I have listened to several of Schubert's works for stage (some of them fragmentary). There is some wonderful music there, for sure.
But this reminds me - a few years ago there was a big shop near Waterloo station in London that sold old vinyl records (classical and jazz). It was a huge place and you could find almost anything there. Some of it quite expensive in the end.
The old man told me that he had dealt with tens of thousands of records in his career there. I asked him if there was one piece of music that he, personally, rated above all others. He said, 'It doesn't need much thought to answer you - I've known it for decades' -
'Oh', I said, 'and what piece is that' ?
'Well, he said, 'all of Europe in the first decade of the 19th century was raving about Napoleon Bonaparte - but the greatest man in Europe at that time was virtually unknown outside of German speaking music circles - Beethoven - and the piece is of course 'Fidelio''
(He said he had listened to every available version and was still listening to 'Fidelio' almost every day)
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