Among his works as a composer are two symphonies (1940, 1945), two "Phantasy" concertos (one for piano, one for violin) both composed in the 1940s, two string quartets (1918, 1942), two violin sonatas (1918 and 1930) and a Concertino for string octet (1928) that became quite popular and was later re-scored for string orchestra. The Oboe Concerto (1927), was written for his brother,
Léon Goossens. He wrote two operas, both with libretto by
Arnold Bennett, which Banfield believes are among his major achievements:
Judith (1929) and
Don Juan de Manara (1935). The performance was conducted by Goossens himself. And between 1949 and 1954 he wrote a large-scale oratorio,
The Apocalypse, after the Revelation of St. John. In 1942 Goossens wrote to several composers, including
Aaron Copland, to request patriotic
fanfares as "stirring and significant contributions to the
war effort ..." Copland responded to the request with his famous
Fanfare for the Common Man. Eighteen fanfares were written by the different composers and performed during the 1942/43 season of the
Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. • A Fanfare for Airmen, composed by
Bernard Wagenaar, performed 9 October 1942 • A Fanfare for Russia, composed by
Deems Taylor, performed 16 October 1942 • A Fanfare for the Fighting French, composed by
Walter Piston, performed 23 October 1942 • A Fanfare to the Forces of our Latin-American Allies, composed by
Henry Cowell, performed 30 October 1942 • A Fanfare for Friends, composed by
Daniel Gregory Mason, performed 6 November 1942 • A Fanfare for Paratroopers, composed by
Paul Creston, performed 27 November 1942 • Fanfare de la Liberté, composed by
Darius Milhaud, performed 11 December 1942 • A Fanfare for American Heroes, composed by
William Grant Still, performed 18 December 1942 • Fanfare for France, composed by
Virgil Thomson, performed 15 January 1943 • Fanfare for Freedom, composed by
Morton Gould, performed 22 January 1943 • Fanfare for Airmen, composed by
Leo Sowerby, performed 29 January 1943 • Fanfare for Poland, composed by
Harl McDonald, performed 5 February 1943 • Fanfare for Commandos, composed by
Bernard Rogers, performed 20 February 1943 • Fanfare for the Medical Corps, composed by
Anis Fuleihan, performed 26 February 1943 • Fanfare for the American Soldier, composed by
Felix Borowski, performed 5 March 1943 • Fanfare for the Common Man, composed by
Aaron Copland, performed 12 March 1943 • Fanfare for the Signal Corps, composed by
Howard Hanson, performed 2 April 1943 • Fanfare for the Merchant Marine, composed by
Eugene Goossens, performed 16 April 1943 In 1941 he made the first American recording of the
Symphony No. 2 by
Tchaikovsky, with the
Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. Goossens's recording ignored the cuts that were popular with conductors at that time. That same year, also with the Cincinnati Symphony, he recorded
Vaughan Williams'
A London Symphony, in its 1920 edition, and also the original version of
Walton's
Violin Concerto, with
Jascha Heifetz as soloist. After his return to England, Goossens was approached by Beecham to arrange a modern symphony orchestra version of
Handel's
Messiah to mark the bicentenary of the composer's death in 1959. Goossens augmented the original orchestration with parts for four horns, three trombones, tuba, piccolo, contrabassoon, two harps, triangle, cymbals, and bass drum. Beecham recorded the piece soon afterward with the
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, and Goossens's version became synonymous with the conductor (but much less so with its orchestrator). Because of disputes around whose work the orchestration was, and the fact that the manuscript was held by the Beecham estate, despite it being claimed by Goossens's estate, it went unperformed for over 40 years. It went unrecorded for even longer, until a new recording appeared in 2020, again with the RPO, under Jonathan Griffith. For
Kapp Records, he recorded a bilingual version of
Peter and the Wolf in 1959, featuring the actor
José Ferrer narrating the story in both English and Spanish. The music was played by the
Vienna State Opera Orchestra. The performance was later released on CD by
MCA Records. Goossens is credited for much of the lobbying to the
New South Wales Government to build a music performance venue, a process that led to the construction of the
Sydney Opera House. Having agreed to go ahead with the project, the
New South Wales Premier Joseph Cahill had wanted it to be on or near Wynyard Railway Station in the north-west of the CBD, but Goossens insisted that it be built at
Bennelong Point overlooking Sydney Harbour. The site of Bennelong Point was confirmed in 1957, after he had left Australia. He is commemorated in the
Eugene Goossens Hall, a small concert and recording facility that is part of the broadcasting complex of the
Australian Broadcasting Corporation in
Harris Street,
Ultimo, in
Sydney. ==Bibliography==