Re: Hard chords: was Songs by A.Schlick?

2004-09-30 Thread Stephan Olbertz
Am 30 Sep 2004 um 12:10 hat Ed Durbrow geschrieben: By the way, the left-hand fingerings in _Varietie_ do not involve fancy barrés with fingers other than the 1st finger. For example, _Varietie_ gives __1b_2d___ __3c_4f___ __2c_3f___ __

Hard chords: was Songs by A.Schlick?

2004-09-30 Thread Stewart McCoy
of your 5th course. :-) Best wishes, Stewart. - Original Message - From: Stephan Olbertz [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, September 30, 2004 8:41 AM Subject: Re: Hard chords: was Songs by A.Schlick? Am 30 Sep 2004 um 12:10 hat Ed Durbrow geschrieben: By the way

Hard chords: was Songs by A.Schlick?

2004-09-30 Thread Stewart McCoy
- Original Message - From: Ed Durbrow [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Stewart McCoy [EMAIL PROTECTED]; lute list [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, September 30, 2004 4:10 AM Subject: Re: Hard chords: was Songs by A.Schlick? Dear Ed, Thanks for taking the discussion further. Threads about left-hand

Hard chords: was Songs by A.Schlick?

2004-09-30 Thread Stewart McCoy
hold down the strings of any particular chord. Best wishes, Stewart McCoy. - Original Message - From: Ed Durbrow [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: lute list [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, September 29, 2004 11:08 AM Subject: hard chords: was Songs by A.Schlick? Schlick was very rude

Re: Hard chords: was Songs by A.Schlick?

2004-09-30 Thread Tim Kuntz
Stewart wrote: Dear Ed, Thanks for taking the discussion further. Threads about left-hand fingering may appear boring and unnecessarily academic to some s*bscr*b*rs, but this discussion, I believe, is of fundamental importance to anyone who plays the lute. My comments are scattered amongst

hard chords: was Songs by A.Schlick?

2004-09-29 Thread Ed Durbrow
Schlick was very rude about Virdung, saying that Virdung had written an impossible chord for the lute: L.c.4.kk, which looks like this in French tablature: _h_ _a_ _b_ ___ ___ _d_ I can just play that on my A lute, but I doubt I'd be able to 'land' on it in any musical context. Shame on him.