FOOTNOTES:[62]L. Piquot:Notice sur la vie et les ouvrages de Luigi Boccherini; Paris, 1851.[63]These are Nos. 1-18, inclusive, in Pohl’s index. The opus numbers by which Haydn’s quartets are usually designated are taken from the thematic index prefixed to the complete Trautwein Edition of 1844. These first quartets are: Opus 1, Nos. 1-6; opus 2, Nos. 1-6; and opus 3, Nos. 1-6.[64]C. F. Pohl: ‘Joseph Haydn,’ Vol. I, p. 331.[65]Eugène Sauzay:Étude sur le quatuor. Paris, 1861.[66]Cf.C. F. Pohl:op. cit., Vol. II, p. 293.[67]Étude sur le quatuor.[68]Adagio, allegro, minuetto. The finale rondo was added some years later.Cf.‘W. A. Mozart,’ by de Wyzewa and de Saint-Foix: Paris, 1912.[69]Cf.Wyzewa and Saint-Foix:op cit.Gassmann was born in Bohemia in 1723 and died in Vienna in 1774. A great many of his works in manuscript are in the libraries at Milan. He had been appointed to a place in Vienna in 1762, and was hardly likely, therefore, to be in Milan when Mozart was; but he had lived at one time in Milan and came back there occasionally from Vienna to superintend performances of his operas.
FOOTNOTES:[62]L. Piquot:Notice sur la vie et les ouvrages de Luigi Boccherini; Paris, 1851.[63]These are Nos. 1-18, inclusive, in Pohl’s index. The opus numbers by which Haydn’s quartets are usually designated are taken from the thematic index prefixed to the complete Trautwein Edition of 1844. These first quartets are: Opus 1, Nos. 1-6; opus 2, Nos. 1-6; and opus 3, Nos. 1-6.[64]C. F. Pohl: ‘Joseph Haydn,’ Vol. I, p. 331.[65]Eugène Sauzay:Étude sur le quatuor. Paris, 1861.[66]Cf.C. F. Pohl:op. cit., Vol. II, p. 293.[67]Étude sur le quatuor.[68]Adagio, allegro, minuetto. The finale rondo was added some years later.Cf.‘W. A. Mozart,’ by de Wyzewa and de Saint-Foix: Paris, 1912.[69]Cf.Wyzewa and Saint-Foix:op cit.Gassmann was born in Bohemia in 1723 and died in Vienna in 1774. A great many of his works in manuscript are in the libraries at Milan. He had been appointed to a place in Vienna in 1762, and was hardly likely, therefore, to be in Milan when Mozart was; but he had lived at one time in Milan and came back there occasionally from Vienna to superintend performances of his operas.
FOOTNOTES:
[62]L. Piquot:Notice sur la vie et les ouvrages de Luigi Boccherini; Paris, 1851.
[62]L. Piquot:Notice sur la vie et les ouvrages de Luigi Boccherini; Paris, 1851.
[63]These are Nos. 1-18, inclusive, in Pohl’s index. The opus numbers by which Haydn’s quartets are usually designated are taken from the thematic index prefixed to the complete Trautwein Edition of 1844. These first quartets are: Opus 1, Nos. 1-6; opus 2, Nos. 1-6; and opus 3, Nos. 1-6.
[63]These are Nos. 1-18, inclusive, in Pohl’s index. The opus numbers by which Haydn’s quartets are usually designated are taken from the thematic index prefixed to the complete Trautwein Edition of 1844. These first quartets are: Opus 1, Nos. 1-6; opus 2, Nos. 1-6; and opus 3, Nos. 1-6.
[64]C. F. Pohl: ‘Joseph Haydn,’ Vol. I, p. 331.
[64]C. F. Pohl: ‘Joseph Haydn,’ Vol. I, p. 331.
[65]Eugène Sauzay:Étude sur le quatuor. Paris, 1861.
[65]Eugène Sauzay:Étude sur le quatuor. Paris, 1861.
[66]Cf.C. F. Pohl:op. cit., Vol. II, p. 293.
[66]Cf.C. F. Pohl:op. cit., Vol. II, p. 293.
[67]Étude sur le quatuor.
[67]Étude sur le quatuor.
[68]Adagio, allegro, minuetto. The finale rondo was added some years later.Cf.‘W. A. Mozart,’ by de Wyzewa and de Saint-Foix: Paris, 1912.
[68]Adagio, allegro, minuetto. The finale rondo was added some years later.Cf.‘W. A. Mozart,’ by de Wyzewa and de Saint-Foix: Paris, 1912.
[69]Cf.Wyzewa and Saint-Foix:op cit.Gassmann was born in Bohemia in 1723 and died in Vienna in 1774. A great many of his works in manuscript are in the libraries at Milan. He had been appointed to a place in Vienna in 1762, and was hardly likely, therefore, to be in Milan when Mozart was; but he had lived at one time in Milan and came back there occasionally from Vienna to superintend performances of his operas.
[69]Cf.Wyzewa and Saint-Foix:op cit.Gassmann was born in Bohemia in 1723 and died in Vienna in 1774. A great many of his works in manuscript are in the libraries at Milan. He had been appointed to a place in Vienna in 1762, and was hardly likely, therefore, to be in Milan when Mozart was; but he had lived at one time in Milan and came back there occasionally from Vienna to superintend performances of his operas.