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The internment diary of Austrian composer Hans Gal (1890-1987) with
a biographical study of his life and career. Includes a CD of first
recordings of three of his works from the period. The Austrian
composer Hans Gal (1890-1987) was one of many Jewish refugees who
fled to Britain from Hitler's Third Reich only to find themselves
interned in prison camps in Britain as 'enemy aliens' - the result
of Churchill's panic decision to 'collar the lot'. Gal thus spent
five months over the summer of 1940 in internment camps - first in
Donaldson's Hospital in Edinburgh, then at Huyton, near Liverpool,
and finally in the Central Promenade Camp on theIsle of Man. Many
of Gal's fellow internees went on, like Gal himself, to become
shaping forces in the intellectual life of Britain - but in
captivity this colourful parade of characters had to put up with
bureaucratic inertia and the indifference of their captors to their
undeserved fate. The diary Gal kept during his captivity vividly
describes the difficulties the internees had to overcome to live as
normal a life as possible. Gal's contribution, of course, was
music, and the CD with this book presents first recordings of the
Huyton Suite he wrote for two violins and flute (the only
instruments available to him), the satirical review What a Life!
composed on the Isle of Man and the piano suite he drew from it.
Introductory chapters by Gal's daughter and by Richard Dove present
a biographical survey of Gal's life and career and an examination
of British internment policy; the Foreword is bythe distinguished
economist Sir Alan Peacock, who studied composition with Gal.
Together they throw light on one of the more shameful British
responses to the threat of Nazi invasion.
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