Indra, Two Songs without Words, Choral Hymns from the Rig Veda, Egdon Heath and the St. Paul's Suite are absolutely brilliant, beautiful compositions.
Holst had an amazing ability of orchestration, with bold chords, colourful timbric variations and a fine use of the expressive possibilities of the English folk songs; his music is simple, yet at the same time deep and evocative. It's rather sad that he is mostly remembered just for one of his works, because he was more than that.
+1
"Courage is going from failure to failure without losing enthusiasm" (Churchill).

'The test of a work of art is, in the end, our affection for it, not our ability to explain why it is good' (Stanley Kubrick).

Karl Henning

Quote from: vandermolen on April 22, 2022, 01:04:55 PM
Copied over from VW thread:
I just listened to a fascinating piece of archive material which was broadcast during the interval of the concert in Manchester last night (21/04). It features Vaughan Williams, in his characteristic upper class accent talking about Gustav Holst and (after Holst's 'Moorside Suite') the composer Herbert Howells talking about Holst. At one time Holst, VW and Howells taught at St Paul's Girl's School in Hammersmith, London. Towards the end of his life Holst turned up unexpectedly one Saturday night, at Howells's front door seemingly very ill. Howells invited Holst to join him and his wife for supper but Holst refused and said that he'd go up to Howells's study to look at manuscripts. By chance there was a Prom being broadcast that night featuring 'The Planets'. Howells invited Holst to come downstairs to listen to the broadcast of 'The Planets' but Holst said that he did not want to hear it! However he eventually came down to listen and when the audience spontaneously started singing the big tune in the middle of 'Jupiter' ('I Vow to thee My Country') Howells noticed that tears were streaming down Holst's face. At the end Holst left them saying that he didn't suppose that they would see him much more and he died shortly afterwards. The extract is after the broadcast of Vaughan Williams's Symphony No. 9, about 37 minutes into the broadcast and the Howells reminiscences are played after Holst's 'Moorside Suite':
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m00169jf



Beautiful and poignant.
Karl Henning, Ph.D.
Composer & Clarinetist
Boston MA
http://www.karlhenning.com/
[Matisse] was interested neither in fending off opposition,
nor in competing for the favor of wayward friends.
His only competition was with himself. — Françoise Gilot

aukhawk

I listened to RVW's A Sea Symphony yesterday - recorded by Slatkin / Philharmonia - and was struck by a passage very near the end which had much similarity (in Slatkin's expansive reading) to Holst's Neptune - the gently rocking orchestra, the muted chorus murmuring a suspended chord.  Sea Symphony, 1909 - Planets, 1917.   Both pieces of music attempt to depict, I suppose, allusions to 'the sea', 'outer space', and 'metaphysics'. 
Neptune the sea god, the planet, the mystic. 
In the Sea Symphony it's more explicit, in Whitman's words - "Greater than stars or suns, Bounding O soul thou journeyest forth" etc etc.

André

Quote from: aukhawk on April 27, 2022, 12:36:51 AM
I listened to RVW's A Sea Symphony yesterday - recorded by Slatkin / Philharmonia - and was struck by a passage very near the end which had much similarity (in Slatkin's expansive reading) to Holst's Neptune - the gently rocking orchestra, the muted chorus murmuring a suspended chord.  Sea Symphony, 1909 - Planets, 1917.   Both pieces of music attempt to depict, I suppose, allusions to 'the sea', 'outer space', and 'metaphysics'. 
Neptune the sea god, the planet, the mystic. 
In the Sea Symphony it's more explicit, in Whitman's words - "Greater than stars or suns, Bounding O soul thou journeyest forth" etc etc.

The Sea Symphony is one of those very rare vocal works where I relish the text almost as much as the music. The passage you mention has a lambent, levitating quality where VW's music perfectly echoes Whitman's poetry.

steve ridgway

Yes. I conducted unbiased research on Discogs and found no results for Holst Greatest Hits. Other composers have fared better. ;D


Carshot

Browsing in a railway station newsagents today I found this:

https://www.classical-music.com/magazine/issues/september-2024

Lots of interesting articles and I look forward to reading it (& listening to the CD of course!)

Luke

Quote from: aukhawk on April 27, 2022, 12:36:51 AMI listened to RVW's A Sea Symphony yesterday - recorded by Slatkin / Philharmonia - and was struck by a passage very near the end which had much similarity (in Slatkin's expansive reading) to Holst's Neptune - the gently rocking orchestra, the muted chorus murmuring a suspended chord.  Sea Symphony, 1909 - Planets, 1917.   Both pieces of music attempt to depict, I suppose, allusions to 'the sea', 'outer space', and 'metaphysics'. 
Neptune the sea god, the planet, the mystic. 
In the Sea Symphony it's more explicit, in Whitman's words - "Greater than stars or suns, Bounding O soul thou journeyest forth" etc etc.

I realise I'm quoting a two-year old post - but that passage at the end of the Sea Symphony always reminds me of the end of Part 1 of Gerontius (same key, too) as the soul 'farther sails' too - the two passages are very similar. The most similar passage I can think of in The Planets comes at the end of Venus as the two chords repeat and sway 

André

These two passages (Gerontius and the Sea symphony) are magnificently otherworldly. In Gerontius, it's the leap of faith in the Great Unknown, in Sea Symphony it's the Great Unknown beyond the ocean.

steve ridgway



As this contains both Mars and Jupiter Holst has to be recognised as a two hit wonder ;D .

Roasted Swan

Just been listening to this month's BBC Music Magazine cover disc;



A very good compilation of mainly live BBC recordings from recent years.  Interesting because it shows Holst moving away from his early Wagner-influenced works (Indra etc) via the visionary Mystic Trumpeter to immersion in folksong - Somerset Rhapsody - to his mature/individual voice - Perfect Fool etc.  The Japanese Suite is an attractive rarity too - I know 3 other recordings (Boult/Faletta/Bostock) but always glad to hear another version.

A bit of a shock to realise that in this Holst's 150th anniversary year there has yet to be a significant release featuring his music exclusively.  He has appeared on some recital/compilation discs and of course the ubiquitous Planets - mainly re-releases of older versions but nothing "new" at all as far as I can tell.  I suppose the truth is the main labels who might - Hyperion/Chandos have done what they want already of his, Naxos have moved on from their "British Music Series" - CPO/Capriccio don't do this kind of repertoire so not sure who is left.  Dutton might I suppose but their release schedule is a thing of mystery!  Certainly Universal in its various label guises won't be doing anything unless one of their celebrity artists suddenly engages with Holst but I doubt they will......