FOR USE EXCLUSIVELY WITH STORIES ON EDLINGER'S PAINTINGA portrait of Austrian Composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) by German painter Johann Edlinger hangs in Berlin's Gemaeldegalerie 20 December 2005. The portrait, painted in 1790, is allegedly the last depiction of Mozart before his death. The painting was re-discovered in 1999, and has sparked controversy as not all specialists believe it depicts the Austrian composer. AFP PHOTO JOHN MACDOUGALL
Cover A painting of Austrian composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) by German painter Johann Edlinger. An original score of two minuets composed by Mozart when he was just 16 will be put up for auction in Paris later this month. © AFP PHOTO JOHN MACDOUGALL

An original score of two minuets composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart when he was just 16 are to be put up for auction in Paris later this month, Sotheby's said on Thursday.

The asking price for the handwritten score dating from 1772 has been set at 150,000-200,000 euros ($166,000-220,000), the auction house said.

It goes on sale on November 18.

"It's the only version," said Simon Maguire, a specialist in musical manuscripts at Sotheby's in London.

"Mozart always wrote first versions" without subsequently reworking them, "unlike Beethoven who revised (his scores) endlessly," the expert told AFP.

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FOR USE EXCLUSIVELY WITH STORIES ON EDLINGER'S PAINTINGA portrait of Austrian Composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) by German painter Johann Edlinger hangs in Berlin's Gemaeldegalerie 20 December 2005. The portrait, painted in 1790, is allegedly the last depiction of Mozart before his death. The painting was re-discovered in 1999, and has sparked controversy as not all specialists believe it depicts the Austrian composer. AFP PHOTO JOHN MACDOUGALL
Above A portrait of Austrian Composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) by German painter Johann Edlinger hangs in Berlin's Gemaeldegalerie 20 December 2005. The portrait, painted in 1790, is allegedly the last depiction of Mozart before his death. The painting was re-discovered in 1999, and has sparked controversy as not all specialists believe it depicts the Austrian composer. AFP PHOTO JOHN MACDOUGALL

The minuets -- which are types of dances -- have never been published and the autograph score contains a few corrections and minor modifications, including one or two that might be in the hand of Mozart's father, Leopold.

The manuscript was kept in Salzburg by the composer's sister, Nannerl, and later found its way into the vast collection of Austrian writer Stefan Zweig, who was "a legendary collector of musical fragments, notably those by Mozart," Maguire said.

The score, the only one of the composer's "Six Minuets K.164" to still be in private hands, are being sold as part of the library of the eminent Swiss bibliophile, Jean-Francois Chaponniere.

Mozart, a child prodigy, began composing at a very early age under his father's guidance.

According to Sotheby's, "dancing itself too was a great passion of the composer, to such an extent that (his wife) Constanze Mozart could remark... 'as great as Mozart's genius was, he was an enthusiast in dancing, and often said that his taste lay in that art, rather than in music'."

On November 27 and 28, a portrait of the 13-year-old Mozart is also going up for sale at rival auction house, Christie's, again in Paris.

It is one of the very rare contemporary portraits of the composer still in private hands and the bidding price has been set at 800,000-1.2 million euros.