[BAROQUE-LUTE] New Recording

2014-05-05 Thread stephen arndt
   Dear Friends,

   I invite you to listen to my recording of Denis Gaultier's La
   rhA(c)torique des dieux on an Andreas von Holst 11-course lute strung
   entirely in pure gut (i.e., the basses are not gimped). Quite some time
   ago I recorded the first forty-three pieces and then put the project
   aside for well over a year owing to various reasons. Towards the end of
   last year I resumed it and recorded pieces forty-four to sixty-one but
   was very dissatisfied with my earlier recordings in terms of tempo and
   sound quality, so I redid them. I used the tablature available for free
   on Richard Civiol's site and took the Louis Pernot recordings as a
   model, arpeggiating chords where he did and attempting to imitate his
   ornaments.


   If you care to, you can listen to an individual piece by clicking on
   its title or to all pieces successively by using the playlist at the
   bottom of the page here:
   [1]http://www.verseandsong.com/song/baroque-lute-2/la-rhetorique-des-di
   eux/.  For those of you who do not know me, be forewarned: I am not a
   professional musician, and this is strictly an amateur endeavor.
   Nevertheless, I hope you will find it pleasant enough listening. Please
   feel free to explore my website by using the expandable menu on the
   left side of the page.


   I hope you will forgive my including off-topic information on another
   recent project of mine. I have revised my translation of Dante's Divine
   Comedy in iambic pentameter and terza rima and now offer it as a Kindle
   e-book. It is written in modern diction and normal syntax and strives
   to remain highly faithful to the sense of the original. Moreover, it is
   the only translation in the 400-year history of Dante translations into
   English to employ perfect rhyme throughout. If you are interested, you
   can find generous samples by clicking on the cover image at the
   following Amazon pages:


   The Inferno: [2]http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JQWNUXC

   The Purgatorio: [3]http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JRD2MPW

   The Paradsiso: [4]http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JS3B414

   The whole Divine Comedy: [5]http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JST98MK

   Best regards to all,

   Stephen Arndt



   --

References

   1. http://www.verseandsong.com/song/baroque-lute-2/la-rhetorique-des-dieux/
   2. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JQWNUXC
   3. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JRD2MPW
   4. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JS3B414
   5. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JST98MK


To get on or off this list see list information at
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html


[BAROQUE-LUTE] Re: New Recording

2014-05-05 Thread Rob MacKillop
I can highly recommend Stephen's translation of the Divine Comedy, as I've 
enjoyed a private copy for a number of years. I'm really pleased to see it 
available as an eBook, and will get a copy of that for my iPad.

Stephen, it is great to listen to your performances with pure gut strings. Can 
you tell us about your experience with them, pros and cons? And who made them? 
What string length and pitch? Etc ;-)

And thanks for recording the entire publication! Hearty congratulations for 
getting through it!

Rob

www.robmackillop.net 

 On 5 May 2014, at 15:33, stephen arndt stephenwar...@verizon.net wrote:
 
   Dear Friends,
 
   I invite you to listen to my recording of Denis Gaultier's La
   rhA(c)torique des dieux on an Andreas von Holst 11-course lute strung
   entirely in pure gut (i.e., the basses are not gimped). Quite some time
   ago I recorded the first forty-three pieces and then put the project
   aside for well over a year owing to various reasons. Towards the end of
   last year I resumed it and recorded pieces forty-four to sixty-one but
   was very dissatisfied with my earlier recordings in terms of tempo and
   sound quality, so I redid them. I used the tablature available for free
   on Richard Civiol's site and took the Louis Pernot recordings as a
   model, arpeggiating chords where he did and attempting to imitate his
   ornaments.
 
 
   If you care to, you can listen to an individual piece by clicking on
   its title or to all pieces successively by using the playlist at the
   bottom of the page here:
   [1]http://www.verseandsong.com/song/baroque-lute-2/la-rhetorique-des-di
   eux/.  For those of you who do not know me, be forewarned: I am not a
   professional musician, and this is strictly an amateur endeavor.
   Nevertheless, I hope you will find it pleasant enough listening. Please
   feel free to explore my website by using the expandable menu on the
   left side of the page.
 
 
   I hope you will forgive my including off-topic information on another
   recent project of mine. I have revised my translation of Dante's Divine
   Comedy in iambic pentameter and terza rima and now offer it as a Kindle
   e-book. It is written in modern diction and normal syntax and strives
   to remain highly faithful to the sense of the original. Moreover, it is
   the only translation in the 400-year history of Dante translations into
   English to employ perfect rhyme throughout. If you are interested, you
   can find generous samples by clicking on the cover image at the
   following Amazon pages:
 
 
   The Inferno: [2]http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JQWNUXC
 
   The Purgatorio: [3]http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JRD2MPW
 
   The Paradsiso: [4]http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JS3B414
 
   The whole Divine Comedy: [5]http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JST98MK
 
   Best regards to all,
 
   Stephen Arndt
 
 
 
   --
 
 References
 
   1. http://www.verseandsong.com/song/baroque-lute-2/la-rhetorique-des-dieux/
   2. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JQWNUXC
   3. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JRD2MPW
   4. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JS3B414
   5. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JST98MK
 
 
 To get on or off this list see list information at
 http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html




[BAROQUE-LUTE] Re: New Recording

2014-05-05 Thread stephen arndt
Thank you, Rob, for your kind words about my Dante work. I have revised it 
extensively since the version I sent you a number of years ago and made 
numerous improvements.


