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'The Planets Op. 32' by Gustav Holst
Performed by the Auburn Symphony Orchestra
Conducted by Anthony Spain
Featuring the Seattle Pacific University Women's Chorus
Choreographed visuals and lighting: 'The Planets Live' by Adrian Wyard
Sound by Bill Levey
Music Composition: Bath Philharmonia Music Director, Jason Thornton
All others: Adrian Wyard
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The Planets was written by British composer Gustav Holst
Mars is marked Allegro (lively) in 5/4 with no expression marks, in Cmajor
Mars the Bringer of War
Mars begins with the angular and irregular meter of 5/4
Holst's main inspiration was the role of the planets in mythology and astrology
The first fragment of melody enters with very low bassoons
Mars in full from 1999 (NASA/JPL/MSSS)
Image taken by the Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft
Listen out for the crescendo and immediate diminuendo across two measures
The disturbing rattling sound is made by tapping the strings with the bow upside down
Mars has been explored by many missions beginning in the 1960s
The full 1st theme appears passed up through the woodwind families
A thin atmosphere has been added to this image even though it's not visible in the original
A Dflat chord over a G pedal creates a very unsettling dissonance
Mars - the red planet (Wikipedia)
The movement is dominated by an incessant ostinato...
The canyon you see here is Valles Marineris
The canyon Valles Marineris is 2500 miles long and 23,000 ft deep
Listen out for the strings returning to 'naturale'
Simulation built with data from the Mars Express spacecraft
The first entry of the tenor tuba, which begins the fanfares in the brass
This composition is formally known as The Planets Op. 32
The plains west of Juventae Chasma (NASA/LPL/Univ. of Arizona)
This fast left to right motion is reminiscent of an army marching - which we hear in the music
Image taken by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft
The second theme makes its first appearance
Back to Kasei Valles. (ESA/DLR/FU)
Mars is the Roman god of war. Mars is also associated with the astrological sign Aries the ram
Olympus Mons - the largest volcano in the Solar System (NASA)
Olympus Mons is more than twice the height of Everest
Image taken by the Viking 1 spacecraft
Nili Patera (NASA/JPL/UA)
Notice that the lighting on the orchestra follows the beat
Gale Crater (NASA/JPL/ESA/DLR/FU-Berlin/MSSS)
Image sources include the Mars Express spacecraft
The full orchestral texture is replaced by stabbing quarters. This gives a very brutal and ugly effect
Enhanced landing video (NASA's Curiosity Rover) (NASA/Canning)
A militaristic fanfare in a call and response manner
This video was originally only 4 frames per second, but has been ‘tweened’ by Bard Canning
Mars can be from 35 to 250 million miles from Earth
The fanfares are accompanied by very fast scurrying chromatic string and woodwind lines
The orchestral texture grows and crescendos in a very menacing way
This is a video loop so it can match any performance tempo
As the music fades, so do the images. Dark, the unknown
Image taken by the Mars Pathfinder rover
These slow pans suggest searching the landing site - looking for the enemy?
Twin Cairns Island (NASA/JPL/MSSS)
Image taken by the Curiosity rover
The music suggests suspicion
Naukluft Plateau (NASA/JPL/MSSS)
This is a composite of several images - color-graded to fit with the others
Image taken by the Opportunity rover
The whole orchestra (Tutti) play the opening ostinato triple fortissimo (as loud as you can)
Victoria Crater (NASA/JPL/UA/Cornell/Ohio State Univ.)
Can you hear machine guns?
Emboldened, we take flight
The trumpets, timpani and side drum hammer out the ostinato incessantly
Animation by Mars3D using elevation data and imagery from orbit. (Mars3D)
The music here suggests fast marching, and so we are shown roaming over terrain
Back to Kasei Valles and 'The Floodwaters of Mars.' (ESA/DLR/FU)
Trombones enter playing the militaristic call and response melody
With each melody repeat we enter a new scene
The fanfare is interspersed with the chromatic theme in woodwind
As the pitch ascends so do we
Mars has a very thin Carbon Dioxide atmosphere. Earth’s is 166 times more dense
Listen out for the entry of the organ on the 4th and 5th beats of the measure
Ascending
The dunes of Meridiani Terra (NASA/LPL/UA)
The 'Spiders of Mars' (NASA/LPL)
A fresh impact crater (NASA/JPL/UA)
A massive climax in augmented time of 5/2
This is a computer-generated image, but looks very real
Music returns to quarter note measures in 3/4
This scene needed lots of energy, hence the fast-moving stars
The final 8 measures are marked Rallentando al Fine (slowing to the end)
The synchronized lighting really adds to the force of this conclusion
Mars begins with the angular and irregular meter of 5/4 (5 beats per measure). As western listeners we are programmed to be comfortable in 2 or 3 or 4 beats per measure. 5 beats immediately gives the sense of being uneasy and mechanistic.
