Talk:Symphony No. 36 (Mozart)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Symphony No. 36 (Mozart) is within the scope of WikiProject Classical music, which aims to improve, expand, cleanup, and maintain all articles related to classical music, that aren't covered by other classical music related projects. Please read the guidelines for writing and maintaining articles. To participate, you can edit this article or visit the project page for more details.
This article is supported by the Compositions task force.

Will get the reference later, but Alfred Einstein notes that around the time of writing this symphony, Mozart copied out some of Joseph Haydn's symphonies' openings- one of which had a slow introduction (no. 75?)- the Linzer is the first of his symphonies to have one, and then he wrote a slow introduction for a Michael Haydn symphony for performance right afterwards, as noted in the link (the spurious "Mozart symphony no. 37"). May be a coincidence of course. Schissel | Sound the Note! 15:40, 2 October 2006 (UTC)