I see that the title of the work got garbled because of the acute accent on 
the e. I'm sure everyone figured out it is La rhetorique des dieux.


The string length on my Andreas von Holst 11-course is 67.5 centimeters; the 
strings are made by Damian Dlugolecki and tuned to A = 392. Andreas von 
Holst thought that the pure gut basses sounded terrible. I think they needed 
a little time to settle in, and now I think they sound good, but I shall let 
you all judge for yourselves. Some of you may not like them. I use a .46 on 
the top course, and it usually lasts three or four months. I haven't found 
any other stringmaker whose strings last that long.


As for pros and cons, the main advantage is simply the sound of gut. I think 
that even with my amateur technique the sound is both warm and clear for the 
most part. I find it difficult to maintain those qualities when the melody 
dips down into a lower register, which it does often enough in La 
rhetorique, but that is probably more a consequence of my playing than of 
the strings themselves. The main disadvantage is the instability of tuning. 
I record on a Fostex and get 7 minutes and 13 seconds worth at 48 Hz. If I 
don't get a good take in that time period (and I usually don't the first few 
times), the instrument will probably have gone out of tune, and I shall have 
to retune before the next take. I know that some people on the list perform 
in public on gut strings. I play at my wife's church once a month and use 
the New Nylgut strings for that. I can't imagine what a tuning nightmare 
playing on gut would be. That's about all I can say on that topic. Thanks 
for listening.


-Original Message- 
From: Rob MacKillop

Sent: Monday, May 05, 2014 11:21 AM
To: stephen arndt
Cc: baroque-lute mailing-list ; lute mailing list list
Subject: Re: [BAROQUE-LUTE] New Recording

I can highly recommend Stephen's translation of the Divine Comedy, as I've 
enjoyed a private copy for a number of years. I'm really pleased to see it 
available as an eBook, and will get a copy of that for my iPad.


Stephen, it is great to listen to your performances with pure gut strings. 
Can you tell us about your experience with them, pros and cons? And who made 
them? What string length and pitch? Etc ;-)


And thanks for recording the entire publication! Hearty congratulations for 
getting through it!


Rob

www.robmackillop.net

On 5 May 2014, at 15:33, stephen arndt stephenwar...@verizon.net 
wrote:


  Dear Friends,

  I invite you to listen to my recording of Denis Gaultier's La
  rhA(c)torique des dieux on an Andreas von Holst 11-course lute strung
  entirely in pure gut (i.e., the basses are not gimped). Quite some time
  ago I recorded the first forty-three pieces and then put the project
  aside for well over a year owing to various reasons. Towards the end of
  last year I resumed it and recorded pieces forty-four to sixty-one but
  was very dissatisfied with my earlier recordings in terms of tempo and
  sound quality, so I redid them. I used the tablature available for free
  on Richard Civiol's site and took the Louis Pernot recordings as a
  model, arpeggiating chords where he did and attempting to imitate his
  ornaments.


  If you care to, you can listen to an individual piece by clicking on
  its title or to all pieces successively by using the playlist at the
  bottom of the page here:
  [1]http://www.verseandsong.com/song/baroque-lute-2/la-rhetorique-des-di
  eux/.  For those of you who do not know me, be forewarned: I am not a
  professional musician, and this is strictly an amateur endeavor.
  Nevertheless, I hope you will find it pleasant enough listening. Please
  feel free to explore my website by using the expandable menu on the
  left side of the page.


  I hope you will forgive my including off-topic information on another
  recent project of mine. I have revised my translation of Dante's Divine
  Comedy in iambic pentameter and terza rima and now offer it as a Kindle
  e-book. It is written in modern diction and normal syntax and strives
  to remain highly faithful to the sense of the original. Moreover, it is
  the only translation in the 400-year history of Dante translations into
  English to employ perfect rhyme throughout. If you are interested, you
  can find generous samples by clicking on the cover image at the
  following Amazon pages:


  The Inferno: [2]http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JQWNUXC

  The Purgatorio: [3]http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JRD2MPW

  The Paradsiso: [4]http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JS3B414

  The whole Divine Comedy: [5]http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JST98MK

  Best regards to all,

  Stephen Arndt



  --

References

  1. 
http://www.verseandsong.com/song/baroque-lute-2/la-rhetorique-des-dieux/

  2. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JQWNUXC
  3. 