The first fragment of melody enters with very low bassoons plus contra bassoon and horn. The melody consists of a perfect 5th followed by a half step (semi-tone). It lasts for 20 beats or 4 measures.
Listen out for the crescendo and immediate diminuendo across two measures
The full 1st theme appears passed up through the woodwind families – bassoons – bass clarinet – bass oboe and english horn (Cor Anglais) to oboe. It consists of a rising perfect fifth followed by a semitone slide downwards, followed by another perfect 5th rise and another semitone slide downward. A very angular melodic shape.
A Dflat chord over a G pedal. This creates a very unsettling dissonance. In addition the horns are asked to play the notes stopped (the muting of the note with the hand in the bell) and the trumpet with a mute. This creates a snarling and rasping effect
The movement is dominated by an incessant ostinato (repeating pattern) of triplet, two quarters, two eighth’s and a quarter note. Holst’s orchestration (use of instruments) is remarkably novel with emphasis most definitely on the brutal and mechanistic. He uses the combination of unison (all playing the same thing), strings Col Legno (with the wood of the Bow), two harps in their low register, timpani using wooden sticks and a very quiet roll (p) on gong/tam tam.
Listen out for the strings returning to 'naturale' or with the use of the hair of the bow. This makes the combined sound of the string section much louder
The first entry of the tenor tuba, which begins the fanfares in the brass, leading to a major orchestral climax 5 bars later. The tenor tuba is a non-conventional orchestral instrument, more at home in a Brass Band, where it's called a Baritone
First major climax. The opening pedal G of this movement or the Dominant has finally moved to the Tonic of C. On top of the ostinato is a raw and dissonant Dflat major chord played by full woodwind, horns and trumpets
The second theme makes its first appearance. A legato chromatic theme with just one single note articulated staccato. It first appears on trombones and tenor tuba and then passed to horns and trumpets. The ostinato remains in full strings trumpet and timpani
An orchestral climax where the music abruptly begins in Eflat minor. The full orchestral texture is replaced by stabbing quarters in the strings using down-bow retakes (where the string player plays a down bow stroke lifts the bow of the string and plays another down bow stroke). This gives a very brutal and ugly effect
A duet between tenor tuba and trumpets. It is a militaristic fanfare in a call and response manner. This is repeated using fuller orchestral textures in the proceeding bars before returning to the duet between tenor tuba and trumpets with the inclusion of a military drum (snare drum) as if calling each other across the battlefield
The fanfares are accompanied by very fast scurrying chromatic string and woodwind lines underpinned by an Aminor Chord with superimposed dissonances of Fsharp and Gsharp in the horns and trombone. This leads to a massive held chord of the same notes as previous - a huge dissonance! Listen out for the organ - an ultra low pedal G
The music shifts from 5 quarters in a bar to 5 half notes and we hear the second chromatic melodic idea in augmentation (doubling of length) on low strings, bassoons and contra bassoon. The snare drum provides fragments of the original ostinato. The orchestral texture grows and crescendos in a very menacing way
The whole orchestra (Tutti) play the opening ostinato triple fortissimo (as loud as you can)
The trumpets, timpani and side drum hammer out the ostinato incessantly whilst the rest of the orchestra plays the first angular theme
Trombones enter playing the militaristic call and response melody accompanied by the original ostinato in strings, at the heel of the bow (at the bass end of the bow to give the most sound and edge to the notes)
The fanfare is interspersed with the chromatic theme in woodwind all still over the pounding ostinato in strings
Listen out for the entry of the organ on the 4th and 5th beats of the measure
A massive climax in augmented time of 5/2 (5 half notes per bar) of two unrelated perfect 5ths piled on top of each other - C/G with Dflat/Aflat
Music returns to quarter not measures in 3/4 with the return of the scurrying chromatic string and woodwind motif
The final 8 measures are marked Rallentando al Fine (slowing to the end). Holst refers back to the original ostinato and uses fragments pulling everything back to a grinding halt. The final note is an explosive and violent open 5th (C/G) using strings, percussion, brass and bassoons
Venus is marked Adagio (Slow) in Eflat Major (3 flats) with no expression markings
Venus the Bringer of Peace
The movement opens with a solo french horn
Venus provides a welcome reprise after the onslaught of war; peace and harmony are restored. This movement finds Holst at his most lyrical
A beautiful answer to the melody in a choir of 4 flutes and 3 oboes
Venus - the cloud planet (Wikipedia)
Venus (aka 'The Evening Star') is bright because it is shrouded in reflective clouds
While Holst titled this movement 'The bringer of peace,' Venus is traditionally also associated with love. The visuals for this movement loosely depicts a romantic relationship
This image is made by combining two sources: A visible-light image and a radar-derived model of the surface (NASA/Goddard/SVS/JPL)
Venus is shown small - initially demure distant
Image data from the Magellan spacecraft
Holst drew inspiration for this movement from Venus the Roman goddess of love. Venus is also associated with Taurus and Libra
But she gets closer over time
For The Planets Holst makes use of a broad diversity of instruments
She’s shy and leaves for a moment
Main theme returns on solo french horn
But returns, shortly
This is an artistic impression of Venus because in real life it looks rather dull
An arpeggiated lower string passage
The music crescendos and we go down to surface - face to face
The violin solo is accompanied by a close harmony syncopated oboe choir
As we descend beneath the clouds the surface comes into view
New violin melody for all violins in the orchestra
The surface of Venus (NASA/JPL)
Clouds were added to this video to give a sense of depth and mystery
Venus’ carbon dioxide atmosphere and greenhouse warming makes it as hot as Mercury
Up from the surface (NASA/JPL/ESA)
More clouds added for effect
Venus has sulfuric acid rain!
