Eugene GOOSSENS (1893-1962) 
          Orchestral Works - Volume 2 
          Kaleidoscope - Suite for Children Op. 18 (1933) [9:49] 
          
Tam o'Shanter, Scherzo for Orchestra Op. 17a (1918-19) [3:38] 
          
          
Three Greek Dances for small orchestra, Op. 44 (1926, revised 
          1927) [10:06] 
          
Concert Piece for oboe/cor anglais, two harps, and orchestra, 
          Op. 65 (1957) [21:57] 
          
Four Conceits - Suite, Op. 20 (1918) [6:44] 
          Variations on 
Cadet Rousselle (French Folk-Song) (1930) [3:47] 
          
          
Two Nature Poems, Op. 25 (1937-38) [11:19] 
          
Intermezzo from 
Don Juan de Mañara, Op. 54 (1935) 
          [6:22] 
          Jeff Crellin (oboe; cor anglais); Marshall Maguire (harp I); Alannah 
          Guthrie-Jones (harp II) 
          Melbourne Symphony Orchestra/Andrew Davis 
          rec. Robert Blackwood Hall, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia, 
          15-16 June 2010, 5 September 2011, 7 September 2012 
          
CHANDOS CHSA5119 
 
          [74:16] 
 
         The final touches to this disc were made in September 
          2012. It’s good therefore that it forms part of the rather muted 
          anniversary events to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the death of 
          a man who was respected both in the UK and much further afield. This 
          respect was not only as composer but also as conductor. He worked in 
          Australia after 1947 but also lived in Cincinnati in the 1930s. He was 
          a true cosmopolitan and to a great extent his music is a reflection 
          of the man. 
            
          This sense of internationalism can be heard in the 
Two Nature 
          Poems. These are orchestrations of twenty-year old piano pieces. 
          In the first, a 
Pastoral, it is not really an English scene painted 
          in these rich Delius-plus colours nor is it Australian or American. 
          There is something warmly European about it which does not fit into 
          any category. The ensuing 
Bacchanal, it might be thought, is 
          a wild drinks party being held in some warm Mediterranean villa. 
            
          The disc opens with Goossens' own orchestration of eight of his miniature 
          piano pieces entitled 
Kaleidoscope - subtitled 
          “A Suite for Children”. Here we have titles like ‘The 
          Musical Box’ scored for piccolo, pizzicato violins and celesta, 
          a rather Stravinskian ‘Punch and Judy Show’ and a dreamy 
          ‘Goodnight’, all beautifully and colourfully realised. 
            
          A brief ten minute ballet sequence, originally called ‘Three Pagan 
          Hymns’ was conceived for the 1920s ballet star Margaret Morris. 
          Realising that they might not get another airing Goossens re-titled 
          these colourfully striking excursions into exotica 
Three Greek 
          Dances. Don’t get thinking that Skalkottas is looking 
          over his shoulder: they are not overtly rhythmic or pagan for that matter 
          but rather luxurious. The third dance hardly gets going before it is 
          wound up. 
            
          The CD ends with the dramatic and also quite beautiful 
Intermezzo 
          from a grand opera first produced at Covent Garden on the eve of the 
          Second World War, 
Don Juan de Mañara. It’s 
          quite typical that apart from a 1959 broadcast, one of Goossens’ 
          finest works has disappeared without a trace. Its plot is somewhat melodramatic 
          but this 
Intermezzo is distinctly worth a hearing. 
            
          It’s interesting how listener’s perceptions change with 
          the years. I plucked off my shelf the book ‘Composer’s Gallery’ 
          by Donald Brook (The Thornton Press, 1946). There Goossens was interviewed. 
          Brook wrote that his “compositions are chiefly in the chromatic 
          idiom; they are modern and experimental without being freakish, although 
          his earlier works suggested that he might develop in other directions.” 
          He speaks of the composer’s fascination with things Chinese and 
          exotic. You would have thought that a piece like 
Tam o’Shanter, 
          described as a Scherzo for Orchestra and written when the composer was 
          in his mid-twenties, might constitute an early work, yet in the excellent 
          booklet essay by the inimitable Lewis Foreman it is pointed out that, 
          at the time, the work would “have been regarded as the acceptable 
          face of modern music”. It now appears, with its suitably Irish 
          compound time bouncy rhythm to be just a fun piece of light music. Perhaps 
          a more challenging piece from this period might have been a chamber 
          work such as the rather Debussian 
Four Sketches Op. 5 of 1913 
          which worth finding on 
Chandos 
          CHAN10259. 
            
          Also written when he was about 24 was the 
Four Conceits, 
          orchestrated by the composer from the piano original. These are delicately 
          carved jewels or as Lewis Foreman describes them “aphoristic essays”. 
          One is called ‘The Gargoyle’; the last is ‘The Marionette 
          Show’. Again the brilliance of the orchestration is what especially 
          fascinates. 
            
          I suspect that the 
Variations on ‘Cadet Rousselle’are 
          simply recorded here for completeness, as this was just one contribution 
          with three other composers including Frank Bridge and Arnold Bax in 
          a collaborative piece for critic Edwin Evans. Originally it was for 
          soprano and piano but is given here in the composer’s orchestration. 
          It’s certainly colourful, which it need to be given its rather 
          flimsy material. 
            
          With this talk about Goossens’ idiomatic orchestration one should 
          remember that he was a professional instrumentalist in the Queens’ 
          Hall Orchestra, and later a much sought after conductor having worked 
          under Beecham, for much of his life in England and America and later 
          in Australasia. In fact he conducted the first London performance of 
          
Le Sacre du Printemps. 
            
          The longest work on the CD was also one of his last. It’s the 
          three movement 
Concert Piece . This is
scored 
          for oboe, doubling cor anglais, played by originally by Leon Goossens 
          and two harps first played by the sisters Marie and Sidonie Goossens. 
          This was clearly a right family affair but a happy and highly original 
          one. The orchestra is used delicately but there are twelve-tone passages, 
          would you believe, and some fascinating harmonies. The middle movement, 
          not surprisingly, recall the open prairie spaces of Aaron Copland and 
          the finale quotes other composers; there is even a snatch of Tchaikovsky’s 
          
Waltz of the Flowers. The three soloists Jeff Crellin, Marshall 
          Maguire and Alannah Guthrie-Jones are perfect substitutes and I suspect 
          could not possibly have come across the work before the recording sessions 
          although there is an earlier recording on ABC Classics (
review). 
          
            
          Indeed these eight works have rarely been heard. Sir Andrew Davis, taking 
          over this series from the late lamented Richard Hickox (see review of 
          
Volume 
          1), clearly understands what is required to make them live and the 
          Melbourne Symphony Orchestra respond enthusiastically. If you are new 
          to Eugene Goossens I would certainly commend this disc as an ideal place 
          to start. 
            
          
Gary Higginson  
          
          See also review by 
John 
          France