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- Holst - Egdon Heath (piano): PDF download
Holst - Egdon Heath (piano): PDF download
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Arranged for piano solo
PDF downloads are ready on completion of the order, with separate files for each piece. 2 downloads of each file are permitted. The unauthorised copying or sharing online of the whole or part of the publication is illegal. PDFs remain the sole copyright of Aria Editions for all countries.
Gustav Holst (1874-1934) composed his orchestral work Egdon Heath (Op. 47) in 1927, in response to a commission from the New York Symphony Orchestra. It is subtitled “Homage to Thomas Hardy” and the piece describes the Dorset landscape, Egdon Heath, which is featured in Hardy’s novel The Return of the Native, written in 1878. Holst was much inspired by Hardy’s writing and met the author while composing the work, who showed him the desolate Dorset landscape. The harmony is stark, spare and modern, dynamics are often extremely quiet, and the music moves slowly with a timeless quality. Its mood is sometimes bleak and forbidding, and its depiction of the cold, impersonal heath is chilling in its accuracy. Near the end, a strange, ghostly dance is evoked, before the work finishes shrouded in mystery.
PDF downloads are ready on completion of the order, with separate files for each piece. 2 downloads of each file are permitted. The unauthorised copying or sharing online of the whole or part of the publication is illegal. PDFs remain the sole copyright of Aria Editions for all countries.
Gustav Holst (1874-1934) composed his orchestral work Egdon Heath (Op. 47) in 1927, in response to a commission from the New York Symphony Orchestra. It is subtitled “Homage to Thomas Hardy” and the piece describes the Dorset landscape, Egdon Heath, which is featured in Hardy’s novel The Return of the Native, written in 1878. Holst was much inspired by Hardy’s writing and met the author while composing the work, who showed him the desolate Dorset landscape. The harmony is stark, spare and modern, dynamics are often extremely quiet, and the music moves slowly with a timeless quality. Its mood is sometimes bleak and forbidding, and its depiction of the cold, impersonal heath is chilling in its accuracy. Near the end, a strange, ghostly dance is evoked, before the work finishes shrouded in mystery.