Twenty-some years ago (close to thirty-some) recordings of Havergal 
Brian's symphonies were scarcer than the proverbial hen's dentures. 
Suddenly, a spate of LPs, containing at least half a dozen of the 
symphonies and his violin concerto appeared on the Aries label. The 
performers were listed as "San Paulo Symphony conducted by Francisco 
Theatro" (actually Stanley Pope conducting the New Philharmonia & John 
Canarina conducting the BBCSO), "Wales Symphony conducted by Colin 
Wilson" (Myer Fredman conducting the Royal PO & Edward Downes conducting 
the London SO), and Hamburg Philharmonic  conducted by Horst Werner (New 
Philharmonia Orch conducted by Stokowski (!) & Stanley Pope again - 
Ralph Holmes was given the pseudonym Emil Liebowitz for his solo work in 
the violin concerto). Strangely enough, the recording of his infamously 
gigantic "Gothic" symphony (no. 1) actually was able to give Adrian 
Boult cover credit (I don't know if there was some arrangement or they 
just thought that there was no point in making up stories about who was 
on a recording of a work that had only be played once at that point 
(there is a now a subsequent  CD of it on Marco Polo). There were 
definitely recordings of a few other cult favorites (Robert Simpson, 
maybe - my LPs are not arranged by label, so I am relying on shaky memory).
Anyhow, wholesale shameless theft of the highest order and most 
enjoyable music, mostly well-played by the phantom artists.
Peter Hirsch
David Lennick wrote:
Anyone remember the Aries label, around 1980? It put out all sorts of 
pirated goodies, including several symphonies by George Lloyd which 
were swiped from BBC transcriptions and given real-sounding names, 
including one belonging to the guy who exposed the whole mess for High 
Fidelity in '81.
Ernst Lumpe, who unfortunately got sucked into the Hatto mess, has 
written for a number of years on identifying some of the pseudonymous 
labels such as Allegro.
dl