I would not mind doing the conversion, could be an interesting
project. Are they all available on your site Roman?  Are the sources
documented too?

am always interested in discovering new music.

Bruno
www.estavel.org

On 11/4/06, Michal Gondko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> But the truth is that most of it is out of print for many years now and
> circulates at best in xerox copies. If you are very lucky you may find
> something in antiquarian bookstores. Good music libraries might have some
> titles. PWM has an anthology of "Eastern European" lute music which is
> available online.
>
> M
>
>
> On 11/4/06 11:23 AM, "Arthur Ness" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Daniel is quite proper in hesitating to attribute the
> > pieces to Bartolomiej Pekiel, a prominent Polish
> > composer of sacred music (d. ca. 1670). The pieces are
> > from a manuscript formerly in Gdansk (Danzig) and are
> > simply titled "B.P.," which stands for "Balletto
> > Polacho," not Bart. Pekiel.  The manuscript might even
> > date from before Pekiel was born.  But it's a good
> > source for Polish dances.
> >
> > Other composers, some already mentioned, would be
> > Valentin Bakfark (Hungarian lutenist working in Poland),
> > Diomedes Cato, Caspar Polack, Albert Dlugoraj.  All are
> > available in modern editions with transcripions into
> > modern notation. VB by Daniel Benko, and most of the
> > others ed. Pietr Pozniak.
> >
> > The edition Daniel was refering to may be found in the
> > series "Wydawnictwo dawnej muzyki polskiej" vols. 30 and
> > 62.  Vol. 30 uses the Schrade method of transcrption,
> > and was wisely withdrawn and redone in conventional
> > notation as vol. 62.  The pieces are also available in
> > an edition  by Ochs euphemistically for lute tuned in E
> > ("or guitar"<g>).
>
>
>
>
> To get on or off this list see list information at
> http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
>


-- 
Bruno Cognyl-Fournier
Luthiste, etc
Estavel
Ensemble de musique ancienne
www.estavel.org


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