Thank you Arthur!
I hope this will be available in our local musicology department, since
the head is an avid lute player.
Have You played any of those hard to get pieces?
My level at the moment lets me play Siena No. 20 comfortably, also the
one in Donauschingen is ok for me. The others are still too tricky for me.
:)
T*
Am 14.07.2018 um 23:33 schrieb Arthur Ness:
You're in luck, Tristan. Richard Falkenstein, the recently retired
editor of JLSA, has an excellent SUNY/Buffalo master's thesis on
Pierino* Fiorentino, Francesco's well known student and disciple. Most
of it (except for Rick's complete edition of his works) appears also in
JLSA 34 (2001): 37-100. He lists the complete sources and modern
editions. Also see Rick's "Perino Fiorentino and the Dentices: A
Poliical Fantasy and the Siena Lute Book," JLSA 44 (2011): 1-46.
*The spelling stems from a typo on the titlepage of the 1566 Dorico
print (/*recte*/ 1546: M. D. XLVI, not M. D. LXVI). Later "Pierino" is
also used. See Rick's footnote 1 (page 37). His gravestone also reads
"Pierino."<sigh> Rick had access to the unique Dorico print, edited by
Pierino himself.
Arthur Ness
arthurjn...@verizon.net
-----Original Message-----
From: Tristan von Neumann <tristanvonneum...@gmx.de>
To: lutelist Net <lute@cs.dartmouth.edu>
Sent: Sat, Jul 14, 2018 1:37 pm
Subject: [LUTE] Perino Fiorentino
Dear Lutists,
whenever I (at least try to) play Perino, it's such a magical
experience. I really like this guy.
Is there any source I may have overlooked, apart from the Francesco
collection and the Siena Lute Book?
Thanks:)
To get on or off this list see list information at
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
<http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/%7Ewbc/lute-admin/index.html>