Well Yanni, I'm accused one minute of 'Hang it on Venice' and the next minute I am accused of 'Hang it on the Jesuits' ! I must be getting close to the truth, right ?
Since we are discussing Venice and Mozart's career you will tell us next that Mozart and his father did not spend time in their tour of Venice....
Against my repeated advise that Venice (+1797) and Florence (+1730's) were never in the best of terms with Rome's Jesuits (and that both were, in any case, irrelevant at the time of Mozart's manufacture, as from 1814, "Rule Britannia" era), you have indeed been "hanging it" on Venice and the Jesuits both, while carefully avoiding Florence, seat of the first italian "english freemasonry lodge" around 1730's.
Funny thing about truth, how "personnal", how subjective, it always is, how people's fixations or private interests affect it.
"Everybody has his individual truth" sort-of and, wrongly assuming you are seeking a "common british truth" or, even better, a "global people's truth unchanged thru the ages", I did my best to provide you with food for thought in my previous, re "public debt vs gdp" at the time of Shakespeare's Shylock and his "Merchant of Venice" to compare with same, two centuries later, when Mozart's manufacture started by his early "biographers" (including, as some say, Mozart himself, ie Georg Nic. Nissen, Mozart's first biographer, lookalike and next husband of his widow).
Because, you see, a very much "universal people's truth unchanged thru the ages" is "hunger" and what "common people"-like Mozart-do to avoid it!
You chose to ignore all that to put forward instead a Mr Bonelli's "truth", "a "fraternising occulist" as per your previous definition, cut furthermore to size to fit your contoversial fixations/intentions!
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http://www.freemasonrytoday.com/10/p08.php)
No, you are not "getting close to it", in fact you are doing your best to avoid it, everything possible to get away from your own subject, ie "The manufacture of Mozart".
What you should be really answering at this stage is :How trustworthy are the already disputed "Nissen & Constance" data concerning in particular Mozart performing privately for "Gluck", 1782 in Vienna?
My opera was performed again yesterday, this time at the request of Gluck. Gluck paid me many compliments on it. I am to dine with him tomorrow. (Vienna, August 7, 1782, to his father.
[How Mozart and Gluck differed in principle on the relation between text and music the reader has already had an opportunity to learn. H.E.K.]) "Mozart: The man and the artist as revealed in his own words by Friedrich Kerst , translated by Henry Edward Krehbiel".
18th January 1783: Gluck writes allegedly from Vienna he will be unable to travel to Paris for illhealth and reduces the fee for his French Danaides (Calzabiggi Ipermestra, the libretto translated in French by Gluck’s librettists, Du Roullet and Tscudi) suggesting Salieri cooperated with him,
a fact he later-on the premiere of Les Danaides in 1784-refused, leaving all glory to Salieri! (Antonio Salieri and Viennese Opera, John A. Rice).
(In same January: Weishaupt writes to Zwack how he would control The Scottish Orthodox Rite defining his enemies, the Rosicrucians and Les Philalethes.
Dec 1782-April 1783: Mozart changes house three times and then moves to Salzburg)
With a remarkable fondness for everything english at the time, Mozart, you see, somehow "inherited" Gluck's immense music archive, there is now no doubt about it, and had every reason to cover the fact. My question, ie for me only to answer, is "what else he did to secure it, what hold he had on "Gluck",
who was not in Vienna throughout 1782 and early 1783, that forced perhaps "Gluck" kill his alias "comte de Saint Germain" in 1784"?
(And what else did "Gluck" lose due to his association with the Mozarts?)
Cheers!