Gustav Holst's Planets Suite is one of his most famous works. Written in 1916, the suite takes the listener on a journey through each of planets, excluding Earth. As Pluto was not discovered until 1930, Holst did not dedicate a movement to the dwarf planet. Holst stated that his inspiration for each movement is the planet's astrological significance. The Suite opens with "Mars" in a dissonant 5/4 rhythm. Astrologically, Mars represents anger and energy. The opening to the Suite is powerful, and the
The power of music can convey so much meaning to anything you write about. With Gustav Holst’s The Planets Op. 32, Holst conveys his view of the solar system and the lore of the planet’s names from mythology through music. Although of some Germanic background on his father’s side, Gustav Holst was thoroughly English, born in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England. He was a composer and choral director who wrote the The Planets from 1914-1916. The Planets consists of seven suites each based upon the
Jane Eyre is a strong and individualist character. As well as Rochester, Jane carries some traits of a Byronic hero. Apart from Fanny who bears her unhappy childhood with suppleness and suffers silently, Jane rebels and defies and is ‘excluded from the Reed family group in the drawing room, because she is not a ‘contented, happy little child’ – excluded, that is, from ‘normal’ society […]’ While growing up in Lowood, Jane opposes to the injustice and authority and also doubts Christian faith and
The Farmer’s Bride by Charlotte Mew. The poet presents the cruel society through the structure of the ballad. This is depicted in the end stopped lines like ‘the shut of a winter’s day.’ The lack of enjambment crystallises the trapped situation the woman faces in this oppressive society. The verb ‘shut’ and noun ‘winter’ connotes unwelcoming and a gloomy change in the young woman’s behavior. This is farther reinforced in ‘one night, in the fall, she runned away.’ This denotes her longing to run away
Painter Nicholas Roerich idea teamed together Igor Stravinsky in 1923, he perpetuates a pagan ceremony in which a young girl dance to death. The concept of Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring is early spring of 1910. Stravinsky wrote, "... the rise of the image of a sacrificed pagan ritual: the wise old man sitting in a circle and they watched dance before her death they offer as a sacrifice to spring god for his kindness. This became the main focus” The Rite of Spring”. When writing Firebird, Stravinsky
Beowulf: A New Translation for Oral Delivery, translated by Dick Ringler, utilized the dark and the ominous to foreshadow or to portray the impending savagery of mankind. Darkness could be defined either by the absence of light or by the lack of intellectual enlightenment. The monstrous creatures are shrouded within the darkness or associate with the ominous. Throughout Beowulf the theme of violence and darkness are intertwined, which is manifest by correlating the darkness with the unknown through
On May 28, 1779 the history of Irish music would change forever. On this time in history, Thomas Moore was born into a Roman Catholic family. At this time in history in Ireland, Roman Catholics could not own land, be educated, or vote. Even though Thomas Moore was born into a Roman Catholic family, he still achieved greatness through his music. Thomas Moore was one of the first Catholics to go to Trinity College. He went to Trinity College to become a lawyer, which is what his mother wanted and
BALTIMORE, MARYLAND— Early this year, Baltimore Antiques Show became Baltimore Art, Antique & Jewelry Show. When the name change was announced, several people raised their eyebrows. They could not understand why it was necessary to change the name of this fair that has become a major Baltimore attraction. In his response to critics, Scott Diament, President and CEO of the Palm Beach Show Group explained that the group had to change the name of the fair to reflect all participants. According to
CHAPTER 1 RESEARCH PROPOSAL Background to the research problem Colours are different wavelengths of light, which are reflected from countless objects. Humans possess the skill to distinguish between hundreds of bands of wavelengths, by utilizing the sensory cells in the retina of the eye (Gage, 2006). Consequently seeing in colour is our own perception and a personal experience. Perception of colour is manipulated by various factors, such as mood, emotion, gender, temperament, age and persona
In “Death in Venice”, there are several figures who work as triggers that seduced Aschenbach out from his self-restrained appreciation of beauty, and pushed him gradually into the realm of desire and unrestrained impulsions, which ultimately leaded him to his death. These figures are contextual symbols in this novella, and to Aschenbach, the encountering with each figure represented a new change to his path, and pushes him forward in his journey. The plot of this novella, which is Aschenbach’s journal
