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Published: Saturday, 14 September 2024 at 08:00 AM


‘I’m not really a composer,’ Imogen Holst declared when she went on BBC Radio’s Desert Island Discs in 1972. Even when pressed, she gave the impression that she knew very little about music at all. She lamented that she was ‘really not very bright I’m afraid’, especially at school, and of her time at the newly formed Council for the Encouragement of Music and the Arts in World War II, when she travelled across the country promoting community music-making, she had little to say except that she had been one of a group of ‘missionary-minded spinsters’. 

Imogen Holst – a talented, though modest, composer

She had worked with Benjamin Britten for years as an amanuensis – although ‘amanuensis’ doesn’t fully communicate the extent of the creative support that she offered the composer – a period she described as ‘the most wonderful experience in learning about music’. When asked which of her own compositions pleased her the most, she simply replied that she was ‘grateful that I know enough about it to be able to edit music’, immediately moving on to talk about Purcell instead, and her edition of The Fairy Queen.

If Imogen Holst doesn’t count a composer, though, it’s very unclear who would. She penned over 200 original works and arrangements, including a ballet, an opera, a Mass, a violin concerto, oboe concerto, songs, hymns, choral works, chamber pieces, orchestral suites and incidental music. It is only very recently, though, that her reputation as a composer has started to grow, following the publication and recording of major works including her 1927 Mass in A Minor, 1929 symphonic poem Persephone and 1930 Suite for Unaccompanied Viola. This, however, is only scratching the surface of her compositional output. The majority of her catalogue has yet to be recorded. Modest to a fault, she never pressed for recognition for any of her own works. She preferred to let others take the limelight – especially her father, Gustav Holst, and Britten, to whom she was devoted.