The Planets, Op. 32
Gustav Holst (1874-1934)
THE STORY
As the head of music at St. Paul’s Girl’s School from 1905 to his death, Gustav Holst found time to compose on the weekends and on holiday, taking advantage of the school’s soundproof music room for long composition sessions. The Planets was the fruit of such weekend endeavors, begun in early 1914 and finished in 1916. With its novel orchestration, rhythmic vitality, and expressive dissonance, The Planets became an emblem of what modern English music could be.
While the date of composition and movement titles such as Mars, the Bringer of War and Venus, the Bringer of Peace may seem related to the approaching World War I, the true inspiration for The Planets lies in Holst’s hobby of astrology. An avid caster of horoscopes for friends, Holst sought to create a “series of mood pictures,” as he put it, which would capture “the astrological significance of the planets.” The subtitles correspond to the characterizations of each planet given by Alan Leo in his text on the horoscope.
LISTEN FOR
INSTRUMENTATION
Two piccolos, four flutes, alto flute, three oboes, bass oboe, English horn, three clarinets, bass clarinet, three bassoons, contrabassoon, six horns, four trumpets, three trombones, two tubas, two timpani, percussion, celesta, organ, two harps, strings
Notes on the music by Andrew Moenning