Many thanks for the responses.
> On Mar 23, 2017, at 11:13 AM, William Brohinsky wrote:
>
> ..."Singing Odes of With and Mirth;" is, of course,
> "Singing Odes of Wit and Mirth;".
> My apologies.
> Ray B
No need to apologize. Ith was such an obvious thypo thath
..."Singing Odes of With and Mirth;" is, of course,
"Singing Odes of Wit and Mirth;".
My apologies.
Ray B
On Thu, Mar 23, 2017 at 2:08 PM, William Brohinsky
<[1]tiorbin...@gmail.com> wrote:
And the song that ends "Better to be drunk..." Is indeed "When I
taste
And the song that ends "Better to be drunk..." Is indeed "When I taste
my goblet deep", #93, "For a Bafs", from the Second Book of "Select
Ayres and Dialogues" by Henry Laws. It is also available as a PDF scan
on IMSLP:
Hello, Howard,
"Tune your lute and raise your voyce" appears as number 10 in the
second volume of John Playford's Theatre of Music.
A PDF scan is available online at IMSLP.Org. The overall page is
[1]http://imslp.org/wiki/The_Theater_of_Music_(Playford,_John)
Ray Brohinsky
On
The first song is called 'when i raise my goblet deep' possibly by
Henry Lawes, though I'm not sure. I have a copy at home so can send
to you tomorrow if you'd like.
Toby
On 23 Mar 2017 04:42, "howard posner" <[1]howardpos...@ca.rr.com>
wrote:
Can someone plug the leaks
Hi!
Regarding the first issue: There is a German song by Henning Dedekind
(around 1600):
Trink ich Wein so verderb ich,
trink ich Wasser so sterb ich,
doch ists besser Wein getrunken und gestorben
denn verdorben
There are recordings on Youtube.
Regards
Jan Johansson
SpÄnga, Sweden