Robert,
What are you talking about? We haven't discovered a new cantata by Beethoven - you are assuming there is another one. You come up with a theory to explain away the evidence and claim it as fact, so flimsy is your whole Luchesi argument regarding not just this but Mozart and Haydn equally.
You even try to misrepresent the Bonn court by claiming it was second in importance to Rome. According to Marek "Bonn was a small town. It pretended to the graces of Paris, to the self-importance of Berlin, and to the ceremonial splendour of papal Rome. It succeeded in being none of these. It was really just a provincial town which gave itself airs because it was the seat of a prince of the church and the capital of a small land called the 'Electorate of Cologne', one of the many states that made up the holy Roman Empire."
May I remind you of your recent and past inconsistancies -
"I am entirely open to a Luchesi/Beethoven co-operation on these two cantatas and the more one looks at it the more I am sure this is the correct solution."
"Taboga believes that virtually every symphony by Joseph Hadyn was actually composed by either Luchesi or another Italian composer. He also believes that many symphonies by Mozart were also written by the same composers. These opinions are so improbable and so enormous that I have personally rejected them as untrue."
Stop saying we do not have a shred of evidence Beethoven wrote these cantatas, that is a lie and we have provided it. The truth is you do not have a shred of evidence Luchesi wrote them. If you had a sketch in Luchesi's handwriting, if you had Luchesi's name on the title page, if you had two witness statements, if you had a work written later by Luchesi that used the same material, indeed if you had just one of these you would claim it as indisputable proof - we have all of this for Beethoven.
I will have no problem accepting Luchesi wrote the cantatas when you can prove it, otherwise there is no more to be said. Ranting that he wrote them is not proof, we need manuscripts, letters contemporary accounts as we do actually have in the case of Beethoven.
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'Man know thyself'
[This message has been edited by Peter (edited 01-08-2006).]
What are you talking about? We haven't discovered a new cantata by Beethoven - you are assuming there is another one. You come up with a theory to explain away the evidence and claim it as fact, so flimsy is your whole Luchesi argument regarding not just this but Mozart and Haydn equally.
You even try to misrepresent the Bonn court by claiming it was second in importance to Rome. According to Marek "Bonn was a small town. It pretended to the graces of Paris, to the self-importance of Berlin, and to the ceremonial splendour of papal Rome. It succeeded in being none of these. It was really just a provincial town which gave itself airs because it was the seat of a prince of the church and the capital of a small land called the 'Electorate of Cologne', one of the many states that made up the holy Roman Empire."
May I remind you of your recent and past inconsistancies -
"I am entirely open to a Luchesi/Beethoven co-operation on these two cantatas and the more one looks at it the more I am sure this is the correct solution."
"Taboga believes that virtually every symphony by Joseph Hadyn was actually composed by either Luchesi or another Italian composer. He also believes that many symphonies by Mozart were also written by the same composers. These opinions are so improbable and so enormous that I have personally rejected them as untrue."
Stop saying we do not have a shred of evidence Beethoven wrote these cantatas, that is a lie and we have provided it. The truth is you do not have a shred of evidence Luchesi wrote them. If you had a sketch in Luchesi's handwriting, if you had Luchesi's name on the title page, if you had two witness statements, if you had a work written later by Luchesi that used the same material, indeed if you had just one of these you would claim it as indisputable proof - we have all of this for Beethoven.
I will have no problem accepting Luchesi wrote the cantatas when you can prove it, otherwise there is no more to be said. Ranting that he wrote them is not proof, we need manuscripts, letters contemporary accounts as we do actually have in the case of Beethoven.
------------------
'Man know thyself'
[This message has been edited by Peter (edited 01-08-2006).]
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