[BAROQUE-LUTE] Re: New Recording

2014-05-05 Thread Rob MacKillop
Well, I do like the sound you are making, and the basses sound good to my ears 
- very clear, and with little sustain, which is generally a good thing for open 
strings and moving bass lines. 

I do wonder though how thick the lowest strings must be, and what size of holes 
you must have in the bridge. 

Looking around the rest of your website, I'm astonished how much recording you 
have done. Although not a professional, your interpretations must carry some 
authenticity for how the many hundreds of good amateur lutenists played. I am 
perfectly content to sit with headphones on and listen to all this wonderful 
music through your performances. 

I do wish, however, you would consider joining SoundCloud, and using their 
player. I'm afraid your player does not work continuously on my iPad. It would 
be nice to just click Play once, then lie back and enjoy the beautiful sounds, 
music and playing. 

Rob

www.robmackillop.net 

 On 5 May 2014, at 17:52, stephen arndt stephenwar...@verizon.net wrote:
 
 Thank you, Rob, for your kind words about my Dante work. I have revised it 
 extensively since the version I sent you a number of years ago and made 
 numerous improvements.
 
 I see that the title of the work got garbled because of the acute accent on 
 the e. I'm sure everyone figured out it is La rhetorique des dieux.
 
 The string length on my Andreas von Holst 11-course is 67.5 centimeters; the 
 strings are made by Damian Dlugolecki and tuned to A = 392. Andreas von Holst 
 thought that the pure gut basses sounded terrible. I think they needed a 
 little time to settle in, and now I think they sound good, but I shall let 
 you all judge for yourselves. Some of you may not like them. I use a .46 on 
 the top course, and it usually lasts three or four months. I haven't found 
 any other stringmaker whose strings last that long.
 
 As for pros and cons, the main advantage is simply the sound of gut. I think 
 that even with my amateur technique the sound is both warm and clear for the 
 most part. I find it difficult to maintain those qualities when the melody 
 dips down into a lower register, which it does often enough in La 
 rhetorique, but that is probably more a consequence of my playing than of 
 the strings themselves. The main disadvantage is the instability of tuning. I 
 record on a Fostex and get 7 minutes and 13 seconds worth at 48 Hz. If I 
 don't get a good take in that time period (and I usually don't the first few 
 times), the instrument will probably have gone out of tune, and I shall have 
 to retune before the next take. I know that some people on the list perform 
 in public on gut strings. I play at my wife's church once a month and use the 
 New Nylgut strings for that. I can't imagine what a tuning nightmare playing 
 on gut would be. That's about all I can say on that topic. Thanks for 
 listening.
 
 -Original Message- From: Rob MacKillop
 Sent: Monday, May 05, 2014 11:21 AM
 To: stephen arndt
 Cc: baroque-lute mailing-list ; lute mailing list list
 Subject: Re: [BAROQUE-LUTE] New Recording
 
 I can highly recommend Stephen's translation of the Divine Comedy, as I've 
 enjoyed a private copy for a number of years. I'm really pleased to see it 
 available as an eBook, and will get a copy of that for my iPad.
 
 Stephen, it is great to listen to your performances with pure gut strings. 
 Can you tell us about your experience with them, pros and cons? And who made 
 them? What string length and pitch? Etc ;-)
 
 And thanks for recording the entire publication! Hearty congratulations for 
 getting through it!
 
 Rob
 
 www.robmackillop.net
 
 On 5 May 2014, at 15:33, stephen arndt stephenwar...@verizon.net wrote:
 
  Dear Friends,
 
  I invite you to listen to my recording of Denis Gaultier's La
  rhA(c)torique des dieux on an Andreas von Holst 11-course lute strung
  entirely in pure gut (i.e., the basses are not gimped). Quite some time
  ago I recorded the first forty-three pieces and then put the project
  aside for well over a year owing to various reasons. Towards the end of
  last year I resumed it and recorded pieces forty-four to sixty-one but
  was very dissatisfied with my earlier recordings in terms of tempo and
  sound quality, so I redid them. I used the tablature available for free
  on Richard Civiol's site and took the Louis Pernot recordings as a
  model, arpeggiating chords where he did and attempting to imitate his
  ornaments.
 
 
  If you care to, you can listen to an individual piece by clicking on
  its title or to all pieces successively by using the playlist at the
  bottom of the page here:
  [1]http://www.verseandsong.com/song/baroque-lute-2/la-rhetorique-des-di
  eux/.  For those of you who do not know me, be forewarned: I am not a
  professional musician, and this is strictly an amateur endeavor.
  Nevertheless, I hope you will find it pleasant enough listening. Please
  feel free to explore my website by using the expandable menu on the
  left