In July I was asked by Disney to appear in an episode of the show Andi
   Mack. They needed a lute player for a big Ren  Faire scene. I
   wascontracted to play the Gianoncelli Bergamesca on camera. It was
   great fun and I used a 15 course archlute. I was in two scenes. Tge
   episode will air in the fall.

   Sterling

   Sent from my Verizon, Samsung Galaxy smartphone

   -------- Original message --------
   From: Alain Veylit <al...@musickshandmade.com>
   Date: 9/6/17 8:51 PM (GMT-07:00)
   To: lutelist Net <Lute@cs.dartmouth.edu>
   Subject: [LUTE] Re: Wolf Hall

   Pride and Prejudice 2005 - luteless, but the ball scenes and costumes
   were well-researched. I once played with a gambist whose instrument had
   been made for one of the Errol Flynn movies.
   On 09/06/2017 07:16 PM, Edward C. Yong wrote:
   >     Good dramas with proper period music that come to mind:
   >     1) The 1994 film Nostradamus. It had a scene of a country
   theatre, and
   >     the music accompanying was Susato, with an onstage band of
   instruments
   >     (unfortunately including a metal flute). Soundtrack also included
   >     Josquin, etc.
   >     2) The TV series The Borgias had plenty of Renaissance music,
   even if
   >     most of it was about 100 years too late, but that's better than
   most
   >     productions anyway. I was asked to do a bit of musical detective
   work
   >     and the findings are here:
   >
   [1]http://www.3pp.website/2013/02/the-borgias-musical-background.html
   >     3) The 1995 film Restoration. Lots of Purcell, even if much was
   >     arranged for modern orchestra.
   >     4) The 1994 film The Madness of King George. Lots of Haendel,
   mostly
   >     arranged for modern orchestra.
   >
   >     On 6 September 2017 at 23:41, Rainer
   <[2]rads.bera_g...@t-online.de>
   >     wrote:
   >
   >       A bit late (after 2.5 years) :) - I seem to have missed it in
   2015.
   >       I wonder if the serial really was such a success.
   >       I have watched (in German) all 6 episodes on the German/French
   >       [sic!] TV channel Arte recently.
   >       Apparently at least 50% of the population suffered from
   depression
   >       in those days.
   >       How Cromwell survived 6 episodes without committing suicide is
   an
   >       enigma.
   >       Rainer
   >       PS
   >       This reminds me of "Shakespeare in Love" which I recently
   watched a
   >       second time on German TV - with very mixed feelings :)
   >       Of course there are many weird ideas. The queen would never
   enter a
   >       public theatre.
   >       Question to the English members: Do most (Many?) people
   understand
   >       those "hidden" jokes?
   >       I really liked the scene with Webster.
   >        On 22.01.2015 00:39, WALSH STUART wrote:
   >
   >       (first episode of much-hyped TV series in UK)
   >       I was expecting an immediate response...
   >       So anyway, here goes: music begins with Ah Robin (not sung -
   and
   >       probably played on a lute?)...melds into Glassy instrumental
   stuff.
   >       A tremolando mandoline churns out all the plucked expressive
   work,
   >       although lutes figure in the mise-en-scene from time to time.
   >       Mark Rylance is a very curious being.
   >       ---
   >       This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus
   software.
   >       [3]http://www.avast.com
   >       To get on or off this list see list information at
   >       [4]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
   >
   >     --
   >
   > References
   >
   >     1.
   http://www.3pp.website/2013/02/the-borgias-musical-background.html
   >     2. mailto:rads.bera_g...@t-online.de
   >     3. http://www.avast.com/
   >     4. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
   >

Reply via email to