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OC 54/54 Postal receipt for a package from Schenker to Drei Masken Verlag, dated January 2,
1926
Postal receipt for galley-proofs and engravings
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OC 54/55 Postal receipt for a package from Schenker to Drei Masken Verlag, dated January 7,
1926
Postal receipt for proofs
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OC 54/56 Typewritten letter from Alfred Böhme (DMV) to Schenker, dated January 14,
1926
Drei-Masken Verlag says that there are plans to publish the autograph manuscript
of Mozart’s Don Giovanni in facsimile. They are in the process of finishing the first
Meisterwerk Yearbook, note Schenker’s wish for wider Urlinie graphs in future
yearbooks.
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OC 54/57 Typewritten letter from DMV to Schenker, dated January 15, 1926
Drei Masken Verlag in Munich have now transferred all matters of production
concerning the first Meisterwerk Yearbook to their office in Vienna.
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OC 54/58 Typewritten letter from August Demblin and Alfred Einstein (DMV) to Schenker, dated
January 16, 1926
The facsimile edition of Mozart’s Don Giovanni will not be ready for some time; a
facsimile of Beethoven’s Op. 57 is planned, not by DMV but by a Paris
printing-house.
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OC 54/59 Typewritten letter from Alfred Böhme (DMV) to Schenker, dated January 21,
1926
Drei Masken Verlag announce that the second galley-proofs are on their way to Schenker and
explain that, owing to the complexity of the publication, it will take time to complete the
corrections to the text and the music examples.
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OC 54/60 Typewritten letter from Alfred Böhme (DMV) to Schenker, dated January 25,
1926
Drei Masken Verlag are sending Schenker the second galley-proofs for the first Meisterwerk
Yearbook, together with a separate printout of the music examples.
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OC 54/61 Double Postal Receipt for packages from Schenker to Drei Masken Verlag, dated
January 29, 1926
Postal receipt for the second set of page-proof corrections for the first Meisterwerk
Yearbook.
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OJ 11/54, [6] Handwritten letter from van Hoboken to Schenker, dated January 3, 1926
Van Hoboken sends New Year greetings; reports that he is to see in the Paris
Conservatory Library the autograph manuscript of Beethoven's "Appassionata" Sonata, which
Einstein has apparently already photographed; he will travel to Vienna on January 6 for lesson
on January 9.
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OJ 14/45, [50] Handwritten letter from Moriz Violin to Schenker, dated January 12, 1926
Violin asks Schenker if he would consider taking one of his pupils, Miss Agnes
Becker, as a pupil for the remainder of the teaching year.
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OJ 6/7, [27] Handwritten letter from Schenker to Moriz Violin, dated January 15, 1926
Schenker agrees to to teach Violin's pupil Agnes Becker twice a week, as soon
as she is ready to come to Vienna. He reports Furtwängler's disillusionment with modern
music, and notes that Weingartner and Julius Korngold have expressed similar sentiments. He
is not optimistic that humanity in general will truly understand the classics, which
underscores the important of his (and Violin's) mission.