I think Cesare Mussolini published a work for English Guittar or Italian Pocket Guitar. He's Italian, but it was published in London @1788 or something (I'm not at home now...). The term English guitar (one or two t's) was used in the 18th-century - have a look at my article on the Music in Time site.
Doc Original Message: ----------------- From: Brad McEwen [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 04:56:26 -0700 (PDT) To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [email protected] Subject: [CITTERN] Re: Diatonic Cittern Music Rob: Ah, ok, then. Brad Rob MacKillop <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Hi Brad, I did not say that ''there were not "British" publications of guittar music in the 18th C.'' - what I did say was that there were no British publications for an instruments called 'the English Guitar'. Please re-read what I said. Rob -----Original Message----- From: Brad McEwen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 27 April 2006 01:11 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [email protected] Subject: [CITTERN] Re: Diatonic Cittern Music Rob You state in the site that there were not "British" publications of guittar music in the 18th C. However, what do you mean by British? Oswald and Brmener were British, were they not? Do you not mean that there were no ENGLISH publciations (to be precise)? Brad To get on or off this list see list information at http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html --------------------------------- New Yahoo! Messenger with Voice. Call regular phones from your PC and save big. -- -------------------------------------------------------------------- mail2web - Check your email from the web at http://mail2web.com/ .
