Peter asks -
'How many works did Haydn and Mozart actually claim themselves to have written ? How many of them did they list in their own inventories, and how many of them did they have published ? I would also like to know how you (Robert) can say Luchesi should be seen as a great composer and then admit that your theory hasn't yet been proved'.
Well, Peter, it seems Joseph Haydn had absolutely no idea how many works he had written. Time after time during his career he admits that a particular work that has become popular is not familiar to him - but this strange admission is excused as being evidence of just how busy he was. We have a fairly typical situation in 1783 where one music collector in Bonn records that he now has in his collection no less than 90 Haydn symphonies, for example. And situations where Haydn himself is so confused about his own supposed compositions that he is forced to get copies of the works made (quickly) in his own handwriting so as to conceal the awful truth. (This definitely occurred with dozens of symphonies in his later years at Esterhazy, for example). The same is again true of many 'Haydn' Masses. So, as far as Haydn is concerned the situation has always been one of great confusion despite claims to the contrary. Even today, Haydn scholars cannot agree as to which index of Haydn works has most authority - that of Kees or the several that have been offered over the past 200 years or so (all of which contradict one another in many, many places). It is not even agreed which symphony was first written by Haydn and he himself was unable to answer this. (One could go on and on with such basic facts).
In respect of Mozart, well, the Koechel list (which is at least widely regarded as authoritative) did not appear in its 1st edition until many decades after Mozart's death (71 years, in fact). This Koechel list, far from being accurate, is, in fact, far from being so in many respects. Bear in mind too that earlier attempts (by people like Abbe Maximilian Stadler/Nissen/Constanze Mozart etc) were even worse in often crediting Mozart with works that, frankly, had little or nothing to do with Mozart.
So in answer to your question, it is today regarded as 'fact' that Mozart wrote those works which are given in the current Koechel edition - i.e. some 626 works, these listed chronologically from K1 to K626.
Unfortunate, or course, that K1 is actually NOT by Mozart and that K626 ('Mozart's' supposed Requiem) was itself dismissed early by various musicians (including the great German musicologist Gottfried Weber) as being a forgery.
But, in simple terms, students of Mozart hold to the view that during Mozart's lifetime there were two real records of Mozart's works - the first of these being a list of Wolfgang's compositions drawn up by none other than Leopold, his father, in 1768 which contained (so it was claimed) a true record of the young composers works made thus far - i.e. at the age of 12.
But here too the Mozart 'industry' seems to run on rules that are hardly consistent. We know for a certain fact that in the very first edition of Koechel (and this a fairly typical example) K18 is an E Flat symphony said to have been written by Wolfgang. Yet this work is actually NOT by Mozart but instead by Johann Christian Bach - his Symphony Op.7 No.6
Similarly, there are works listed in Koechel (i.e. works which are supposedly authentic Mozart) which are simply not his. Take K1, for example. One could continue on and on with this in simply listing the many works supposedly by Mozart written by him before he was 12 years old that are, in fact, NOT by Mozart. Many of them nevertheless remain, today, still in modern versions (the 6th and 7th editions) despite this fact !
We have too many evidences of works being in Koechel which are today said to have been written by Mozart in 'collaboration' with other composers, including a whole series of other early works. We have symphonies, quartets, church works, keyboard works etc. etc. which (had it not been Mozart of whom we were speaking) could surely not have survived till today in being credited as works by 'Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart'.
Somebody suggested that contributors to MozartForum would do well to comment on these matters here. (My reply is 'fine ! - let them do so - and will we not see what is true ?)
But I want to emphasise the murky nature of this rise to fame of Mozart at the hands of his father. It was of course Leopold's guidance and example that shaped much of what was to come. Let's look next at Mozart in 1768. Surely, if Wolfgang had indeed arrived in Vienna that year with his father as a young musical genius (one who had toured successfully to the astonishment of all Europe) we would hardly expect Leopold to record as he does that year of the reaction of the Viennese -
'They (the people here in Vienna) avoid most carefully every occasion of seeing us and of admitting to Wolfgang's skill, so that on the many occasions on which they might be asked whether they have heard this boy and what they thought of him, they could always say that they had not heard him and that it could not possibly be true - that it was all humbug and foolishness - that it was all pre-arranged - that Wolfgang was given music which he already knew - that it was ridiculous ....'
