Gustav Holst certainly wouldn’t be classed by anyone in the “one-hit wonder” brigade, but it is quite rare to find his name appearing on concert programmes next to anything but those two words: The Planets. Unlike Holst himself, I would not question the frequent performances that his most popular work receives; it is a sensational piece of music, fully deserving of all its orchestral and audience attention. However, it is wonderful when that crowd-pulling piece is coupled in performance with one of the exquisite works that Holst himself regarded most highly. This was the case for Prom 32, in which Edward Gardner conducted the BBC Symphony Orchestra in Egdon Heath and The Planets, coupled with two works of a vastly different character by the Polish composer Witold Lutosławski: the Piano Concerto and the Symphonic Variations.
The short, youthful Symphonic Variations opened the concert, and it proved quite a curtain raiser. Its intensity is vibrant: opening with an innocent flute melody, the music undergoes a sinister harmonic twist, with eerie, dissonant chords underlying an oboe solo. After a skittish, scratchy allegro variation, full of unpredictable, insuppressible energy, the music disperses into a slower, cloudier section featuring a brief but delicious violin solo from leader Simon Blendis. A steadier, momentum-gathering variation becomes scatty again, even bordering on manic, but a soaring horn melody (prefiguring those of “Jupiter” remarkably, I thought) heralded the work’s swift conclusion. The orchestra’s lively sound and energy excelled in this opening number, which was, quite simply, great fun.
This frolicsome beginning proved an excellent foil for Holst’s austere representation of Thomas Hardy’s desolate landscape in Egdon Heath. Hardy’s novel The Return of the Native begins with a description of the Heath, the harsh, indifferent backdrop against which the tale is set. Holst gives the opening melody to the double basses, immediately creating an eerie, foreboding soundscape which is only increased by the intangible shifting harmonies that enter in the winds. The twisting melodic passages wind their way slowly up through the strings, before a brass chorale leads into a scurrying, quicker section in which the looming music takes a fierce turn. Another brass chorale disintegrates this fierceness, the instruments’ timbre imparting a first hint of warmth into the otherwise chilly music. Again, shifting chords in the strings invoke an alien, intangible atmosphere. The orchestra created an extraordinary veiled, misty sound totally befitting Holst’s bleak vision: one which showed how completely Gardner and his players had understood the magic of Egdon Heath. And with an ephemeral floating violin passage, this vision drifted away in a wisp of mist...