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Symphony No. 27 (Haydn) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Symphony No. 27 (Haydn) Joseph Haydn's Symphony No. 27 in G major (Hoboken I/27) was probably written before 1760. Its chronological position was assigned by Eusebius Mandyczewski in 1907.〔Published in ''Joseph Haydns Werke: erste kritische durchgesehene Gesamtausgabe''〕 Although later adopted by Hoboken, Robbins Landon has subsequently revised the work's likely chronological position 〔HC Robbins Landon, Haydn: Chronicle and Works, 5 vols, (Bloomington and London: Indiana University Press, 1976-) v. 1, Haydn: the Early Years, 1732-1765, 280-294.〕 and now believes that the symphony is one of Haydn's earliest, written at roughly the same time as symphonies nos. 15–18. Haydn himself may have labeled the symphony his 16th, although this remains unclear.〔 ==Nickname (Hermannstädter)== In 1946, a copy of the symphony was discovered in the summer palace of Baron Samuel von Brukenthal near the city of Hermannstadt (now Sibiu in Romania). Originally thought to be an original discovery, the symphony briefly acquired the nickname ''Hermannstädter'' after it was recorded under that title by the Romanian Philharmonic State Orchestra.〔〔. Other related nicknames associated with this find are "Brukenthal" and "Symphony of Sibiu".〕 Because of the political climate in Eastern Europe following the Second World War, it was some time before musicologists were able to examine the find and realize that the manuscript was a copy of a work that had already been published by Breitkopf & Hartel in 1907.〔
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