Most of the infomation I have read, seems to place a lot of the Albinoni losses at Dresden. Why or how the manuscripts ended there, I don't know. I read that almost 40 Vivaldi violin concerti were destroyed in Dresden, and they were only sources. But Vivaldi's pupil Pisendel was in Dresden, so that explains that connection. Unsure why Albinoni would have had such a presence in library/archives.
 


 
On 4/10/06, Johannes Gebauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 10.04.2006 Kim Patrick Clow wrote:
> I have been recently reading about Albinoni. It's mentioned in many sources that more thank likely was as prolific as Vivaldi. But that many sources were destroyed in Dresden's bombing in 1944.

Are you sure this is about the Dresden bombing in 1944? Most of the
other stuff was destroyed in the 18th century, at least that's what I
always thought.

There must have been some kind of catalogue. Whether it was ever
complete is another question, and whether it has survived yet another.

Johannes
--
http://www.musikmanufaktur.com
http://www.camerata-berolinensis.de

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Kim Patrick Clow
"There's really only two types of music: good and bad." ~ Rossini
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