A solo oboe takes a new version of the melody
A beautiful 'False Color' image of the surface (NASA/JPL/USGS)
This is a ‘false color’ image used by scientists to highlight surface features
She’s still shy, but before long
She reveals her full beauty
Listen out for a version of the original melody several octaves lower
Strings are muted (a rubber clip is attached to the bridge muffling the sound)
Return to the home key of Eflat major...
Sadly, our meeting is over, Venus must leave
But she can’t bare to go just yet - parting is such sweet sorrow
Contrary motion in Flutes and Horns...
All good things must come to an end - Venus says farewell, for now
Harp 2 provides a shimmering tremolo
Violins are very high in their range producing an ethereal effect
Marked Adagio (Slow) in Eflat Major (3 flats) with no expression markings
The movement opens with a solo french horn playing a beautifully simply rising melody. Almost exactly the same tune as the opening of the Opera Oberon by Weber
A beautiful answer to the melody in a choir of 4 flutes and 3 oboes moving in contrary motion (flutes going down and oboes going up). The second time this is heard the oboes are replaced by clarinets retaining the original contrary motion
Holst enables the orchestra to glitter and dazzle with the inclusion of two harps, glockenspiel and celeste. A celeste is a very novel addition to the orchestra. It is a keyboard instrument sounding an octave higher than written consisting of small bells hit by tiny mallets. Again at this point we hear a typical Holst idea of moving chromatically altered chords (harps, horns and flutes), over a pedal note. The pedals move downward by half step played by double basses and cello
Main theme returns on solo french horn maintaining the notion of ever present peace and serenity. with the contrary motion answering phrase in flutes and clarinets
An arpeggiated lower string passage leading to an enharmonic cadence of a Dflat 7 chord moving to an Fsharp major chord. If we read the first chord as Csharp major 7 and the second as Fsharp major, this is beautiful perfect cadence, moving into the dazzling brightness of Fsharp
The violin solo is accompanied by a close harmony syncopated oboe choir followed by unison violins playing this second melody
New violin melody for all violins in the orchestra, accompanied by a close harmony syncopated choir of oboes, cor anglais (english horn - a low oboe, clarinets and horn, proceeded by a solo oboe playing the same melody accompanied by a choir of flutes
Solo violin returns accompanied by a syncopated choir of flutes in their low tessitura (range)
A solo oboe takes a new version of the melody dropping a semitone to Fmajor from Fsharp major. This melody superimposed with an earlier melodic fragment concluding with a passionate version played by strings followed by solo cello
Listen out for a version of the original melody several octaves lower in the cellos and double bass reintroducing the original glittering orchestration with the use of 2 harps and celeste, maintaining the idea of chromatically altered chords with pedal notes (in Eflat with a dominant pedal of Bflat)
Strings are muted (a rubber clip is attached to the bridge muffling the sound) with only 4 desks of 1st Violins and 4 desks of 2nd violins accompanying the main theme played by flute. 1st and 2nd violins are in contrary motion
Muted violin theme returns accompanied by a flute choir in Fflat major (enharmonically Emajor) proceeded by a horn and cello solo using the same melodic material
Return to the home key of Eflat major with sparkling orchestration including scalic figures on harps and celeste as well as beautiful arppegiated accompaniment figures in Harp 1, clarinet and flutes followed by violins
Contrary motion in Flutes and Horns colored with the use of harp harmonics (plucked at certain parts of the string - they sound an octave higher than written giving a very pure floating sound). Celeste has the main rhythmic and melodic movement, the rest of the orchestra accompanies very quietly
Harp 2 provides a shimmering tremolo (fast oscillation on the same note). In this case an Eflat and Dsharp. They are played on different strings on the harp and hence can do a rapid oscillation - a classic Holst orchestral coloring effect
Violins are subdivided into 4 separate parts very high in their range producing an ethereal effect as if floating on the final chord. The final chord of eflat is left floating and the celeste adds a final C effectively making it a Cmin seventh, hence the apparent lack of resolution
Mercury is marked Vivace (very lively) in the compound time signature of 6/8 in Bflat major
Mercury the Winged Messenger
This movement was inspired by Mercury the Roman god of communication and prosperity. Mercury is also associated with Gemini & Virgo
The pulse is staying the same but rhythmic ambiguity is beginning to be established
The visuals here needed energy and movement to match the music, so Mercury is shown zooming around, presumably delivering messages
About the Planet Mercury (Wikipedia)
Piccolo in 6/8 whilst oboes, celeste, harp 1 and 1st violin in 3/4
Mercury’s direction matches the music: if the pitch ascends, so does Mercury
Section concludes with 1st violins on a high harmonic
We used to think that Mercury did not spin and always faced the Sun, but that’s not true.
