If you want to explore more Scottish lute music I recommend Balcarres.
In the next LSA Quarterly I have an article that includes music from
Balcarres. There will be more pieces in our new Figital Music
Supplement, both in the original d-minor tuning and transcribed to
10-course vielle ton.
Nancy
Of course Da Milano, but if you have ten courses under the fingers, try
the Scottish lute music, Rowallan, Straloch... !
V.
> Message du 04/12/17 21:21
> De : "Tristan von Neumann" <tristanvonneum...@gmx.de>
> A : "lutelist Net" <lute@cs.dartmouth.edu>
> Copie à :
> Objet : [LUTE] Rewarding Renaissance Lute repertoire
>
> Here's a poll for Renaissance Lutists -
>
> what do you consider most rewarding to play in terms of
playability
> combined with beauty?
> So far, I love Francesco da Milano and most anonymous pieces from
the
> Siena Ms., they never get tiresome and lie gently on the hands.
> Also Hans Neusiedler and Luis Milan.
> Not in this category: Albert de Rippe. Amazing music, but
honestly, did
> this guy have six fingers on each hand??
>
> What are your favourites? Is there any obscure repertoire to
discover?
>
>
>
> To get on or off this list see list information at
> http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
>
--
--
Nancy Carlin
Administrator THE LUTE SOCIETY OF AMERICA
http://LuteSocietyofAmerica.org
PO Box 6499
Concord, CA 94524
USA
925 / 686-5800
www.groundsanddivisions.info
www.nancycarlinassociates.com