" In fact, there are markings in  
the tablature that we take as standard indications that call for  
separation of vertically-arranged notes."

Are these markings in historical tabulatures too? I do not remember i
saw one.
wolfgang

-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: David Rastall [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 31. Januar 2008 16:09
An: Andrew Gibbs
Cc: Stewart McCoy; Lute Net
Betreff: [LUTE] Re: Playing in time (olim Polish, anyone?)


On Jan 31, 2008, at 4:39 AM, Andrew Gibbs wrote:

> ..but do you think the occasional (and tasteful) spreading of chords 
> is a bad or non-HIP thing?

No, not really.  As long as it's not done to excess.  Rolling too  
many chords in a piece tends to muddy up the counterpoint and blur  
the rhythm.  But there are times when a chord has to be spread:  a  
chord consisting of five or six notes obviously has to be rolled, and  
it's perfectly legitimate to play a chord with the right-hand thumb  
moving down over the bass note(s) and the index finger moving up  
"backwards" over the higher strings.  In fact, there are markings in  
the tablature that we take as standard indications that call for  
separation of vertically-arranged notes.

David R
[EMAIL PROTECTED]




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