1st violins using natural harmonic E play a rhythmic motif
Can you hear Morse code? Maybe Mercury is trasnmitting messages to alien worlds?
Rhythmic motif transferred to Glockenspiel
Rhythmic accompaniment presented solidly in 2/4 with melody on solo violin in 6/8
The motion through a star field is used here because it suggests a journey, and the motion gives the image sufficient energy to match the music
Places on Mercury have the greatest temperature range in the Solar System: -280 to 800F
2nd violins begin the building of the orchestral texture
As the energy level in the music builds so does the drama and speed shown on screen
Here comes the crescendo - wait for it
And as we pass through the apex everything slows down. Notice the lighting emphasizes the downbeat
A fermata (pause) on a low Bflat and F...
Mercury in 'False Color' (NASA/JHU-APL/Carnegie Inst.)
This is a 'stretched RGB' false color image from the Messenger spacecraft
The next section is full of rhythmic ambiguity
Strings in rhythmic unison
Slower, heavier music is depicted by a slow moving, massive Jupiter
Woodwinds join, dropping the tonality by half a step
Rachmaninoff Basin (NASA/APL/Carnegie Inst.)
A descending phrase in flutes and clarinets
Mercury's North Pole (NASA/GSFC/MIT/APL/Carnegie Inst.)
Despite being close to the Sun, water ice has been detected in shadowed craters
For the closing section new imagery is shown at a fast pace to match the energy in the music
Strings in rhythmic unison make a hushed return
A tour over Mercury's surface (NASA/APL)
The ambiguous rhythmic motif returns on timpani
In 2021 the BepiColombo mission will arrive at Mercury
When the music calms it’s important that the imagery becomes calm and/or smaller, so a zoom out fits well
A melody that descends in pitch goes well with a zoom-out too
A chromatic ascent through the range of the woodwind family
The penultimate bar is a held close harmony Emajor Chord
arked Vivace (very lively) in the compound time signature of 6/8 in Bflat major
The strings are muted and Holst creates a very delicate texture of perpetually mobile eighth notes, passing the motion from one string family and woodwind family member to another, underpinned by short chords in harps
Two bars of 2/4 using sixteenth notes in strings and woodwind, followed by a return to 6/8 followed by 2/4 again. The pulse staying the same but rhythmic ambiguity beginning to be established
Piccolo in 6/8 whilst oboes, celeste, harp 1 and 1st violin in 3/4
Section concludes with 1st violins on a high harmonic (violins simply rest their finger on the string rather than pressing it down, producing a very airy light sound)
1st violins using natural harmonic E play a rhythmic motif, which is completely rhythmically ambiguous between 3/4 and 6/8. This acts as an upper pedal (same as a low pedal - sustaining harmonic direction)
Rhythmic motif transferred to Glockenspiel
Rhythmic accompaniment presented solidly in 2/4 with melody on solo violin in 6/8, proceeded by solo oboe, flute and celeste. The celeste is accompanied by just one desk (two players) per 1st Violins 2nd violins and violas
2nd violins begin the building of the orchestral texture followed by 1st violins, clarinets, flutes and trumpets all accompanied with chords in brass and arpeggiation in harps in Cmajor
A fermata (pause) on a low Bflat and F followed by one bar return to the opening rhythmic idea and another fermata bar, followed by a complete return to the opening material - a recapitulation
The next section is full of rhythmic ambiguity in which the original idea is tossed around the orchestra in combinations of 6/8, 3/4 and 2/4. Particularly listen out for the celeste and piccolo duet in 6/8 accompanied by strings, harp and woodwind in 3/4
Strings in rhythmic unison played pianissimo in Dmajor with a weirdly meandering melodic profile where the material goes one way then the next
Woodwinds join, dropping the tonality by half a step to Dflat major
A descending phrase in flutes and clarinets phrased in 4 notes rather than the previous 3 creating yet more rhythmic ambiguity
Strings in rhythmic unison make a hushed return but in a more harmonically ambiguous way, using a variety of chromatic notes. With the joining of the woodwind this leads to a very brief orchestral climax on a single eighth note of Emajor
The ambiguous rhythmic motif returns on timpani on the apparent dominant (B), with interjections by celeste and woodwind and the original melody played by piccolo and solo violin
A chromatic ascent through the range of the woodwind family in 2/4 concluding on a very high E harmonic (4 octaves above middle 'c') played by 1st violins with further interjections from celeste, strings, harp contra bassoon and double bass
The penultimate bar is a held close harmony Emajor Chord played by 3 bassoons proceeded by a very delicate eighth note full stop in woodwind, strings and harp
Jupiter is marked Allegro Giocoso (joyfully lively) in Cmajor in 2/4
Jupiter the Bringer of Jollity
Opening texture is formed out of four three-note patterns
This movement was inpired by Jupiter the king of the Roman gods. Jupiter is also associated with Sagittarius
The first theme is a highly syncopated jaunty melody
A big image for bold music that depicts a big, bold planet!
