Peanuts by Charles Schulz for February 09, 1954
Transcript:
Schroeder sits in the living-room listening to a record-player. Charlie Brown approaches and asks, "I like that record, Schroeder. What is it?"<BR><BR> Schreoder stands and replies, "Haydn's 'Toy Symphony'..." Charlie Brown continues, "Oh? Haydn wrote some nice things, didn't he?"<BR><BR> They sit and Schroeder responds, "Well, Haydn really didn't write this..Mozart did.." Charlie Brown replies, "I've always like Mozart..."<BR><BR> Schroeder, putting on another record, replies, "What I mean to say is...Mozart's father wrote it..." Charlie Brown develops a dark mood.<BR><BR>
Nuttypearls115 over 12 years ago
Make up your mind, Schroeder! Haydn, Mozart, of Mozart’s father?
RoofDog about 12 years ago
If Haydn was called Papa Haydn, and his father wrote a symphony, would we speak of Papa Haydn’s Papa?
nlars170 almost 12 years ago
Mozart’s father was Mozart too.
yow4zip Premium Member almost 11 years ago
Good ol’ Leopold.
Stormwyrm over 7 years ago
The authorship of the Toy Symphony (Cassation in G major for toys, 2 oboes, 2 horns, strings and continuo) has long been disputed. It was long thought to have been written by Joseph Haydn, then later scholarship suggested Mozart (which was why it was once assigned the Köchel number 63), and then later Mozart’s father Leopold, and it’s even been attributed to an Austrian monk named Edmund Angerer. It is likely that its true author will never be known.