Musical hoax

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A musical hoax (also musical forgery and musical mystification) is a piece of music composed by an individual or group who intentionally misattribute it to someone else.[1]

Musical hoaxes ascribed to historical figures

Henri Casadesus

Marius Casadesus

Samuel Dushkin

  • Grave for violin and orchestra by "Johann Georg Benda"[2]

François-Joseph Fétis

  • Lute Concerto by "Valentin Strobel"

Remo Giazotto

Mikhail Goldstein

Arthur Hutchings

Fritz Kreisler[4]

Winfried Michel

Édouard Nanny[5]

Alessandro Parisotti

Manuel Ponce[citation needed]

Vladimir Vavilov

  • Ave Maria by Anonymous; The piece later received an unrelated misattribution to Giulio Caccini.
  • Elegy for guitar by "Mikhail Vyssotsky"
  • Kanzona for lute by "Francesco Canova da Milano"
  • Mazurka in C minor for guitar by "Andrey Sykhra"
  • Nocturne in C minor for guitar by "Vassily Sarenko"
  • Ricercar by "Niccolo Nigrino"

Ascribed to non-existent or purported historical individuals

  • Hans Keller and Susan Bradshaw
  • Winfried Michel
    • Chamber music by "Giovanni Paolo Simonetti"[citation needed]
  • Roman Turovsky-Savchuk
    • Works for baroque lute by Johann Joachim Sautscheck, Gotthold Ephraim Sautscheck, Konradin Aemilius Sautscheck, et al.[citation needed]
    • Works for renaissance lute by Ioannes Leopolita and Jacobus Olevsiensis"[citation needed]
  • Rohan Kriwaczek
    • Works for solo violin, ascribed to various fictional English "funeral violinists".[citation needed]

References

  1. Dan Hill. "Musical Crimes: Forgery, Deceit, and Socio-Hermeneutics". Archived from the original on September 18, 2008. Retrieved February 28, 2013. 
  2. Lebermann W. Apokryph, "Plagiat, Korruptel oder Falsifikat?" Musikforschung 20 (1967): 413–25.
  3. Arthur Hutchings, "Personal View: 2. Du Côté de chez Zak", Musical Times 102, no. 1424 (October 1961): 623–24. Citation on p. 623.
  4. Library of Congress Fritz Kreisler Collection
  5. Rodney Slatford, "Review: Domenico Dragonetti in England (1794-1846): The Career of a Double Bass Virtuoso" Music & Letters 80, no. 2 (May 1999): 297–99
  6. Andrew Porter, "Zak's 'Mobile'", The Musical Times 123, no. 1671 (May 1982): 319.
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