Mighty Jupiter - the king of the planets (Wikipedia)
The main theme is re-stated using a unique combination of instruments
This is Jupiter's moon Io (Wikipedia)
3D model built with images from the Galileo spacecraft
Cymbals always indicate an event of some kind - here it’s the introduction of Jupiter’s moon, Io
The second melody with its fanfare qualities is played by 4 unison french horns
Here's Jupiter's moon Callisto (Wikipedia)
Horns ‘herald’ too. Here they announce the arrival of Callisto, another of the four Galilean moons
Ganymede is the largest moon in the Solar System
Where did they go? Jupiter is a prankster
The third theme is another highly jaunty melody played by strings and horns
The third themes second quotation uses full woodwind with a sprinkling of glockenspiel
A return to first theme in closed three part harmony
First quotation of the 4th theme played by french horns in unison
The moons rotate with a speed that matches the music
Jupiter’s four main moons were discovered by Galileo Galilei in 1610
The waltz theme is played by trumpets in octaves
The waltz gathers tempo through a stringendo
The waltz reaches a Fsharp major climax
Out from Jupiter's Red Spot (NASA/JPL/SSI)
As mentioned before a crescendo with cymbals needs a dramatic event. Here we show a high-speed zoom out from Jupiter’s Red Spot
Image by the Cassini spacecraft
The fanfare second theme is accompanied by a novel and exceptionally rapid pizzicato
Fifth Theme - in Eflat major, reminiscent of an English Hymn tune
Down we go to Europa's cracked surface
Majestic hymn-like music needs an appropriately majestic scene
This middle section ('Andante Maestoso') has been used in many other compositions
Flying over Androgeos linea (NASA/LPI/Schenk)
Europa has a liquid water ocean under its icy surface
Flying over Conamara Chaos (NASA/LPI/Schenk)
Europa gets stretched by 100ft every three days. This is caused by Jupiter’s enormous gravity
And a concluding melody needs a concluding, slowing image
Return to the fanfare second theme played by cor anglais
A small image for a quiet melody
Return to first theme on oboe in Amajor
An abrupt return to the opening theme played fortissimo
Drama!
An Active Volcano on Io (NASA/JPL/UA)
The horns herald a new scene once again
Jupiter's South Pole (NASA/JPL/SwRI/MSSS)
Jupiter has the biggest ocean of any planet, albeit made of metallic hydrogen
Image by the Juno spacecraft
Listen out for the comma or luftpause before the return of the third theme (general pause on the upbeat)
Jupiter's Weather (NASA/JPL/Björn Jónsson)
Animation built with images from the Voyager 1 spacecraft
Jupiter's Weather in 2D (NASA/JPL/SSI)
Return of the waltz theme in Dflat major in 3/4
Return of the English Hymn Fifth theme in all lower instruments
Presto (very fast) tempo using the original three note texture
Listen out for the final chord (Cmajor) - it's the only note for Bass Drum in the movement
Marked Allegro Giocoso (joyfully lively) in Cmajor in 2/4
Opening texture is formed out of four three-note patterns superimposed over one another played by 1st and 2nd violins
The first theme is a highly syncopated jaunty melody played by 6 horns cellos and violas in unison followed by an orchestral crescendo using the previous three note patterns
The main theme is re-stated using a unique combination of instruments. The melody is played completely by a double set of timpani. In order to play all the melody's notes Holst has to spread the tune across two sets of timpani. In addition Holst uses double basses, tuba, tenor tuba, and bassoons
The second melody with its fanfare qualities is played by 4 unison french horns followed by another highly syncopated answering phrase played by strings, clarinets and bassoons. The following section is an inter-play of theme two and the opening three note texture played by 3 flutes and piccolo
The third theme is another highly jaunty melody played by strings and horns in unison accompanied by a traditional umm-pah pattern in double basses, tuba and trombones
The third themes second quotation uses full woodwind with a sprinkling of glockenspiel
A return to first theme in closed three part harmony in violins and violas, interspersed with the three note opening texture and theme 2 (fanfares)
First quotation of the 4th theme played by french horns in unison in which Holst uses a waltz as his medium for Jollity - in 3/4, followed by strings and woodwind reiterating the melody
The waltz theme is played by trumpets in octaves accompanied by arpeggiated woodwind lines and the first appearance of a tambourine
The waltz gathers tempo through a stringendo (meaning to get quicker), and Holst combines the 4th melody with the syncopated 1st melody played by trombones
The waltz reaches a Fsharp major climax followed by a fanfare from brass using the rhythm of the first theme followed by timpani using a fragment from the same source in 2/4
The fanfare second theme is accompanied by a novel and exceptionally rapid pizzicato (plucking of the string) in violas and cellos
Fifth Theme - in Eflat major, reminiscent of an English Hymn tune - used later for 'I vow to thee my Country'; perhaps more in the style of Edward Elgar?
