The two Avie cycles involving Gál’s symphonies have both proved highly 
            entertaining and enlightening. Kenneth Woods and Stratford-upon-Avon-based 
            Orchestra of the Swan (OOTS)'s four-disc series has already given 
            pairings of Austrian composer Hans Gál's symphonies with one of Schumann's, 
            a composer Gál admired and wrote about. Volume one paired their Thirds 
            (Vie AV2230, review), 
            whilst volume two Schumann's Second and Gál's Fourth (Avie AV2231, 
            review); 
            volume three reversed these numbers for Schumann's Fourth and Gál's 
            Second (Avie AV2232, review).
            
            Beside Gál's appreciation of Schumann, there is another justification 
            for this combination, in that Gál's music is 'old-fashioned' by modernist 
            standards, and self-evidently descended from Schumann. Mellifluous, 
            elegant, limpid and nostalgic are four tags that might attach to almost 
            anything Gál wrote, and that certainly goes for the Second Symphony. 
            As in the Third and Fourth, there are echoes from the outset of Strauss, 
            then Mahler and perhaps Bruckner.
            
            By way of succinct description of the work, Woods quotes Gál's own 
            programme notes: "The first movement is a calm, freely formed 
            introduction, which presents some of the motives that are important 
            for the further course of the work. The following lively and energetic 
            movement stands between this introduction and the broadly laid out 
            Adagio which forms the heart of the Symphony; it acts as a 'drama 
            of the world' [Weltspiel] between the two parts of a meditation which 
            is turned completely inwards. The actual conflict and its working 
            out is left to the last movement, which, starting out from a passacaglia-like 
            episode, develops into an extended sonata form and, in an ever more 
            calming coda, spins itself again into the withdrawn mood of the introduction, 
            turned away from the world."
            
            In fact, this rather dry note does not really do justice to the invention 
            and drama of the work. It also suggests a rather introverted, sombre 
            tone, which would be entirely understandable in light of the tragedy 
            that repeatedly impinged on Gál's life immediately before its completion 
            in 1943: the death of his mother, the suicide of his aunt, sister 
            and youngest son - all in the same calendar year. On the contrary, 
            however, humour and warmth abound, particularly in the second movement 
            scherzo, and lyrical tenderness and hope are always more prominent 
            sentiments than outright melancholy or despair. This big, impressive 
            work has only recently been rescued from oblivion. The OOTS' performance 
            of it in 2012 was its first for fifty years, according to the notes 
            - though the Northern Sinfonia's recording under Thomas Zehetmair 
            (Avie AV2225) took place in 2010, which obviously predates it a little.
            
            Gál aside, Woods and the OOTS' Schumann series has been something 
            of a revelation, the smaller forces bringing much clarity to a composer 
            whose symphonies have often been unfairly accused of textural thickness. 
            As Woods points out, the score of the Fourth was revised by an older, 
            wiser Schumann "for performance by the 45 or so musicians of 
            his Düsseldorf orchestra or the Leipzig Gewandhaus, (not a modern 
            symphony orchestra of over 80 players)".
            
            There are dozens of recordings of Schumann's Fourth available - and 
            that is considering only the full cycles. Thankfully, the modern trend 
            is for smaller ensembles for Schumann, Roger Norrington's 'HIP' cycle 
            for the German Hänssler Classic label among the most high-profile 
            (94.602). There are even many recordings of Schumann's original version 
            of this work - favoured and published by Brahms - and those wishing 
            to compare Schumann's improvements to the original can do much worse 
            than to turn to another Avie recording, again with Thomas Zehetmair 
            leading the Northern Sinfonia (Avie AV2125).
            
            Nevertheless, no one buying this disc for the Gál, as is most likely, 
            will be disappointed by what is a particularly refreshing reading 
            of Schumann. On the other hand, Woods's account of Gál is close enough 
            to Zehetmair's that those who already own the latter will not necessarily 
            feel compelled to acquire the former. Woods's movement timings are 
            almost identical to Zehetmair's, the main (but minor) difference being 
            his slower-by-a-minute account of the central Adagio, true to the 
            composer's metronome markings. Notwithstanding, the growing legion 
            of Gál fans will certainly want both sets. In his notes, Woods - now 
            carving out a third impressive career, besides conductor and cellist, 
            as annotator - describes the Second Symphony, not unreasonably, as 
            "a wartime masterpiece that contemplates peace both personal 
            and universal." More emphatically still, on his website he calls 
            Gál "the best damn Austro-German master you didn't know existed."
            
            There is also an apparent argument here that Avie have been 
            wasteful in launching these two side-by-side series - Zehetmair's 
            may well not be a full cycle - especially as Gál is paired each time 
            with a composer who has been prolifically recorded. Woods has discussed 
            this question in interviews and online, citing above all the huge 
            financial commitments and risks necessary to get such a project recorded, 
            especially considering the fact that Avie actually operates an "artist 
            ownership" business model. Thus, though Franz Schmidt's four 
            symphonies would have made a daringly provocative pairing, and any 
            four of Karl Weigl's would have thrown up some interesting comparisons, 
            the inclusion of the entirely bankable Schumann or Schubert makes 
            realisation quicker and indeed more likely. As Woods expresses the 
            "the realities of recording in the modern age", starkly: 
            "To those of you who feel like you don’t need or want another 
            Schumann or Schubert, I would just encourage you to think of that 
            half of your purchase price as a small but incredibly valued contribution 
            to the next recording."
            
            Woods' expansive, well written essay on the composers and their symphonies 
            comes in English, German and French. This recording has the same decent 
            sound quality as the previous disc. Incidentally, besides Zehetmair, 
            there is more quality orchestral Gál already available on Avie - the 
            Violin Concerto, Violin Concertino and Triptych for Orchestra (Avie 
            AV2146), as well as the Cello Concerto paired with Elgar's (Avie AV2237, 
            review). 
            Woods the cellist performs Gál's String Trios with his Ensemble Epomeo 
            colleagues on Avie AV2259 (review).
            
            Byzantion
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            Previous reviews: Dan 
            Morgan and Steve 
            Arloff 
                      Masterwork Index: Schumann 
            symphony 4