Mr. Newman has kindly given us his evidence that the symphonies cataloged as by Haydn and Mozart in Modena are the same as the ones held by the same library when cataloged in Bonn in 1784: namely, that the numbers add up identically.
This is certainly suggestive, but it is no more than that. In orthodox scholarship, when a relationship like that is found and there is no other evidence, a scholar will accept on a provisional basis that the two lists are identical, subject to correction by contradictory evidence. In this case the contradictory evidence (namely, that some of these symphonies hadn't been written in 1784) already exists.
There are many follow-up questions which Mr Newman's evidence does not answer, however, such as:
1) Are these the ONLY symphonies in the catalog? If not, then given the difficulty of making complete one-to-one matches in the lists as given, it cannot be said that each list has 58 symphonies.
2) If the 1784 Bonn catalog contains no incipits, does the Modena catalog? If not, how do we know that the symphonies credited to Mozart in the Modena catalog include those dated after 1784? (Only four Mozart symphonies - the "trilogy" and the "Prague" - are given post-1784 dates by conventional scholarship, so there's plenty of other Mozart symphonies that could have made up the lot, even leaving aside the possibility that some are by L. Mozart rather than W. Mozart.)
3) It appears that the 1784 catalog lists 38 symphonies "by different authors" without specifying who the authors were. This would make sense if they were not itemized, but it appears that they were. This is puzzling.
4) Mr. Newman stated in an earlier post, "The inventory of 1784 was corrupted by the fact that it (contrary to accepted practice) did not credit anonymous works automatically to the existing Kapellmeister (Luchesi)." I do not know of any such accepted practice (which proves nothing either way), but the wording implies that the standard practice would have been to credit to Lucchesi works that he did not write. That being the case, the absence of any identified attributions to Lucchesi in the 1784 symphonies amounts to evidence that he didn't write any, for if he's not being credited with works he didn't write, why is he also not being credited with works he did write, if indeed he did? Surely if the Kapellmeister's name was supposed to be prominent in the inventory, it would be odd to dump his works namelessly among the "different authors." Or are we postulating a conspiracy by Neefe, who supervised this catalog, to diminish Lucchesi? Wheels within wheels, conspiracy within conspiracy, turtles on the backs of turtles all the way down.
5) If I understand the point of all this correctly, the 1784 inventory was an honest inventory, and the Modena inventory ripped all the title-pages off and attributed works to Haydn and Mozart that they did not write. Yet if this is the case, where is the evidence that they were actually written by Lucchesi?
6) Taboga's breathtaking claim (see his web page) is that Haydn never wrote ANY SYMPHONIES WHATEVER. His late symphonies are all by Lucchesi and the early ones are all by Sammartini (a claim that made me laugh; early Haydn doesn't sound like Sammartini). Yet the 1784 inventory lists 19 symphonies by clear variants of the name Haydn. Therefore either Taboga is wrong or the 1784 inventory isn't any more reliable than the Modena inventory.
That's just a beginning of the huge mound of unanswered questions which the Taboga/Newman claims raise, and which Mr. Newman has told me are "not really very useful" and fail to understand the "tremendous work" Signor Taboga has done. I have read his English language summary, which is quite long, and which is filled with unwarranted assumptions and completely specious logic. The skeptical observer owes nothing in terms of respect to this quite pathetic "effort". He owes us evidence to back up his claims. Implications that we should bow down in uncritical respect will not be taken kindly.
This is certainly suggestive, but it is no more than that. In orthodox scholarship, when a relationship like that is found and there is no other evidence, a scholar will accept on a provisional basis that the two lists are identical, subject to correction by contradictory evidence. In this case the contradictory evidence (namely, that some of these symphonies hadn't been written in 1784) already exists.
There are many follow-up questions which Mr Newman's evidence does not answer, however, such as:
1) Are these the ONLY symphonies in the catalog? If not, then given the difficulty of making complete one-to-one matches in the lists as given, it cannot be said that each list has 58 symphonies.
2) If the 1784 Bonn catalog contains no incipits, does the Modena catalog? If not, how do we know that the symphonies credited to Mozart in the Modena catalog include those dated after 1784? (Only four Mozart symphonies - the "trilogy" and the "Prague" - are given post-1784 dates by conventional scholarship, so there's plenty of other Mozart symphonies that could have made up the lot, even leaving aside the possibility that some are by L. Mozart rather than W. Mozart.)
3) It appears that the 1784 catalog lists 38 symphonies "by different authors" without specifying who the authors were. This would make sense if they were not itemized, but it appears that they were. This is puzzling.
4) Mr. Newman stated in an earlier post, "The inventory of 1784 was corrupted by the fact that it (contrary to accepted practice) did not credit anonymous works automatically to the existing Kapellmeister (Luchesi)." I do not know of any such accepted practice (which proves nothing either way), but the wording implies that the standard practice would have been to credit to Lucchesi works that he did not write. That being the case, the absence of any identified attributions to Lucchesi in the 1784 symphonies amounts to evidence that he didn't write any, for if he's not being credited with works he didn't write, why is he also not being credited with works he did write, if indeed he did? Surely if the Kapellmeister's name was supposed to be prominent in the inventory, it would be odd to dump his works namelessly among the "different authors." Or are we postulating a conspiracy by Neefe, who supervised this catalog, to diminish Lucchesi? Wheels within wheels, conspiracy within conspiracy, turtles on the backs of turtles all the way down.
5) If I understand the point of all this correctly, the 1784 inventory was an honest inventory, and the Modena inventory ripped all the title-pages off and attributed works to Haydn and Mozart that they did not write. Yet if this is the case, where is the evidence that they were actually written by Lucchesi?
6) Taboga's breathtaking claim (see his web page) is that Haydn never wrote ANY SYMPHONIES WHATEVER. His late symphonies are all by Lucchesi and the early ones are all by Sammartini (a claim that made me laugh; early Haydn doesn't sound like Sammartini). Yet the 1784 inventory lists 19 symphonies by clear variants of the name Haydn. Therefore either Taboga is wrong or the 1784 inventory isn't any more reliable than the Modena inventory.
That's just a beginning of the huge mound of unanswered questions which the Taboga/Newman claims raise, and which Mr. Newman has told me are "not really very useful" and fail to understand the "tremendous work" Signor Taboga has done. I have read his English language summary, which is quite long, and which is filled with unwarranted assumptions and completely specious logic. The skeptical observer owes nothing in terms of respect to this quite pathetic "effort". He owes us evidence to back up his claims. Implications that we should bow down in uncritical respect will not be taken kindly.
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