To what extent was Wilhelm’s foreign policy the cause of WWI? Kaiser Wilhelms foreign policy wasn’t the exact cause of World War I, but it was one of the main causes that brought it to start. In 1888, Wilhelm II became the Kaiser of the german empire. The changes he made in the policies and style of government during the next years played a big role in the outbreak of war during 1914. Compared to Bismarck, who chose really conservative politics between the 1870s and 1880s, Wilhelm opted for a militaristic
“Born on July 7, 1860, Austrian composer and conductor Gustav Mahler served as director for the Vienna Court Opera from 1897 to 1907. He later led the New York Metropolitan Opera and Philharmonic Orchestra. He wrote 10 symphonies during his career, which became popular for their 20th-century techniques and emotional character. He died in Vienna on May 18, 1911.”- https://www.biography.com/people/gustav-mahler-9395470 “Symphony No. 2 by Gustav Mahler, known as the Resurrection Symphony, was written
The primary source, “Olaudah Equiano on Slavery (1789)” reveals to its audience a first point of view of a child who undergoes the process of enslavement. Gustavus Vassa or better known as Olaudah Equiano was a mere child when he was abducted from his village; he describes his journey to the unknown with a flood of different emotions “[A]stonishment, which was soon converted into terror…[E]veryone of their countenances expressing dejection and sorrow” indicates how African people were not fully aware
Academic arguments cannot exist without a level of shared understanding. The entire ecosystem of authors writing, responding, arguing and developing new ideas depends on the idea that writers can apply their own interpretation to a build upon the understanding of a different writer. In Stanley Fish’s There’s No Such Thing as Free Speech and It’s a Good Thing, Too, Stanley Fish attempts to present his own interpretation of free speech. Throughout the essay, Fish tries to convince the reader that expression
Theories of comparative politics analyse the domestic politics of individual nations in an attempt to explain how and why certain political outcomes occur. These theories are concerned with the inner-workings of political institutions and the long-term patterns of political behaviour within the state boundary. Ultimately, theories of comparative politics aim to explain how and why a political system functions in the way that it does. However, owing to the multitudes of conceptions that have been
In Terry Alford’s novel “Prince Among Slaves” there were many people that strived to bring Ibrahima back to Africa, during this time he also worked to free his children. The role of letter writing had an impact on the course of the book and each person connected the direction of Ibrahima’s journey. A former prince, Abd al-Rahman Ibrahima, was captured through an ambush due to his lost to the Hebohs and is now a slave (23). When Ibrahima was 19, he had led his first victory, which earned him some
concert is a combination of pieces done by Holst named The Planets, which include Mars and Venus among others. The performance in the Young People’s Concert is done to a group of young learners at the New York Philharmonic, in New York. This paper reviews the concert, providing a description of the program, analysis of the purpose of the program and how it was organised. The Program The pieces done include compositions by British composer, Gustav Holst, called The
Gustav was a English composer, arranger, and an teacher. He is best known for his orchestral suite The Planets. He composed a large number of other works across a range of genres, but no others achieved comparabe success. His compositional style was the produce of many influences, Richard Wagner and Richard Strauss being most crucial early in his development. Gustav Holst was a huge influence in musical education in many English Schools. Holst was very stubbornly independent and explored in the musical
brought up in, and there is no doubt that this was a pioneering turning point in the universal development of music. In particular, Gustav Holst had an influence on the production of John William’s Star Wars soundtrack, specifically the song titles ‘Imperial March’. This will be analysed through comparison and analysis of a classical era piece called Mars, by Holst in a series of scores called ‘The Planets’ and The famous sound of Star-Wars (in particular, the score called “Star Wars - Imperial march”)
the orchestra was conducted by Philip Mann. The orchestra performed John Adams’s Short Ride in a Fast Machine, Richard Strauss’s Also Sprach Zarathustra, and Gustav Holst’s The Planets. This report will only be over The Planets. Gustav Holst was born in Cheltenham, England on September 21, 1874, and died in London, England on May 25, 1934. Holst composed towards the end of the romantic period, but was more well known as a 20th-century composer. Holst’s composed several popular pieces including First