[LUTE] Re: Mace's lute-dyphone

2017-09-02 Thread Steve Ramey
A quick Google search yielded this: [1]http://www.lastampa.it/2015/02/18/edizioni/biella/in-tour-con-il-dyp hone-il-recital-su-corde-iWlEtbfSSRE90tpksgEwuM/pagina.html Steve __ From: G. C.

[LUTE] Re: Mace's lute-dyphone

2017-09-02 Thread G. C.
Thanks Matthew, I'll check it out. Impressive! Virusfri. [1]www.avast.com On Sat, Sep 2, 2017 at 10:42 PM, Matthew Daillie <[2]dail...@club-internet.fr> wrote: Yes this was done by Italian luthier Antonio Dattis and demonstrated to the Lute Society in London in

[LUTE] Re: Mace's lute-dyphone

2017-09-02 Thread Matthew Daillie
Yes this was done by Italian luthier Antonio Dattis and demonstrated to the Lute Society in London in November 2014, followed by a paper in Lute News No. 112 (December 2014). Best, Matthew On 02/09/2017 22:29, G. C. wrote: Question to the cognoscenti: Has any modern

[LUTE] Mace's lute-dyphone

2017-09-02 Thread G. C.
Question to the cognoscenti: Has any modern luthier yet been adventurous enough, to try and reproduce Mace's double necked lute-dyphone, and has any antique specimen survived, or is the figure in his book the only evidence we have? G. Virusfri. [1]www.avast.com --

[LUTE] Re: Dances played like dances

2017-09-02 Thread Roman Turovsky
Because we like to think that we love music. RT On 9/2/2017 9:18 AM, Tristan von Neumann wrote: I meant this probably early version from the Lute manuscript in Nuremberg. The question remains: why is it that most lutists hold back when playing these kinds of dances as if there was no one

[LUTE] Re: Dances played like dances

2017-09-02 Thread Tristan von Neumann
Sorry, I thought I could attach the jpg. It didn't go through. Lack of example does however not invalidate the question :) Am 02.09.2017 um 15:30 schrieb adS: On 02.09.2017 15:18, Tristan von Neumann wrote: I meant this probably early version from the Lute manuscript in Nuremberg. Why on

[LUTE] Re: Dances played like dances

2017-09-02 Thread adS
On 02.09.2017 15:18, Tristan von Neumann wrote: I meant this probably early version from the Lute manuscript in Nuremberg. Why on earth haven't you told us? Grr Rainer To get on or off this list see list information at

[LUTE] Re: Dances played like dances

2017-09-02 Thread Tristan von Neumann
I meant this probably early version from the Lute manuscript in Nuremberg. The question remains: why is it that most lutists hold back when playing these kinds of dances as if there was no one dancing? http://dlib.gnm.de/item/Hs33748-1/78/jpg/1000 Also, this MS. contains some interesting

[LUTE] Re: Dances played like dances

2017-09-02 Thread Rainer
If you are talking about number 269 in Terpsichore, this is certainly drawn form a ballet performed at the court of Henri IV. In Terpsichore it appears as "Ballet du Roy pour sonner apres." (Number 269). In the Philidor MS F496 it appears (page 12) as "Ballet des Sorciers. Dansé sous le