baroque-lute  

[BAROQUE-LUTE] Re: performing aspects

Jorge Torres
Fri, 12 Oct 2007 17:58:22 -0700

Dear Henk:

Virtually everything that the German baroque lutenists did can be  
traced to the French, and vibrato is no exception.  Miolement is the  
term that was used by Robert de Visee to designate his symbol for  
vibrato.  In Mersenne the author (Basset) calls vibrato verre casse  
and says that it was used infrequently.  Mace calls it the Sting and  
also states that it was "not modish" these days (p.109).  After Mace  
it is not referred to in the literature for the French lute.  It is  
Visee who is the next to mention it in the context of plucked string  
practice in France.  In the preface to his Livre de guitarre he lists  
the ornament and notates it with a bold asterisk but does not discuss  
its execution.  (See Livre de guitarre, facsimile of 1682 Paris  
edition, Geneva, 1973).  This asterisk is the same symbol used for  
miolement in Saiz I.  For a discussion of the close relationship  
between Visee and Saiz I see Wallace Rave, "Remarks on Gallot  
Sources:  How They Differ." Journal of the Lute Society of America,  
vols. XX-XXI, 1987-1988 p. 87-105.  If one compares the places in  
Saiz I that use the asterisk and compare it in parallel place in  
Barbe one finds a slanted double cross used to designate what was an  
asterisk in Saiz I.  The inference seems to be that miolement was  
indicated in Barbe by the slanted double cross.

It is unfortunate that there are no 17th century French lute authors  
that discuss the ornament at all.  Nevertheless, vibrato seems to  
have enjoyed some popularity with the viol school that was evolving  
at around the time of Barbe and Saiz I.   For a comparitive  
discussion of the use of vibrato in the gambists' repertoire se  
Frederick Neumann, Ornamentation in Baroque and Post Baroque Music,  
(Princeton, 1978), p. 511-513.  In his 1685 publication Demachy says  
that the ornament for vibrato he calls tremblement sans appuyer is  
sometimes called miaullement.   It is possible that despite the  
statements made by Mersenne and Mace (vibrato going out of fashion),  
that vibrato was enjoying a revival in French instrumental practice  
at the end of the seventeenth century and the start of the eighteenth  
century.

Cheers,
Jorge

On Oct 12, 2007, at 3:59 PM, Henk Pakker wrote:

> I am wandering about the use of vibrato - as well as (Segovian)  
> pushing strings away - on baroque lute in e.g. the Weiss period.  
> Sure Weiss indicated explicit at certain passages the use of  
> vibrato, but how much more was it in use? When playing Weiss' music  
> more often you get the 'inner feeling' to 'vibrate' at certain  
> spots, etc. In "Performance on Lute, Guitar and Vihuela" (ISBN  
> 0-521-45528-6) I can't find any directions/explanations on this  
> matter. Impressions on this aspect are very welcome.
>
> Henk Pakker
>
> --
>
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Jorge Torres
Associate Professor of Music
237 Williams Center
Lafayette College
Easton, PA 18042
(610)330-5365
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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