Talk:Musikalisches Würfelspiel

Authenticity
In a textbook I am reading for an AI course that discusses Mozart's game, it says that while there was at one time dispute over whether or not he wrote it, that now most scholars agree that he did. This book is copyrighted 2006, so I assume it is an up-to-date reference. The source is:

Levy, David. "Robots Unlimited." Wellesly, MA: A.K. Peters, 2006. 51.

Does anyone know of any newer or contradictory sources that can be considered reliable?

JKillah 23:03, 30 March 2006 (UTC)


 * (Piranha1986 17:17, 4 February 2007 (UTC)).


 * I included a similar reference from David Cope's book on Experiments in Musical Intelligence, but that book came out ten years before the other one. I also have no idea how to link the citation so I used mention in in MLA-like syntax.
 * Csimokat 15 May 2008.

RF20190424 Is this article right? IMSLP seems to have just one piece like this, as K516f, published by Simrock in 1793 (according to IMSLP). K294 seems to be something entirely different. K516f appears to use short fragments, not two bar ones. There are detailed instructions, and mention of dice. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 176.24.64.222 (talk) 23:19, 23 April 2019 (UTC)

Software
The software linked (http://sunsite.univie.ac.at/Mozart/dice/) is now no longer functioning, however others have made different implentations https://rbnrpi.wordpress.com/2016/01/20/a-third-visit-to-mozarts-dice-generated-minuet-using-sonic-pi/ )