Book description
Gustav Holst was a leading figure in the new age of English music
in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. His most celebrated work,
The Planets, is an orchestral tour de force, but he wrote music of
startling originality in many forms, drawing inspiration from sources
as varied as English folksong, oriental melody, the Apocrypha and
Sanskrit literature, as well as from writers such as Keats, Hardy,
Bridges and Whitman. This biography, by his daughter Imogen, was first
published by Faber in 1938 and revised in 1969. In it she quotes at
length from his many letters to his friends - especially to his
closest colleague Vaughan Williams - and draws on her personal
memories of Holst's later years. Holst struggled all his life against
bouts of ill-health and depression, but his remarkable and
good-humoured resilience enabled him to compose great music in often
difficult circumstances. He was essentially a very private person, and
the huge popular success of The Planets in 1919 disconcerted him.
Imogen Holst describes the effect of this sudden fame on her father,
and records the late flowering of his music in the final years of his life.