Return to the fanfare second theme played by cor anglais accompanied by rapidly repeated two note patterns in first and second violins, followed by upper strings tremolando (rapid movement of the bow at the point on one note)
Return to first theme on oboe in Amajor
An abrupt return to the opening theme played fortissimo
Listen out for the comma or luftpause before the return of the third theme (general pause on the upbeat)
Return of the waltz theme in Dflat major in 3/4
Return of the English Hymn Fifth theme in all lower instruments accompanied by ascending and descending scales in harp and woodwind in the key of Bmajor. Upper strings play arpeggiated ten notes to a quarter. The section concludes with a rising chromatic scale in strings and lower wind
Presto (very fast) tempo using the original three note texture in upper strings and wind with final quotation of a rhythmic fragment from the opening theme played by trombones and double timpani
Listen out for the final chord (Cmajor) - it's the only note for Bass Drum in the movement
Saturn is marked Adagio (Very Slow) with 4 beats per measure with no expression markings
Saturn the Bringer of Old Age
The opening begins on the second quarter with a unique combination of instruments
Saturn is the Roman god of renewal and time. Saturn is also associated with Capricorn
With Saturn unique harmonies and competing rhythmic elements combined with bells, mark the marching on of life and time
Opening melody played by the double bass section
This whole introduction is understated with smaller images of Saturn - to match the quiet music
Saturn - the ringed planet (Wikipedia)
Saturday is named for the planet Saturn
This opening melody is now played by the bass oboe
The beginning of the trombone close harmony
Old age will slow you down - that’s shown on-screen
Saturn from 2004 (NASA/JPL/SSI)
Image by the Cassini spacecraft
All the outer gas giants have ring systems, but none are as impressive as Saturn's
Cortege continues with accompaniment
This is Saturn's moon, Titan (Wikipedia)
Saturn's night side (NASA/JPL/SSI)
Saturn's moons Titan and Rhea (NASA/JPL/SSI)
The orchestral textures thicken
Descent to the surface of Titan (ESA/NASA/JPL/UA)
Animation built with images from the Huygens lander
Clouds have been added to spice up the video
We are blinded as we disappear into thick clouds - matching the intensity in the music
And hit the surface with a bump
A Methane Lake: Ontario Lacus (NASA/JPL/USGS)
Saturn’s moon Titan is the only place apart from Earth that has liquid oceans - but they're not water
Chaos and trepidation
Titan's night side (NASA/JPL/SSI)
The music returns to being ambiguous
Saturn's backlit rings (NASA/JPL/SSI)
A calm scene for calm music
The main theme is played by a solo double bass
A change of pace, and a new scene
Saturn from above (NASA/JPL/SSI/Ugarkovic)
The main theme is played by bass clarinet and bassoons
Saturns Rings - and also a tiny Earth (NASA/JPL/SSI)
The main theme is played pp (pianissimo)
Main theme transferred to trombones
Main theme given back to unison strings
Zoom out to a final view (NASA/JPL/SSI)
Saturn in Silhouette (NASA/JPL/SSI)
This silhouette makes Saturns rings look almost like a halo - the final conclusion to old age
The music becomes more static and the harmonic rhythm slows even further
Marked Adagio (Very Slow) with 4 beats per measure with no expression markings
The opening begins on the second quarter with a unique combination of 2 flutes, bass flute and low harp harmonics giving a very pale color to the sound. The rhythmic pattern in syncopated with chords sounding on the second and fourth beats of every measure. The tonality is ambiguous with no really defined key centre
Opening melody played by the double bass section three octaves lower than the accompaniment
This opening melody is now played by the bass oboe. This is a very rare and novel inclusion within the orchestra. In Germanic music it is known as a Heckelphone, an instrument loved by Richard Strauss
The beginning of the trombone close harmony choral as a type of cortege accompanied by pizzicato lower strings in Emajor
Cortege continues with accompaniment on beats 2 and 4 with timpani, harps and lower strings pizzicato. A chorus of flutes and bass flute on the beat plays the main theme
The orchestral textures thicken until the pulse doubles (animato) and the motion of the music is syncopated across the quarter and eighth notes. This is the first time that tubular bells are used in the piece as an offbeat peel. The tempo oscillates between this new tempo and the original tempo with terrifying effect
The music returns to being ambiguous and the positioning of the pulses becomes vague resulting in the inaudibility of the bar lines and sense of floating
The main theme is played by a solo double bass and appears to float as the bar lines have in-effect vanished due to the syncopated accompaniment in harp harmonics
The main theme is played by bass clarinet and bassoons accompanied by a choir of syncopated flutes and harp
The main theme is played pp (pianissimo) by unison strings accompanied by an overlaying of textures including 16th notes by harps a lattice work of french horn entries, arrpegiated flutes and tubular bells
Main theme transferred to trombones
Main theme given back to unison strings (bar double basses) raised one octave
The music becomes more static and the harmonic rhythm slows even further. Holst includes very low pedals from the very limits of the range of the organ. Movement ends with an endless sustained Cmajor chord in upper strings
Uranus is marked Allegro in 6/4 divided into dotted half beat notes in Cmajor
Uranus the Magician
The opening theme is presented as a series of 4 Fermatas (pauses)
This movement was inspired by Uranus a Greek sky god. Uranus is also associated with Aquarius
Uranus makes a bold entrance, as most magicians do
To date Uranus has only been visited by the Voyager 2 spacecraft
The dance begins using solo bassoons in a very similar manner to Dukas in The Sorcerers Apprentice
Uranus is tilted on its side
A playful scene
Two planets? Uranus is ‘The Magician’ after all!
