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Llewellyn Series: Cottis Conducts the Planets

Submitted by Paulius Gutauskas on
Llewellyn Series: Cottis Conducts the Planets
Wednesday 5th Nov - 7:30 PM
Thursday 6th Nov - 7:30 PM
Llewellyn Hall
Presented by
Canberra Symphony Orchestra

Jessica Cottis conducts The Planets: expansive, spine-tingling music inspired by stars, celestial spheres and the cosmos.

From ancient astronomers to NASA’s ‘Pale Blue Dot’, our place in the cosmos has captured imaginations since time immemorial. A storyteller's inventory, this program draws on different knowledges to make meaning of the vastness of the universe.

LOGOS is a ‘musical Big Bang’, beginning with the breath and building to a dramatic orchestral climax.

Expansive and layered, this beguiling work by Danish–Australian composer Benjamin de Murashkin reflects the order of mathematics and the mystery of the sublime, drawing inspiration from Tibetan music created to keep dark spiritual forces at bay.

An inventor, engineer and prolific composer, Josef Strauss, too, embraced rationality and creativity. His Music of the Spheres is a response to musica universalis: the philosophical idea that the stars and planets, suspended in perfect harmony, make their own music as they move across the heavens.

In The Planets, Gustav Holst personifies the celestial spheres, drawing on cosmic archetypes of astrology and Greek mythology. In the shadow of the Great War, he composed Mars and Venus, war and peace, before leading us from Mercury through Neptune, to the icy edges of the solar system – incorporating English folk melodies and dance rhythms along the way. The Planets ends, at the composer’s instruction, when ‘the sound is lost in the distance’.

Artists
Jessica Cottis Conductor
Women of the CSO Chorus
Canberra Symphony Orchestra

Repertoire 
BENJAMIN DE MURASHKIN LOGOS
JOSEF STRAUSS Music of the Spheres Waltzes, Op. 235
GUSTAV HOLST The Planets, Op. 32

Acknowledgment of Country

The Australian National University acknowledges, celebrates and pays our respects to the Ngunnawal and Ngambri people of the Canberra region and to all First Nations Australians on whose traditional lands we meet and work, and whose cultures are among the oldest continuing cultures in human history.