I've always understood 'kitsch' to be false art, or as the OED has it 'characterised by worthless pretentiousness'. I don't think that can credibly be applied to 'the Planets' which has always struck me as original in its structural use of harmony and melody.
The score says only that the door should be closed slowly and silently and the last bar should be repeated until the sound is lost in the distance. This was probably practicable in Queen's Hall in 1920. I don't suppose Holst imagined someone listening to a digital recording through headphones, straining to catch the actual last sound. It would be interesting to hear his comments about the various attempts made to fade the sound a niente.
The score says only that the door should be closed slowly and silently and the last bar should be repeated until the sound is lost in the distance. This was probably practicable in Queen's Hall in 1920. I don't suppose Holst imagined someone listening to a digital recording through headphones, straining to catch the actual last sound. It would be interesting to hear his comments about the various attempts made to fade the sound a niente.
Comment