Holst increases tension by increasing the density of notes per half measure
Holst uses rhythmic ambiguity with 6/4 in trumpets and 3/2 in tubas
Fun fact: Uranus smells of rotten eggs!
Use of rhythmic ambiguity with strings in 3/2 and woodwind in 6/4
Observed in antiquity Uranus was only identified as a planet in 1781
The name Uranus was not finally settled until the 1830s
Theme 2 is presented by unison strings and horns
Westerlund 2 Cluster (NASA/ESA/STSci)
The twinkling stars were added just to keep a little dynamism in the image
Return of the main theme played by bassoon and bass clarinet
Main theme set in 3/2 as apposed to 6/4
The Iris Nebula (Ermolli)
The dance starts again with a complex accompaniment
Theme 3 is first heard by tenor tuba and tuba
NGC7822 (Ermolli)
These scenes are awe-inspiring and have a magical quality
Theme 3 played by trumpets using straight quarter note rhythms
Horsehead Nebula (Ermolli)
Antares and Rho Ophiuchi (Ermolli)
NGC891 (Ermolli)
Huge orchestral rallentando (slowing down)
The animation here is showing Galaxy formation, but it has a sparkly magical quality too
A computer simulation of galaxy formation (NASA/GSFC/NCSA-AVL/O'Shea/Norman)
Final rallentando with a glissando
Homophonic string chords using just 2 desks of strings
Timpani play the main theme in continuing rhythmic diminution
A big musical conclusion needed a flashy ending on-screen
Uranus is 20AU distant
M78 and the Horsehead Nebula (Ermolli)
Final fragment of the main theme played by 1st Harp
Again, twinkling stars keep the image alive in this very quiet section
Marked Allegro in 6/4 divided into dotted half beat notes in Cmajor
The opening theme is presented as a series of 4 seemingly unrelated held notes or Fermatas (pauses) G - Eflat - A - B. This is answered by the same pitches in diminution played by tenor tuba and tuba. This is followed by further rhythmic diminution of the theme played by timpani
The dance begins in a gnarly way using solo bassoons, in a very similar manner to Dukas in The Sorcerers Apprentice. The orchestral textures build and thicken with the inclusion of more and more instrumental families
Holst increases tension by increasing the density of notes per half measure from 3 to 4 - increasing speed without the alteration of pulse
Holst uses rhythmic ambiguity with 6/4 in trumpets and 3/2 in tubas
Use of rhythmic ambiguity with strings in 3/2 and woodwind in 6/4
Theme 2 is presented by unison strings and horns accompanied by woodwind and lower strings with single notes on beats 3 and 6
Return of the main theme played by bassoon and bass clarinet with a rhythmic diminution for timpani and further rhythmic augmentation for tuba
Main theme set in 3/2 as apposed to 6/4 played by timpani and tuba followed by the theme played very quickly in eighth notes by piccolo, flute and clarinet concluding with the original theme in the original note lengths
The dance starts again with a complex accompaniment played by bass woodwind instruments, timpani, 2 harps and lower strings
Theme 3 is first heard by tenor tuba and tuba. The phrases are extended to include 9/4 bars concluding with the opening theme in diminution on timpani
Theme 3 played by trumpets using straight quarter note rhythms with woodwind interjections of theme one in eighth notes
Huge orchestral rallentando (slowing down) leading to a massive strike on the bass drum and cymbal and the return of theme 3 with extended phrases in 9/4 with main theme in diminution
Final rallentando with a glissando (rapid ascending scale with the hand drawn across the manual), on the organ along the full length of the manual
Homophonic string chords using just 2 desks of strings with the main theme played by 1st harp using harmonics
Timpani play the main theme in continuing rhythmic diminution until the main theme returns in half notes in strings, brass percussion and woodwind
Full orchestral dissonance using a bi-tonal chord of Fmajor and Cminor with a pedal E
Final fragment of the main theme played by 1st Harp with harmonics and two final ambiguous chords of open fifths
Neptune is marked Andante in 5/4 (3 beats followed by 2), with no expression markings
Neptune the Mystic
Opening melody is harmonically ambiguous
Neptune is the Roman god of the sea. Neptune is also associated with Pisces
To date Neptune has only been visited by the Voyager 2 spacecraft
Tremolo in 1st & 2nd Harp on the same chord written enharmonically
The Eastern Veil (Ermolli)
As with Uranus transparency is used to give a sense of mystery and the unknown
Neptune was discovered in 1846 - by mathematical prediction
Neptune has the fastest winds in the Solar System (1200mph)
M82 - The Starburst Galaxy (NASA/ESA/STSci)
Strings enter muted (Con Sordino) with celeste chords
Neptune’s moon Triton will feature later, so it’s introduced in this scene
This is Neptune's moon, Triton (Wikipedia)
Composite held chords of Emin/Emajor...
