With the gradual reissue of the original Marco Polo releases 
                  of Havergal Brian’s symphonies on the bargain-priced Naxos label, it is to be 
                  hoped that more people will explore the music of this fascinating 
                  but still largely under-appreciated maverick English composer. 
                  The original Marco Polo CDs were tantalisingly labelled the 
                  Brian Cycle but only 11 of the canon of 32 have appeared 
                  to date, leaving many still unrecorded. One can only hope that 
                  more recordings are lurking in the Naxos archives awaiting release.
                 
                The symphony presented here was actually Brian’s third. The 
                  mighty Gothic Symphony, released on Marco Polo (8.223280/81) 
                  and more recently on Naxos (8.557418/19) was originally his second but the work Brian 
                  wrote as his First Symphony, A Fantastic Symphony, he 
                  partly discarded. The Fantastic Symphony’s first and 
                  last movements were rescued as separate works and are also available 
                  in the Marco Polo series – the Fantastic Variations on 
                  8.223731 with symphonies 20 and 25, and the Festal Dance 
                  on 8.223481 with symphonies 17 and 32.
                 
                The Second Symphony was written in 1930-31 and is cast in 
                  a traditional four-movement design, albeit with the movements 
                  playing without a break. The orchestral forces required, by 
                  normal standards are vast (16 horns are asked for) but, in comparison 
                  with the gargantuan orchestra demanded in the Gothic 
                  Symphony, somewhat modest. Always attracted to German literature, 
                  Brian took Goethe’s drama Götz von Berlichingen as his 
                  initial inspiration, although he denied any specific programme 
                  to the symphony.
                 
                The first movement is one of those rugged symphonic movements 
                  cast in granite that listeners familiar with Brian’s work will 
                  recognise. The slow movement is the least successful for me. 
                  It seems a little too loosely put together and I found it difficult 
                  giving it my full attention on repeated listenings. The scherzo 
                  is altogether more successful, with antiphonal horns, drum-like 
                  ostinati and a sense of Brucknerian excitement. The finale 
                  is a funeral march-cum-rondo and, at nearly 20 minutes duration, 
                  the emotional heart of the symphony.
                 
                The disc opens with the only work Brian wrote for brass alone: 
                  the very short Festival Fanfare, dated Christmas 1967 
                  and written at the suggestion of an American admirer. The Fanfare 
                  was also first performed in the United 
                  States – in Urbana, Illinois - in May 1972. It is an attractive but unremarkable piece 
                  but shows the affinity to orchestral brass that Brian had displayed 
                  throughout his long composing career.
                 
                
              While 
                the brass-only Fanfare received 
                an excellent performance, I’m afraid 
                that of the symphony leaves a great 
                deal to be desired. While other CDs 
                in the Brian series were made in Bratislava, 
                Dublin, Glasgow and Kiev, this is the 
                only one (so far) from the Moscow Symphony 
                Orchestra. This orchestra was only founded 
                in 1989 and so was seven years old at 
                the time of this recording, trying to 
                develop at a time when Russia was losing 
                many of its best musicians to more secure 
                and better paid jobs in the West following 
                the dismantling of the Soviet Union. 
                The MSO has never, to my ears, achieved 
                the standards of its more senior counterparts 
                in Russia and seems much more at home 
                in the many excellent film music recordings 
                that have appeared on Marco Polo and 
                Naxos than it does in this symphony. 
                The main problem is that the upper strings 
                just don’t seem to have the notes under 
                their fingers, with sometimes disastrous 
                results for ensemble and tuning. In 
                addition, the very studio-bound sound 
                produced in the Mosfilm recording venue 
                helps matters not at all, being rather 
                dry and unforgiving, with little ambience 
                around the sound. However, with no alternative 
                recordings available, this disc serves 
                to show what a unique force Havergal 
                Brian was in British music and connoisseurs 
                of off-the-beaten-track music from England 
                will find much to enthral them here.
                 
                
              Derek Warby
               
              see also Review 
                by Colin Clarke