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"One could almost get the impression that Leopold said to his son, 'Look, you've written this crazy concerto movement, try to do it better, a little bit more concise,' and as a result we ended up with this prelude-like movement," he said. Posthumous discoveries of Mozart pieces are rare but not unheard of. In September, Leisinger announced that a French library had found a previously unknown piece handwritten by Mozart. That work, described as the preliminary draft of a musical composition, was found in Nantes, in western France, as staff members went through the library's archives. Leisinger said the library contacted his foundation for help authenticating the work. The latest finds add "important details" to what we know about the young Mozart's work, said Christoph Wolff, professor of music history at Harvard University, who is also director of the Bach Archive in Leipzig, Germany.
"The Salzburg discovery offers significant insight into the earliest accomplishments of Mozart," Wolff said in an e-mail to The Associated Press. The Salzburg-based foundation, established in 1880 and a prime source for Mozart-related matters, seeks to preserve the composer's heritage and find new approaches for analyzing him. ___ On the Net: International Mozarteum Foundation: http://www.mozarteum.at/
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