PS. #73 has an identical beginning as 2 of Molinaro's fantasias.

----- Original Message ----- From: "Gernot Hilger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Lute List" <lute@cs.dartmouth.edu>
Sent: Thursday, November 01, 2007 10:49 PM
Subject: [LUTE] Re: dedillo


The video looks very much like dedillo, but the sound tells us otherwise. Bass and treble are merely alternating as are the thumb and index. If it were dedillo we'd notice more than one treble note per bass note.

Is the piece really attributed to Molinaro?
g

On 01.11.2007, at 12:41, Robert Clair wrote:

I recently watched a YouTube clip with PO'D, from some
instructional TV
program, where he played the Poulton #73 (Molinaro-dubious-very-fine)
Fantasia with "dedillo" in the final show-off. I thought that was
cool, as I
play it differently.


Let me gently suggest that you watch the video again. He is playing
the tremolo with a normal thumb-index alternation. If you're not
convinced, download the video and watch it with a viewer where you
can go frame by frame. It's quite clear.

(TubeTV + QuickTime will work on a Mac, can't help with the Redmond
product.)

Bob

------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
"My lute is strung entirely in gut.", said Tom sheepishly.




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