Mozart, Beethoven...and Haydn. The Big 3. Beethoven is at the top of a lot of people's mountain, including mine. Mozart is considered a miracle of western art. But what to make of Papa Haydn, the nice guy in the powdered wig? Many of us know he invented the string quartet and the symphony but respect his place in history rather than actually listen to his music. I know I mostly felt like he wanted to be Mozart when he grew up, and I'm sure I'm not the only one.
That all changed when I decided to make Haydn one of my COVID projects. I listened to all the symphonies and all the string quartets and it turned my musical world upside down. Now my position is he is not just important but as interesting, creative and inventive as any composer who ever lived. JMO, but you'd be crazy to disagree

. He was famously friends with Mozart, and they clearly and great respect for each other. And the thing with Haydn is, in addition to everything else he was a very shrewd judge of talent. When he heard Mozart's piano concertos and operas he stopped writing his own, because he knew he couldn't compete. He also knew Mozart's symphonies and string quartets (some of which were dedicated to him), and continued to write his own until the very end of life, because he knew his were every bit as good (if not better...).
Pick a few "random" symphonies and you'll likely be amazed at how individual, creative and just plain good they are.

On CD, from the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra Box. Anything the OCO has recorded is well worth listening to.