Thanks to all and sundry who shared their musings on the word 'toy',
as well as pointing me to the lyrics of The Hunt('/e)s Up(e).
Howard was kind enough to correct my English, I _was_ wondering why
the OED was so hard to read. Anyway, it shows I still need an English
dictionary. And I owe Howard
On 07/31/2012 03:25 PM, A.J. Padilla MD wrote:
As I recall, over the years there have been several threads about the
Pakistani lutes, all pretty much negative, essentially to the effect that
you need all new strings, have to change the action by altering the
fingerboard and/or bridge and/or nut,
Hi, all,
There seems to be a new generation of lutes and baroque guitars from
Mid-East or a similar company. The exterior seems to be more finished
and authentic, at least to judge by the photos, and the price is
about double. They also credit Zachary Taylor with the designs.
The Lute Society in UK has a 'hire fleet' of lutes for this very
purpose. Whether they can be hired to Chicago might seem unlikely but
would surely be worth asking.
Stephen
On 07/31/2012 03:25 PM, A.J. Padilla MD wrote:
.
Note that the Lute Society (in the UK) has a list
Chris,
I took a look on eBay just on spec to see what was out there based on your
email on this subject. I know nothing of the quality but at first blush, the
Roosebeck 7 course seen here -
It did enough to let me know
whether I wanted to pursue playing on a lute.
Probably yes
But a mentor who could have guided you ,and made some adjustments to
the instrument's action, might have meant that your lute playing
experience was agreable enough that you stayed with
On Aug 1, 2012, at 10:01 AM, co...@medievalist.org wrote:
I took a look on eBay just on spec to see what was out there based on your
email on this subject. I know nothing of the quality but at first blush, the
Roosebeck 7 course seen here
A while ago Mel Wong, the lute maker, got a lute made in China, which
he adjusted and offered for sale at a reasonable price. ($600). He told me
that he didn't have to do very much to it. This was two years ago.
His email is mel.w...@sbcglobal.net if you want to see if he can still
get one.
Howard wrote:
Apart from the obvious caveats:
Doesn't travel lute mean flat back?
Yes, I agree. The nomenclature they use seems a bit ignorant, not meant in the
pejorative. I think I saw an 8 course descant lute too by them.
And importing rosewood may be a problem because most varieties are
Depends upon the species, Craig.
http://www.fws.gov/international/DMA_DSA/CITES/CITES_home.html
http://www.fws.gov/international/DMA_DSA/CITES/pdf/Cites_eng.pdf
http://www.cites.org/eng/app/appendices.php (true rosewoods are of the genus
Dalbergia)
Only Dalbergia nigra is afforded protection
PS: Dalbergia nigra is that commonly referred to as Brazilian rosewood.
Eugene
-Original Message-
From: Braig, Eugene
Sent: Wednesday, August 01, 2012 2:09 PM
To: lutelist Net
Subject: RE: [LUTE] Re: My First Lute
Depends upon the species, Craig.
Thanks Eugene. Apparently the Justice Dept. here in the US is including
Madagascar rosewood when it enforces the Lacey Act.
Craig
To get on or off this list see list information at
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
Anyone interested should check out Mel's web site:
www.blackbirdstringarts.com. It's full of enjoyable reading,
particularly on the topic of the current generation of middle Eastern
lutes and the Chinese lutes he offered a few years ago.
Regards to all,
Steve
Does anyone have this piece in tab they could send me (off list) or
point me to a source on line?
TIA
Daniel Heiman
--
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http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
Hello
A
Anyone has an intabulation of Belle qui tient ma vie pavan? I need for
a gig in 2 days... last minute request.
A
quelqu'un aurait une tablature de Belle qui tien ma vie, j'en ai besoin
pour concert dans 2 jours, demandA(c) A la derniAre minute..
A
A
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