Search Chambers
Consult Chambers 21st Century Dictionary, The Chambers Thesaurus (1996) or Chambers Biographical Dictionary (1997 edition with amendments). Enter your search and choose your title from the drop-down menu.
Holst, Gustav Theodore, originally Gustav Theodore von Holst 1874-1934
English composer
Born in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, of Swedish origin, he studied under Charles Stanford, at the Royal College of Music, but neuritis in his hand prevented him from becoming a concert pianist. He taught music at St Paul's School, Hammersmith (1905-57), and then became musical director at Morley College (1907) and at Reading College (1919). He shared Ralph Vaughan Williams' interest in the English folksong tradition, which inspired his St Paul's Suite for Strings (1913) and many charming arrangements of songs. Economy and clarity became his hallmark. He emerged as a major composer with the seven-movement suite The Planets (1914-16). Among his other major works are The Hymn of Jesus (1917), his comic operas The Perfect Fool (1922) and At the Boar's Head (1924), and his orchestral tone-poem Egdon Heath (1927), inspired by Thomas Hardy's Return of the Native. His daughter Imogen (1907-84), like him, was a musical educationist, conductor and composer of folk-song arrangements, and was associated with Benjamin Britten in the Aldeburgh Festivals.
-
The Chambers Dictionary (13th edition)
“Chambers is the one I keep at my right hand”- Philip Pullman.
The unrivalled dictionary for word lovers, now in its 13th edition.
-
The Chambers Thesaurus
The Chambers Thesaurus (4th Edition) is a veritable treasure-trove, including the greatest selection of alternative words and phrases available in an A to Z format. -
Chambers Biographical Dictionary
“Simply all you need to know about anyone” – Fay Weldon.
Thoroughly revised and updated for its 9th edition.
Consult Chambers 21st Century Dictionary, The Chambers Thesaurus (1996) or Chambers Biographical Dictionary (1997 edition with amendments). Enter your search and choose your title from the drop-down menu.
Search Tip
A wildcard is a special character you can use to replace one or more characters in a word. There are two types of wildcard. The first is a question mark ?, which matches a single character. The second is an asterisk *, which matches zero or more characters. The two kinds of wildcard can be mixed in a single search.
View More Search Tips