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Why Did the Handwriting in This 248-Year-Old Notebook Look Familiar? It Turned Out to Be a Forgotten Mozart Manuscript
Key takeaways
- Ellen Wexler | Writer and Special Projects Editor
- The 44-page volume contained seven handwritten pieces of music for flute and harp.
- Goy, a curator at the National Library of France, found the pages in a stack of some 20 anonymous manuscripts in February.
Ellen Wexler | Writer and Special Projects Editor
Add as preferred source The Mozart notebook was found in a stack of roughly 20 manuscripts at the National Library of France. Kenzo Tribouillard / AFP via Getty Images As he leafed through the notebook, François-Pierre Goy couldn’t shake the feeling that he’d seen something like it before.
The 44-page volume contained seven handwritten pieces of music for flute and harp. Judging by the penmanship, they appeared to be the work of two composers. One of them had scribbled out musical notation in a familiar manner.
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