Hi all,
so - where is Andrews mail cc to the cittern list?
and others.......
like Rob was explaining

Martina

 "Alexander Batov" <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb:
> Hi Andrew,
> 
> As an update-correction to my yesterday's post where I mentioned (quote) The 
> earliest guittars with watch keys by Preston can probably be dated by 1760s 
> (end of quote), there is at least one EG in the V&A labelled "Remerius 
> Liessen,1756" which is, according to the inscription in the display case, 
> "an early example of the use of the 'watch-key tuning' mechanism". I do not 
> remember what this instrument looks like but I will have a look on the next 
> occasion; i.e. there is a possibility that the mechanism could be a later 
> replacement. Another EG from the same collection, by "W.Gibson, 1765" has 
> worm-gear tuners. So if the first one is not converted (the second is 
> definitely genuine) then both instruments seem to predate the date of the 
> quoted advertisement. This doesn't exclude of course that Hintz couldn't be 
> an inventor of either of them or, indeed, both, but ...
> 
> Alexander
> 
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: Andrew Rutherford
> To: Alexander Batov
> Cc: cittern list
> Sent: Friday, November 30, 2007 3:43 PM
> Subject: Re: [CITTERN] Re: Preston tuner history
> 
> Hi cittern people,
> 
> The instrument maker and publisher John Frederick Hintz, in an advertisement 
> in "The Public Advertiser", March 17th 1766, claims to have invented 
> something that may be the watchkey tuning system (not to mention the 
> instrument itself): "...after many years Study and Application in 
> endeavouring to bring this favourite instrument the Guittar (being the first 
> Inventor) still to a greater perfection in regard to tuning and keeping the 
> same in Tune, which has always been a principal Defect as well as 
> inconvenient, has now found out, on a principal entirely new, several 
> Methods, whereby it is much easier and exacter tuned, and also remains much 
> longer in tune than any Method hitherto known."
> 
> I got this passage from Lanie Graf at the Moravian Archives in Pennsylvania. 
> She's studying Hintz and his relationship with the Moravian community in 
> London (and America). Peter Holman is also looking into this topic, I 
> understand.
> 
> andy rutherford 
> 
> 
> 
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> 
> 
 
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