Stew,
A quick review gives me most of them, but of course you have set some easy
ones by using the full names. I'll look tomorrow night when sober and having
more time.
I have been busy tonight finishing the lute, and that involves a bit of
indulgence in the sauce. So I'll just say grau mo
Michael,
I haven't properly followed what the Liuto Forte is, so this is an
uneducated comment.
I think everyone is missing the the main appeal that this kind of
instrument offers, that being a crossover for a guitarist wanting to play
the lute without changing guitar technique,( I know
Dear all,
If you only have time to practice one piece per day, maybe you should
consider this one.
Best,
Jason
-C
-t
-f
{60 Passomesso in Basso/Adriaensen Pratum Musicum 1584}
b
c
2 d
x a
b
1abd a
xabd
2aadc
3 c
x a
xaac a
4 d
x c
x d
x c
x a
x c
b
2abd a
x c
xabd
x d
xabd a
In the October 2003 Lute News there is an interview with Bob Barto
For those of you who are not members of the Lute Society, the
interview is available online at: http://www9.plala.or.jp/edurbrow/.
Click on Lute information and resources in the frame on the left.
I'd highly recommend
Dear All,
Did anyone make at some point a compilation of original =
lute trios for renaissance lute?
If someone did, would be possible to have a listing of the pieces and =
sources?
Thanks very much.
Saludos,
A
--
Hi,
I know of Paccoloni and Besard (Novus Partus).
Best wishes
Thomas
Am Don, 2003-11-06 um 10.34 schrieb arielabramovich:
Dear All,
Did anyone make at some point a compilation of original =
lute trios for renaissance lute?
If someone did, would be possible to have a listing
hi,
i just read that the german (tyrole) name of cardinal Christoph Madruzzo is
Madrutsch.
wolfgang w.
Dear Arthur,
A large cache of music discovered in Germany sounded very
intriguing, so I asked Paul Madgwick if he could tell us more about
it. This was his answer:
The Sloane ranger rides again!
I do not remember it.
It was Paul who told me about the Antiqua facsimile of the Sloane MS
(just the
Sorry : there are two JS Bach (not De Visee as I said) theorbo CDs by Pascal
Monteilhet (one Virgin, another one Zig-Zag Territoires). Both are his own
transcriptions for the theorbo of the cello suites.
GC
-Original Message-
From: Arto Wikla [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Donnerstag, 6. November 2003 00:50
To: Vance Wood
Cc: lute list
Subject: Re: La Magdalena: my change of one bass note
Dear Vance,
you wrote
I don't have any criticism but only a question. Your
11/06/03
Test, disregard.
The Other
Hello again,
There are a couple of wrong notes in bar #266. If anyone is interested
in the corrected file, let me know.
Jason
Jon,
I guess nothing actually sounds bad on the classical guitar if you =
think
about it. What I'm talking about is the level of playing that is coming =
out
of the conservatories, these days, you simply can't get that kind of =
speed
and brilliance without nails.
I consider the
FUEL SAVER PRO
This revolutionary device Boosts Gas Mileage 27%+ by helping fuel burn bet=
ter using three patented processes from General Motors.
Take a test drive Today - http://www.zppi.org/?axel=3D49
PROVEN TECHNOLOGY
A certified U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) laboratory
I believe Finnish, Hungarian and Turkish are related and not of
Indo-European origin.- they are called something like Turko-Ugrarian. A
Turkic tribe moved westward from Anatolia through Eastern Europe to Finland.
I had a Hungarian friend (sadly now deceased) who explained something like
this to
Dear Monica,
you wrote:
I believe Finnish, Hungarian and Turkish are related and not of
Indo-European origin.- they are called something like Turko-Ugrarian. A
Turkic tribe moved westward from Anatolia through Eastern Europe to Finland.
That is a funny legend... ;-)
As far as I know,
Monica Hall at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
A
Turkic tribe moved westward from Anatolia through Eastern Europe to Finland.
Finland must have moved considerably to the north and east since then.
I have a question regarding Ennemond Gaultier. In the cd liner notes of the
Vieux Gaultier cd of Hopkinson Smith it says that he created his performance
of the Chaconne ou Cascade de Mr. Launnay from two versions. I am aware of
the standard Saizenay version of the Chaconne which is also found
Dear Monica,
Finnish and Hungarian are part of a group of languages known as
Finno-Ugric or Finno-Ugrian. Finnish and Estonian are quite
close to each other,
but Hungarian, although it has evolved from the same common
language, has gone its own separate way, and the similarities are
not so
Yes; these are most beautiful. Try Madlonna Mia Pieta, Io vo Gridando -
they are wonderful.
ed
At 07:14 PM 11/6/03 +, Stewart McCoy wrote:
Dear Ariel,
There are a few lute trios in Adriaenssen's _Pratum Musicum_
(Antwerp, 1584). There is a facsimile edition with an introduction
and
A one-time colleague of mine who held the degree of Doctorandus from
Leiden University used to delight in the fact that the University still
sent him letters using the salutation Weleidelgeleerdeheer which I
suppose translates as Well-and-truly learned Sir. Maybe he was just
pulling my
I've come across a 17th century English carol that uses the melody of Robin, i.e.
Come Mad Boys, Be Glad Boys. Lyric follows:
Come mad boys, be glad boys, for Christmas is here,
And we shall be feasted with jolly good cheer;
Then let us
Dear Jason,
If you have the CNRS edition, please refer to page XXIII, under
concordances, and you will find listed the other sources, which include:
Gottweig I, f. 36-39 [Chaconne ... de Gautier]
Ibid., f. 51, 52 [Chaconne du V. Gautier]
Oxf. f 576, f. 28 [Cascade (S.N.)]
It does not appear
Stewart,
Somewhere in the vague distances of my mind I remember singing in Finnish.
There is a recollection that the name of the country, or the people, was
Suuomi (spelling?). Is my memory totally failed, or is there a word that is
similar that describes the country.
Best, Jon
24 matches
Mail list logo