Beyond Neptune are the stars
Trills and tremolos in strings with scalic passages in celeste
Westerlund Cluster (NASA/ESA/STSci)
Antennae Galaxy NGC 4038-4039 (NASA/ESA/STSci)
This Celeste melody here suggests millions of twinkling stars
30 Doradus - Tarantula Nebula (NASA/ESA/STSci)
Sul Ponticello tremolando in strings
Sailing past Neptune's moon Triton (NASA/GSFC/JPL/LPI/Schenk/Blackwell)
Here we meet mysterious Triton
Pianissimo Bass Drum stroke with composite chords in wind
Neptune is 30 times further from the Sun than the Earth
It takes radio signals from Earth four hours to reach Neptune
Harps glissando in contrary motion
A simulation of galaxies colliding (NASA/GSFC/AVL/Robertson/Hernquist)
The off-stage wordless choir enter for the first time
Billions of stars are singing, courtesy of the women’s chorus
A beautiful image for a beautiful melody
The choir of female voices breaks into six parts of weaving wordless counterpoint
The Orion Nebula (NASA/ESA/STSci)
The chorus sounds other-worldly here, almost heavenly - we are after all in the heavens at this point
The orchestra comes to the fore
The center of our Milky Way Galaxy (NASA/ESA/SSC/CSC/STSci)
A change of direction in the music indicated by a change of direction in the zoom. We are leaving
The work concludes with voices repeating two chords quieter and quieter
The choir re-enter in a call and response sequence
As we leave the planets in our solar system we get a sense of the vastness that lies beyond
The choir recedes to silence. This is one of the first indefinite fades in classical music
This look was inspired by the closing credits in Close Encounters of the Third Kind - as the spaceship is slowly receding into the distance
Andante in 5/4 (3 beats followed by 2), with no expression markings
Opening melody is harmonically ambiguous and given to a solo flute ghosted by bass flute a sixth below
Tremolo in 1st & 2nd Harp on the same chord written enharmonically (Gsharp minor/Aflat minor). The chords are played on different strings so can be oscillated from one to another
Strings enter muted (Con Sordino) with celeste chords and the opening melodic material is converted into accompanying texture
Composite held chords of Emin/Emajor in trumpets and Trombones with arpeggiated textures in strings and harps
Trills and tremolos in strings with scalic passages in celeste. From this point melodic shape disappears and is replaced by pure texture and slow moving harmony.
Sul Ponticello tremolando in strings (the bow played close to the bridge producing a more scratchy harsh texture), followed by composite chords in brass accompanying florid complex textures in celeste, harps and upper strings
Pianissimo Bass Drum stroke with composite chords in wind colored by sul ponticello in strings and the entry of the celeste in quintiplets starting at various points in the bar leading to the listener not knowing where the measures start and finish
Harps glissando in contrary motion underpinned by a composite chord of Emajor/min
The off-stage wordless choir enter for the first time a held top G accompanying the first truly melodic idea since the opening of the movement played by solo clarinet, followed by 1st Violins without their mutes
The choir of female voices breaks into six parts of weaving wordless counterpoint in Emajor accompanied very sparsely by harp harmonics and very low and quiet flute chords
The orchestra comes to the fore using virtuosic complex textures of scalic and arpeggiated patterns in harps, celeste and strings, with composite chords in woodwind and brass
The choir re-enter in a call and response sequence gently and beautifully accompanied by glissandi in harps and an upper pedal (B) on 1st Violins
The work concludes with voices repeating two chords which become quieter and quieter