Dear Robert,
Bear with me a moment. I got confused with the discussion as it developed. So I looked around & found http://itis.volta.alessandria.it/epi...4/ep4tabog.htm
this</a>. From it, I got the impression that Luchesi was a talented kid who got himself a nice gig in Bonn, fixing the damage that Beethoven's grandfather left. It must have paid well. But as he was unable to publish anything under his own name, it seems to me he got the idea of selling his work to the highest bidder. Perhaps as a way of making cash on the side, perhaps to find his music a wider audience (Bonn's not a very big town), perhaps for critical acclaim, perhaps to rescue it from oblivion.
He found a taker in Max Franz, who funnels Luchesi's music to Haydn & Mozart. Establishing the truth shouldn't be all that much of a problem. There's the watermarks, there's the catalogs. If original manuscripts can be found, there's handwriting. If they match up then we should be brave & go where they take us.
This puts a new slant on why & when Beethoven left Bonn for Vienna. Was he sent as Luchesi's emmissary? Was it at the behest of Max Franz? Had the Bonn court not been dissolved, Beethoven, not Mozart, would have been Luchesi's logical successor. Since musical theory is not learned overnight, Beethoven was obviously trained before he arrived in Vienna. I presume we can determine if Neefe really was an adequate pedagogue & if not, we should look around for some other teacher.
Does this make any sense, or am I still looking in the wrong direction?
Bear with me a moment. I got confused with the discussion as it developed. So I looked around & found http://itis.volta.alessandria.it/epi...4/ep4tabog.htm
this</a>. From it, I got the impression that Luchesi was a talented kid who got himself a nice gig in Bonn, fixing the damage that Beethoven's grandfather left. It must have paid well. But as he was unable to publish anything under his own name, it seems to me he got the idea of selling his work to the highest bidder. Perhaps as a way of making cash on the side, perhaps to find his music a wider audience (Bonn's not a very big town), perhaps for critical acclaim, perhaps to rescue it from oblivion.
He found a taker in Max Franz, who funnels Luchesi's music to Haydn & Mozart. Establishing the truth shouldn't be all that much of a problem. There's the watermarks, there's the catalogs. If original manuscripts can be found, there's handwriting. If they match up then we should be brave & go where they take us.
This puts a new slant on why & when Beethoven left Bonn for Vienna. Was he sent as Luchesi's emmissary? Was it at the behest of Max Franz? Had the Bonn court not been dissolved, Beethoven, not Mozart, would have been Luchesi's logical successor. Since musical theory is not learned overnight, Beethoven was obviously trained before he arrived in Vienna. I presume we can determine if Neefe really was an adequate pedagogue & if not, we should look around for some other teacher.
Does this make any sense, or am I still looking in the wrong direction?
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