Dear Arto,
This Mouton Prelude is well known and included in lute school books as
teaching material / example. It is included in several historic manuscripts
in various versions, with and without dissection the bass course. For your
kind information I attach my hand-written copy of this piece
Dear Bernhard,
thanks! The 17706 (8r-8v) doesn't seem to indicate playing the
campanella, as you also have written. On the other hand the Saizenay
279153 (p. 114) does that, and uses special markings to that: g. and
p.. What (French?) words could those mean?
Best,
Arto
On 12/04/12 09:45,
Von Radolt also employs this technique in his 'Der Aller Treueeste
Freindin...' (Vienna 1701) - see the paper with relevant translation
and commentary by Bill Samson and me in FoMRHI Quarterly some years ago
(digital copies available - search FoMRHI). And I've recall at least
one
Arto,
In his famous book Pieces de luth Perrine uses the p for pouce (engl:
thumb).
Bernhard
-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu [mailto:lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu] Im Auftrag
von wi...@cs.helsinki.fi
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 12. April 2012 09:34
An: Bernhard Fischer
Arto,
In his famous book Pieces de luth Perrine uses the p for pouce (engl:
thumb). And to indicate the first finger (right hand) he used an a as you
can see from the copy of a page of this other book Livre de musique pur le
lut.
Bernhard
-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: