Ron Andrico
Tue, 22 Jul 2008 13:12:30 -0700
Daniel and all: I am not convinced those single dots always indicated use of the right-hand index finger. From the early prints of Spinacino on=2C I think the alternating dots were just a way of keeping track of strong-weak beats in a long run of tablature ciphers. We have seen that ornamentation signs meant different things to different printers and copyists=2C it should come as no surprise that fingering dots served different functions. Lute News Number 81 (April 2007) contains a transcription of a talk given by Bob Barto on the use of the right-hand ring finger in the music of Weiss. He seems to have drawn no conclusions but offers several interesting ideas. On the subject of fingerstyle guitarists=2C Doc Watson=2C Merle Travis=2C Etta Baker=2C John Jackson and doubtless others all played (or in the case of Doc=2C still play) with thumb and index finger. They seemed to do OK without embracing the modern classical guitar technique of using the ring finger. Best=2C Ron Andrico www.mignarda.com> Date: Tue=2C 22 Jul 2008 10:16:43 -0700> To: lute@cs.dartmouth.edu> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: [LUTE] Re: Piccinini's rolls> > That's not the only funny fingering he uses. > Toccata XX for liuto has index > finger dots going > down to the 10 course in a bass run that finally > ends > on the 12th course. Has anyone tried to play > it that way? I have also noted > other ring finger > allergy cases- from the usual suspects of 17th > Century > France to the late blues virtuoso > Reverend Gary Davis (OT alert! Guitar!). > Even > Weiss eschews the ring finger in spots where I > would tend to use it- > unfortunately unlearning > automatic ring finger usage is one thing I can't > > do- even with early Renaissance thumb under=2C > planted pinky- but just four > note chords in those > instances.> > > > -- > > > > To get on or off this > list see list information at> > http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html _________________________________________________________________ Keep your kids safer online with Windows Live Family Safety. http://www.windowslive.com/family_safety/overview.html?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_family_safety_072008 --