I found this a fascinating and enjoyable program but I was unable at all to reconcile Holst’s musical planets with Brian Cox’s physical planets.
It was striking that for each planet in turn, Cox’s descriptions of the worlds informed by astronomy and science were at odds with Holst’s representations inspired by mythology and astrology - not just at odds, in utter incongruity. The terrestrial and human exist in a different imaginative dimension to the celestial and the alien.
I wondered if there is a planet suite to be compiled for each of these worlds as we now understand them? My imagination failed me completely. Nature in art is represented though our relation to it, the planets are mysterious and inhospitable, and music, the most abstract of arts is always psychological. I cannot think of a modern 'Planets'.
It was striking that for each planet in turn, Cox’s descriptions of the worlds informed by astronomy and science were at odds with Holst’s representations inspired by mythology and astrology - not just at odds, in utter incongruity. The terrestrial and human exist in a different imaginative dimension to the celestial and the alien.
I wondered if there is a planet suite to be compiled for each of these worlds as we now understand them? My imagination failed me completely. Nature in art is represented though our relation to it, the planets are mysterious and inhospitable, and music, the most abstract of arts is always psychological. I cannot think of a modern 'Planets'.
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