This recording features the Symphony in G major, RicG G61 of Adalbert Gyrowetz, which was formerly attributed to Joseph Haydn. It is probably the symphony to which Gyrowetz refers in his autobiography when he mentions that on his arrival in Paris in 1789 he found one of his symphonies published and performed under Haydn’s name!
The movements are:
00:00 Allegro
04:44 Poco adagio
08:42 Menuetto allegretto
12:37 Final
From Wikipedia: Désiré Defauw (5 September 1885, Ghent, Belgium – 25 July 1960, Gary, Indiana, United States) was a Belgian conductor and violinist.
During World War I he became a refugee, working in London where in 1917 he appeared at the Wigmore Hall performing John Ireland’s Violin Sonata No. 2 with the composer at the piano.
He was professor of conducting at the Brussels Conservatory and was the first conductor of the Orchestre National de Belgique from 1937. He left Belgium for North America in 1940 and was music director of the Montreal Symphony Orchestra from 1941 to 1952 and also music director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra from 1943 to 1947. In 1947 he recorded the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto with the CSO and Mischa Elman as soloist. Defauw, who later served as music director of the Grand Rapids Symphony in Grand Rapids, Michigan, from 1954 to 1958, also was a composer. He was simultaneously the conductor of the Bloomington-Normal Symphony Orchestra from 1953 to 1958.
I transferred this work from French Columbia LFX 205/6.
source
How intriguing to think of Gyrowetz writing a symphony and it getting published as being by Haydn. Was that a ploy by the publisher to generate more interest in it? Haha, I should think Haydn would've been very surprised to discover that he had "written" it. Thanks for this. It's pleasant music.