Hans:

You may be right about Rosetti, but Landon lists him as a violinist, based on 
his Eszterhazy contract, so I went along with his entry (pp77f). He does have 
Rosetti (I'm sure we're talking about the same guy) leaving Eszterhaza 
(apparently not willingly) in 1781, subsequently serving  in the court of the 
Prince of Oettingen-Wallerstein, where he rose to be Capellmeister 
(Kapellmeister). Landon has him dying in Ludwigslust in 1792. Perhaps he played 
contrabass as well, since most of the players hired by Haydn doubled and 
tripled on various instruments?

Greetings from Seattle where the weather has been cloudless and sunny for the 
last few days---Gott sei Dank!

Richard in Seattle 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  To: 'The Horn List' 
  Sent: Sunday, February 20, 2005 10:48 PM
  Subject: RE: [Hornlist] Haydn/Rosetti Double Concerto


  Hello Richard,

  Aren�t you mixing up things a bit ?   Rosetti was a
  contrabassist & not a violinist & he was engaged with
  Oettingen Wallerstein from 1773 until he moved to
  Ludwigslust-Schwerin a year before his death 1792.

  And the Haydn Concerto question ? There is a lot of "mixage"
  by the musicologists. The Steinmuellers (I have a full set
  of a concert for one horn composed by one of the
  Steinmuellers) were great virtuosi indeed, but there was
  also Anton FRANZ (also a acclaimed baryton player) in
  Haydn�s orchestra. The confusion with the double concerto
  comes up again & again, due to the Haydn double concerto set
  in Oettingen-Wallerstein used as the source, as the original
  manuscript by Haydn was lost when the fire destroyed parts
  of Esterhazy castle. And due to the fact, that his brother
  Michael (Haydn) wrote a double concerto also, which was
  published by Klaas Weelink (KaWe) as of doubtful authorship
  (Antonio Rosetti) & rather by Michael Haydn. Hoboken quotes
  the incipit of a Joseph Haydn double concerto, but it does
  not match with the concerto in question nor with the M.Haydn
  attributed Rosetti No.II concerto. So the authorship
  question will remain open. Leave the concerto with Joseph
  Haydn, nothing speaks against it.

  There are total five double concertos by Rosetti (one is
  perhaps by Michael Haydn)

  Greetings from Munich

  Hans
  ============================================================
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  ==

  -----Original Message-----
  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
  Behalf Of Richard V. West
  Sent: Monday, February 21, 2005 6:06 AM
  To: The Horn List
  Subject: [Hornlist] Haydn/Rosetti Double Concerto

  Kyle:

  In checking H. C. Robbins Landon, I found the following
  citation regarding the Rosetti Double Concerto in "Haydn:
  Chronicle and Works," Volume 2, pp79f. It's in connection
  with a discussion of the three Steinmueller brothers, whose
  father was a horn player under Haydn at Eszterhaza. Landon
  quotes from Cramer's Magazine of 9 July 1784 in regards to a
  January 24 performance by the brothers (presumably in
  Hamburg): "One was already prejudiced in these virtuosi's
  favor, since they have a Haydn for Capellmeister, and was
  not disappointed; they turned out to be truly virtuosi,
  genuine connoisseurs of music and its melody and of their
  instrument. It is rare, very rare, that one can hear such
  clever men on this instrument at one time...They played a
  Double Concerto by Rosetti, and one for 3 horns by
  Hoffmeister..." Interestingly, Haydn himself was godfather
  to two of the brothers.

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