Commentary
This previously unknown advertisement by Viennese music copyist and dealer Lorenz Lausch offers an arrangement for eight-part Harmonie of Mozart’s Le nozze di Figaro. The arrangement is attributed to Johann Nepomuk Went (Wendt), oboist in the orchestra of the Viennese court theater and a member of the Harmonie band of Emperor Joseph II. Lausch is already known to have advertised Went’s arrangement of Figaro in the Wiener Zeitung on 27 Aug 1791 (Dokumente, 352). However, the advertisement transcribed above shows that Lausch was offering the arrangement two years earlier than had previously been realized. Lausch’s advertisement of 22 Aug 1789 was first published in a modern edition by Edge (2001, 2081–2 and Appendix H, 2416).
Went’s arrangement of Figaro survives. RISM lists two complete sets of parts explicitly attributed to Went: one in the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek (Mus.Schott.As 3499) and the other in Český Krumlov (39a K I). The latter set, from the collection of Prince Schwarzenberg, includes parts for two English horns, rather than for two clarinets (as in the emperor’s Harmonie), reflecting the different instrumentation of Schwarzenberg’s band. Bastiaan Blomhert (1987, 47) discusses an unattributed set of parts for what is apparently the same arrangement stemming from the Hofbibliothek in Donaueschingen (now in the Badische Landesbibliothek, Don Mus.Ms. 1394; the parts for Harmonie are mixed together with an independent set of parts for Figaro arranged for string quartet). Went’s Harmonie arrangement of Figaro has been published in two volumes by Musica Rara, based on a source from the Pitti collection, now in the conservatory library in Florence (I-Fc, P. 329).
Lausch’s advertisement of Figaro appears to have been timed to take advantage of the first revival of the opera by the court theater; the revival premiered on 29 Aug 1789, exactly one week after the advertisement. In this same advertisement, Lausch also offers Went’s arrangement for Harmonie of Salieri’s operas Axur, re d’Ormus and Il Talismano. The other works in the advertisement include three string quartets by Johann Baptist Vanhal and six variations for keyboard by Ignaz Pleyel.
On Lausch, see Edge (2001, 2075–88) as well as our entry for 8 Jul 1784 regarding Lausch’s advertisement in Das Wienerblättchen on that date. For other advertisements by Lausch on our site, see our entries for 30 Oct 1784 and 9 Oct 1790.