(Leopold Mozart, Vienna, 1768 - writing on the reaction to the Viennese musicians about Wolfgang, his son).
Well, of course this was nothing more than evidence of 'jealousy' - and so says his father, of course. This is of course the point at where the neutral judge must agree that the young Mozart is not merely a remarkable circus performer on keyboard but is, in fact, a remarkable composer. And it's THIS aspect, I suggest, that is all too often forgotten.
In January of that same year Leopold (now used to creating a sensation with Wolfgang at the keyboard) decides that his son is now old enough to take on Vienna. He seeks and gets several audiences with the Emperor, Leopold 2nd. He is rewarded for his persistancy and assures that Emperor that Wolfgang can certainly write an opera. Father and son are now asked to contact the Vienna Theatre Director, Giuseppe Affligio (1722-1788) with a view to Wolfgang writing 'La Finta Semplice'. The fee for this work to be 100 ducats.
Leopold is delighted and the two now see Affligio.
(Affligio had the year before been given a 10 year contract to oversee the two largest theatres in Vienna).
Affligio learns that the commission is for 'La Finta Semplice - an opera that had already been staged in Venice in 1764 by the composer Salvatore Perillo. Thus, Mozart is to use the same text (or one based on the same text) for his own version.
Leopold and Wolfgang return to Salzburg and work begins on the piece by late January/early February of that same year, 1768. In March Leopold writes that composition is going well. And by June the score of this opera by his son is now complete. (It consists of some 558 pages of music).
Father and son now return to Vienna and present the work to Affligio so that rehearsals can begin.
But there is now a major problem. Affligio (who obviously stands to benefit if the opera is performed) is convinced that this work is NOT by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. He dares to say so. In fact Affligio (saying much the same as other musicians in Vienna) tells Leopold that this opera has been 'ghost written' and was certainly NOT the product of the 12 year old boy. Leopold is deeply offended by this. But now the orchestra and the singers themselves (who have worked with the boy Mozart for a few days on the piece) agree with Affligio - the work is definitely NOT by Wolfgang.
What happens next ? Well, Leopold now writes at length to the Emperor and Empress (the latter being specially keen to hear the piece and enclosing with his letter a long list of compositions already written by his son. (It's this list which is the first attempted inventory of 'Mozart' thus far).
But the Emperor, despite having commissioned the work, now decides that there are sufficient reasons to abandon the whole venture. La Finta Semplice is NOT staged and the Mozart's return home to Salzburg without any payment.
As for Affligio, he continues working in Vienna as per his contract but starts to lose money. In a few more years he is obliged to transfer control of the theatres to a nobleman, Count Kohary. And, most remarkably, in 1778 Affligio is now arrested. (Mozart at this time is now 22 years old). The charge ?
That of forgery. And the following year (1779) he is condemned to life imprisonment to the island of Elba - the island where, 9 years later, this same Affligio dies.
I mention this remarkable story to illustrate that time after time things occur in the life and career of Mozart which would, if we were not here discussing Mozart, give us grounds to doubt the accepted version of his life and works. One could give dozens of examples. In my honest opinion Leopold's own Jesuit education made him a quite audacious 'manager' of the young Mozart and, I suggest, a person who was both willing and able to manufacture certain truths if those suited him. In later years (even after Mozart's death) the myth of Mozart's life and career would be much embellished as would the supposed inventories of his works. By 1784 the mature Mozart was in Vienna writing his own thematic catalogue of his 'own' works. This thematic catalogue is today under scrutiny as never before. And with good reason. It too contradicts many other lines of evidence.
Mozart wrote many wonderful things. Of this there is in my view no doubt at all. But his actual achievements (particularly in symphonic and other material) may be far less than many are prepared to accept.
Robert
Comment