Gustav Holst omitted Earth from his suite "The Planets" because he wanted to portray the astrological influences associated with the planets known in his time. As Earth was not traditionally associated with a specific astrological identity, he chose to focus on the other planets.
All except the inner two.
No. All planets are spherical.
All of the inner planets are rocky planets: Mars, Earth, Venus, and Mercury
their all gas planets
You can learn all about him in wikipedia under his name.
Gustav Holst omitted Earth from his suite "The Planets" because he wanted to portray the astrological influences associated with the planets known in his time. As Earth was not traditionally associated with a specific astrological identity, he chose to focus on the other planets.
All works of Holst have been in the public domain for several years. Certain editions, performances, and recordings will have their own rightsholders.
The slower movements of "The Planets" are all longer than the faster ones. The fifth movement, "Saturn, the Bringer of Old Age," besides being slower, has a coda that makes it the longest of all.
Indeed with the exception of Earth, all the astrological planets known during the work's composition are represented in the Planets, Op. 32, is a seven-movement orchestral suite by the English composer Gustav Holst which was written between 1914 and 1916. The planets had: 1.Mars, the Bringer of War 2.Venus, the Bringer of Peace 3.Mercury, the Winged Messenger 4.Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity 5.Saturn, the Bringer of Old Age 6.Uranus, the Magician 7.Neptune, the Mystic Pluto was discovered four years before the death of Holst, but Holst showed no interest in arranging it. Perhaps earth was not included because it was not named after a deity.
Holst called them:Mercury, the Winged MessengerVenus, the Bringer of LoveMars, the Bringer of WarJupiter, the Bringer of JollitySaturn, the Bringer of Old AgeUranus, the MagicianNeptune, the Mystic
All planets have a core.
All of them smoke and drinks, there are pics. But Georg and Tom smoke more then Bill and Gustav.
It seems to turn up a lot in trailers for action movies, as does "O fortuna" from Orff's Carmina Burana. I heard once that the music scoring is one of the last things that gets edited into a movie, so when the trailers come out there may not be any music written; also, since the trailer is a mash-up of bits from all over the movie, they couldn't use the actual score from all those different parts or the music would have no continuity. So they just substitute Holst's Mars or some other piece of exciting music instead.
Yes all planets have a orbit
Meteorites crashed into all of the planets.
No not all the planets have craters on.