Hello,

The papers of Charlie (Karl-Ernst Schröder) are:
http://www.rimab.ch/content/bibliographie/SCB-Bib-2002-01-454

and:
Generalbass-Aussetzungen für Laute zu Arien aus Johann Adolf Hasses Oper 
Cleofilde, in Basler Jahrbuch für historische Musikpraxis XIX 1995, S. 159-187

All the best,

Andreas


Am 17.05.2012 um 13:45 schrieb Christopher Wilke:

>    Bernd,
>       This is a tricky thing. Usually, I try to find a pattern written
>   out in some other lute solo. Karl-Ernst Schroeder did a very good
>   survey of the ones found in Weiss sonatas. (I don't remember the source
>   off the top of my head.) I find a strict pattern to be uninteresting,
>   however, and so I occasionally vary the base pattern for effect when
>   the progression is interesting or when there's an especially dissonant
>   chord. I usually keep a consistent number of notes in each chord. Who
>   knows if this is really correct? Many times the arpeggio sections are
>   unmeasured and the very fact that a pattern was not specified on the
>   page may imply that a more rhapsodic and personally idiosyncratic
>   approach was intended.
>        For progressions in which the number of notes varies, you could
>   always make a patchwork of patterns utilizing each grouping from
>   various existing solos, such as Schroeder compiled. Or you could follow
>   your own muse and see where it takes you.
>   Chris
>   Dr. Christopher Wilke D.M.A.
>   Lutenist, Guitarist and Composer
>   www.christopherwilke.com
>   --- On Thu, 5/17/12, Bernd Haegemann <b...@symbol4.de> wrote:
> 
>     From: Bernd Haegemann <b...@symbol4.de>
>     Subject: [BAROQUE-LUTE] Arpeggio question
>     To:
>     Cc: "lute-cs.dartmouth.edu List" <l...@cs.dartmouth.edu>, "baroque
>     Lutelist" <baroque-lute@cs.dartmouth.edu>
>     Date: Thursday, May 17, 2012, 5:17 AM
> 
>   Dear all,
>   sometimes we find in baroque lute music chains of chords, notated
>   evenly as it seems and with the mark "arpeggio" or "arp".
>   Now, if the chain looked like this (with n being the number of notes in
>   the chord)
>   4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
>   or
>   5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5
>   one would think of some arpeggio scheme to use it in such a passage.
>   But what the number of notes in the chords looks like this
>   5 5 5 5 5 5 3 3 3 2 3 3 4 6 6 5 4 4 4
>   or so?
>   What would you do?
>   Thank you for your hints!
>   best regards
>   Bernd
>   To get on or off this list see list information at
>   [1]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
> 
>   --
> 
> References
> 
>   1. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
> 



Reply via email to