Collection Highlights

29th July 2016

Here is a selection of items from the Holst Archive. To access more of the collection please see the link to our online catalogue.

Manuscript for The Harper for voice and piano by Gustav, 1891

This unpublished work was written when Gustav was a boy at Cheltenham Grammar School. In the 1920s Gustav mentioned in his lectures on England and her Music that he knew Irish and Scottish folk songs as a child.

Manuscript for The Harper for voice and piano by Gustav Holst, 1891

Manuscript for The Harper edited by Imogen for the work’s first performance in 1967

In 1964 Imogen embarked on the preparation of new and revised editions of her father’s music, for performance and publication, in tandem with her work on A Thematic Catalogue of Gustav Holst’s Music (London: Faber Music) published in his centenary year in 1974.

Manuscript for The Harper edited by Imogen Holst for the work’s first performance in 1967

Programme for the first performance of The Harper

This was given in the version edited by Imogen, at Westminster Theatre Arts Centre, as part of her illustrated talk on her father’s life and music.

3. Programme for the first performance of The Harper

Programme for the first performance of The Harper

Letter from Gustav to Imogen, 30 Jul 1930

Gustav discusses his daughter’s ballet Meddling in Magic and Suite for viola, both written in 1930 during her final year at the Royal College of Music.

4. Letter from Gustav to Imogen, 30 Jul 1930

4. Letter from Gustav to Imogen, 30 Jul 1930

Ancient English Christmas Carols, 1400-1700, collected and arranged by Edith Rickert, London, Chatto and Windus, 1914

This book was given to Imogen by her father to congratulate her on her first composition Sonata in D minor written in 1918 at the age of 11. Imogen used the present as a source for her next work Four English Christmas Carols written in the same year. The bookplate reflects her lifelong passion for folk music and dance.

Ancient English Christmas Carols, 1400-1700, collected and arranged by Edith Rickert, London, Chatto and Windus, 1914

 Manuscript for Out of your sleep arise and wake by Imogen

She continued to use her volume of Christmas carols as a source for texts throughout her career, calling on it for the last time in December 1968 for this carol.

6. Manuscript for Out of your sleep arise and wake by Imogen Holst

Reproduced by permission of Faber Music http://www.fabermusic.com/

Gustav’s conducting score of The Planets

This is copy no. 1 of a first edition of 200 copies published in 1921.

1. Gustav Holst’s conducting score of The Planets

Reproduced by permission of Faber Music http://www.fabermusic.com/

1. Gustav’s conducting score of The Planets

Reproduced by permission of Faber Music http://www.fabermusic.com/

Photographs of the Holsts enjoying themselves singing, 1932

These photographs were taken when Gustav and Imogen were holidaying in the Cotswolds with Gustav’s brother Emil, an actor known by the stage name Ernest Cossart.

Emil Cossart, Gustav Holst, Imogen Holst 1932

Emil Cossart, Gustav Holst, Imogen Holst 1932

 

Conducting score for St Paul’s Suite for string orchestra by Gustav

This was Gustav’s conducting score, handed down to Imogen and used by her to conduct The English Chamber Orchestra at the opening concert of the Snape Maltings Concert Hall on 2 June 1967. The score is marked by both Imogen and her father.

St Pauls Suite 3

Reproduced by permission of Faber Music http://www.fabermusic.com/

St Pauls Suite 1

Reproduced by permission of Faber Music http://www.fabermusic.com/

St Pauls Suite 2

Reproduced by permission of Faber Music http://www.fabermusic.com/

Programme for the inaugural concert of the 1967 Aldeburgh Festival celebrating the opening of Snape Maltings Concert Hall

Imogen conducted her father’s work and wrote the note for the programme.

4. Programme for the inaugural concert of the 1967 Aldeburgh Festival celebrating the opening of Snape Maltings Concert Hall

 

Imogen’s conducting baton

Imogen’s friend, Colin Matthews, observed ‘Anyone could have told at a glance that she had been a dancer, and still was. Her conducting… was a joy to watch – the same dance-like movements, and rhythm – rhythm was everything’.Imogen Holst's conducting baton

 

 Imogen conducting the band of the Royal Military School of Music (Kneller Hall) at Framlingham Castle during the 1975 Aldeburgh Festival

In this concert she conducted her father’s Suite No. 1 in E flat. Photograph: Nigel LuckhurstImogen conducting Kneller Hall

Imogen Holst conducting

Photograph: Walter RawlingsImogen Holst Conducting

Programme for concert performance at Morley College, 1911

This was the first performance of the music of Purcell’s The Fairy Queen since 1700. Imogen, also a pioneer of early music, edited a shortened version of this work with Britten in 1967, first performed at the Aldeburgh Festival that year.

Programme Purcell Fairy Queen 1911

Programme for Morley College concert, 1914

This concert included folk songs arranged by Ralph Vaughan Williams and conducted by the composer, Gustav’s close friend.
3b Programme Morley College 1914 1
Programme Morley College 1914 2

 

Gustav’s diary, 1919

Gustav spent November 1918 to June 1919 in Constantinople and Salonica with the Young Men’s Christian Association as Musical Organiser in their educational work.
Gustav Holsts's diary

Letter from Imogen to Gustav, Summer 1933

Imogen describes her amateur choir’s visit to Abingdon Festival comparing the experience to the Whitsuntide Festivals Gustav organised at Thaxted, Essex from 1916 to 1918. For these events Gustav brought his singers and players from Morley College and St Paul’s Girls’ School to join the Parish Church choir. To view the complete letter search RefNo HOL/1/5/2/23/40 in the online archive catalogue.
4. Letter from Imogen to Gustav, Summer 1933

Imogen’s report of her wartime work making music, Feb 1940

In 1939 Imogen became involved in a project that sent ‘music travellers’ across rural England to inspire and organise community music making, and so preserve English traditions through the war years.

Imogen’s report of her wartime work making music, Feb 1940

 Notebooks for teaching at Dartington

Imogen noted folk songs for learning by rote, both English and Appalachian, as well as rounds for her work with the students.

Dartington folk songs

Imogen’s scrapbook, 1934-1936

This is the seventh of ten scrapbooks Imogen kept from 1926 to 1941 in which she pasted a variety of ephemera. The volumes form a colourful record of her work, leisure and travels as well as a social record of musical life in pre-war London and beyond. Imogen was a pivotal member of the English Folk Dance and Song Society and in April 1936 conducted a concert of folk music and dance in Edinburgh which included her father’s arrangement of the Welsh folk song Lisa Lan.
(copyright clearance pending)

Imogen’s visit to West Bengal, Winter 1950 to 1951

Imogen made notes from her lessons at Santiniketan in this sketch-book, here noting a Bengali folksong.
Imogen Holst India sketchbook

Imogen’s visit to West Bengal, Winter 1950 to 1951

Photograph of Imogen learning a folk dance

Imogen Holst Indian folk dancing

Gustav’s holiday in Algeria, Apr 1908

Gustav used to carry a sketch-book in his pocket so that he could jot down the tunes he was thinking of, wherever he happened to be. He later drew on the tunes he noted in this book whilst in Algeria when composing his Oriental Suite for Orchestra Beni Mora and St Paul’s Suite.
Gustav Holst Algeria sketchbook

 Gustav’s holiday in Algeria, Apr 1908

Letter from Gustav to his wife Isobel sent from Algeria. To view the complete letter and other letters from Gustav to Isobel search RefNo HOL/1/5/1/8 in the online archive catalogue.
Gustav Holst letter to Isobel 1