Robert... the problem with your theories is that you cite endless documents as proof of your position that no one except musicologists and music historians would care to investigate or refute. And yet you have not convinced the least percentage of those who are indeed experts in the field. Of course you counter that this is but proof of how ingrained the conspiracy is... which puts the anyone else in a no win situation... or rather you would have the non-expert audience take your word... the word of an amateur... over that of all the professionals and experts in the field. If you had indisputable proof as to the falsehood of Mozart's achievements... or even enough proof to warrant serious doubts... there would be any number of academics jumping upon the information. But such is not the case. Until such time, I think I'll stick with the majority view of the "experts" in the field and believe that Mozart, Haydn, and Beethoven wrote most of what is attributed to them, Shakespeare wrote Hamlet, King Lear, Othello, etc... and Niel Armstrong walked on the moon.
By the way... I don't see how the notion that a single composer wrote all that is attributed to Mozart or Haydn can be imagined as any more fantastic than the notion that J.S. Bach wrote all that is attributed to him. Hell, Bach's oeuvre dwarfs that of Mozart and Haydn combined. 224 cantatas alone... and this is just what has come down to us. There may have been as many as 400. Two complete passions with a Passion of St. Luke and passion of St. Mark largely lost. Some 10-15 CDs worth of solo music for the organ. Bach (and Handel) far away overwhelm me in terms of their musical output and its consistent high quality.



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) needed to play Papageno. Marlis Peterson is a sweet and lovely voice to play Pamina... the love interest of the opera.






