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''The Planets'' (also known as '''''The Planets Suite'''''), Opus 32, is an Orchestral suite by the English composer Gustav Holst . It was written between 1914 and 1916 and received its first complete public performance on October 10 , 1920 in Birmingham , with Appleby Matthews conducting. The suite has 8 movements (formerly seven), each of them named after a Planet (and its corresponding Roman deity):

# Mars , the Bringer of War
# Venus , the Bringer of Peace
# Mercury , the Winged Messenger
# Jupiter , the Bringer of Jollity
# Saturn , the Bringer of Old Age
# Uranus , the Magician
# Neptune , the Mystic
# Pluto , the Renewer

:(The 8th Movement, Pluto, was (mostly) written in 2000 by composer Colin Matthews .}

BACKGROUND

The concept of the work is Astrological rather than Astronomical (which is why Earth is not included) with the Moon and the Sun replaced by the planets Uranus and Neptune, which were unknown to the classical world. The idea was suggested to Holst by Clifford Bax who introduced him to astrology. Each movement is intended to convey ideas and emotions associated with the Roman deity in question. Holst also used Alan Leo's book ''What is a Horoscope?'' as a jumping board for his own ideas, as well as for the subtitles (e.g., "The Bringer of...") for the movements.

''The Planets'' was originally scored for a piano duet, except for "Neptune," which was scored for a single organ, as Holst believed that the sound of the piano was too harsh for a world as mysterious and far away as Neptune. However, it was also scored for a large orchestra, including an organ and, in the last movement, a wordless women's choir. Holst’s use of orchestra in this work is very imaginative and colourful, showing the influence of Igor Stravinsky and other continental composers rather than his English predecessors. The audience at the first performance was so excited by such new sonorities that the suite was an instant success. Although ''The Planets'' remains Holst’s most popular work, the composer himself didn’t count it as one of his best creations and later often complained about his other works being completely eclipsed by it. He did, however, conduct a recorded performance of the suite in the early 1920s, and his own favourite movement was "Saturn".

With the exception of the first two movements, the order of the movements corresponds to increasing distance of their eponymous planets from the Earth. Some commentators have suggested that this is intentional, with the anomaly of ''Mars'' preceding ''Venus'' being either a device to make the first four movements match the form of a symphonietta or being a consequence of the common misconception that Mars is actually closer than Venus. An alternative explanation is derivable from the astrological concept of rulership of signs of the Zodiac by planets. If the zodiac signs are listed along with their Ruling Planet s in the traditional order starting with Aries and duplicate planets, the then undiscovered Pluto, and the luminaries (the Sun and the Moon) are omitted, then the order obtained matches the order of the movements in the suite.


MOVEMENT FOR PLUTO

Although Pluto was discovered in 1930 , four years prior to Holst's death, Holst expressed no interest in writing a movement for it. In 2000 , The Hallé Orchestra commissioned composer Colin Matthews , a Holst specialist, to write a new movement to be played with the suite. Matthews called his piece ''Pluto, the Renewer'', and it was dedicated to Imogen, Gustav Holst's daughter. It was first performed in Manchester on May 11 , 2000 , with Kent Nagano conducting the Hallé Orchestra. Ironically, the movement was added at about the same time that Astronomers were coming to question the status of Pluto as a planet (see the article on Pluto for further details).

To make his new movement fit, Matthews changed the ending of the "Neptune" movement to transition to "Pluto". On the Nagano CD recording, "Neptune" is offered on two different tracks so as to allow the listener to choose whether or not to hear "Pluto" by selecting the track order.


THE PLANETS IN POPULAR CULTURE

The "Mars" and "Jupiter" movements, in particular, have often been used as film and television music :



  • "Mars" was used heavily in episode five of '', entitled "Blues for a Red Planet", which examined the fact and fiction of the planet Mars .


  • It is not true, however, that the "Mars" movement was used as the "Martian National Anthem" in Robert A. Heinlein 's '' Stranger In A Strange Land '' — the piece cited in that work is a fictitious "Nine Planets Symphony" whose 'Mars' movement as described could not be Holst's "Mars" movement.


  • The melody of the slow middle section of "Jupiter" became popular as the patriotic hymn " Thaxted ", with words (beginning " I Vow To Thee, My Country ") added by Cecil Spring-Rice , although Holst had no such patriotic intentions when he wrote the music. The same section was also used as the basis for "The World in Union", the official anthem of 2003 Rugby World Cup.


  • In '''', Gromit plays a 33 record of ''The Plants'' Suite in the greenhouse, which is actually "Venus" from ''The Planets''.


  • In the Symphony X song "The Divine Wings of Tragedy", Mars is quoted after the choir intro.


  • Japanese singer Ayaka Hirahara made her debut with her single named "Jupiter" on December 17 th, 2003 , and the title track was based on the theme of "Jupiter" from Holst's piece. The single release of Jupiter was one of the best-selling singles on the Japanese market in 2004.


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  • lineup, but were forbidden by the composer's legal estate.



  • "Mars," "Venus" and "Jupiter" were arranged by Jay Bocook into a common Marching show



  • "Mars" is also used in the video game '' Super Mario Bros. 3 '' for the NES . It can be heard in the pirate ship stages and in some of the final stages of world 8.


  • "Mars" is used in the Bedlam series of games from Ground Zero Software.


  • In the musical score for the 2000 film '' Gladiator '', composer Hans Zimmer quoted "Mars" in several scenes using several themes in his score, including the relentless hammering motif heard throughout the piece.




  • The Frank Zappa song "Ritual Dance of the Young Pumpkin" begins with a rendition of "Jupiter".


  • The melody for Bathory song "Hammerheart" from ''Twilight of the Gods'' is taken from Holst's "Jupiter".


  • The For The NASA Mission 2001 Mars Odyssey " has a number of movements which are deliberately similar to Holst's "Mars".


  • "Mars" features heavily as background music for Outpost , the computer game.



  • Selected pieces from "The Lord of the Rings" trilogy of scores by Howard Shore , sound heavily influenced by The Planets.

  • Similarly, the entire scoring for "Trinity and Beyond" (the documentary about nuclear bombs) also borrows heavily from The Planets.


  • Former Australian Prime Minister Paul Keating entered the Australian Labor Party's 1993 Policy Launch to the music.




ACCLAIMED RECORDINGS OF THE PLANETS

  • Charles Dutoit conducting the Montreal Symphony Orchestra. Recorded in 1986 and released in 1998 by Penguin Classics.

  • John Eliot Gardiner conducting the Philharmonia Orchestra. Recorded in 1994 and released in 1995 by Deutsche Grammophon.

  • James Levine conducting the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Recorded in 1989 and released in 1991 by Deutsche Grammophon.

  • Zubin Mehta conducting the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra. Recorded in 1971 and released 1997 by Decca under the London label.

  • André Previn conducting the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. Recorded in 1986 and released in 1990 by Telarc.

  • Leonard Slatkin conducting the Philharmonia Orchestra. Released in 2001 by RCA.



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