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Holst: The Planets

by

London Symphony Orchestra

 
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Holst: The Planets
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Everyone has a favourite planet. What's yours?

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    Everyone has a favourite planet — is it the big, oh-so-English tune at the heart of "Jupiter" ("I vow to thee my country" for all you British hymn-singers!); or it is the dreamy measures of "Venus"; or maybe the last, "Neptune," which involves the first fade-out in classical music — a wordless women’s chorus blending with the orchestra before slipping away into nothingness. Holst’s seven-movement The Planets, first heard in 1918, takes its cue not from the individual planets' astronomical significance but rather from their astrological roles. This gives Holst a palette from which to draw some of his most visionary imaginings — and in crafting his individual visions of the heavenly bodies, he gave the film industry a vocabulary that it still employs. The LSO knows this work inside out — Holst himself recorded The Planets with them in 1926 — and under Sir Colin Davis gives an elegant performance that prizes beauty over drama.

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