Dear Charles, Arthur, Mathias,

thank you so much for your (fast, exact, nice) answers. This list is a 
treasure.

Saludos from Barcelona,

Manolo



Mathias Rösel wrote:

>"Charles Browne" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb:
>  
>
>>Dear Manolo,
>>according to Dick Hoban's "The Art of the Lute in renaissance Italy" the
>>first is an intabulation of a vocal piece by da Crema 1546(Vol 3:
>>Intabulations) and the second is by da Crema  (Vol 2:Dances) as well.
>>best wishes
>>Charles
>>    
>>
>
>Correct, Et don bon soir is # 26, and Sal. [sic! with dot] ditto el
>giorgio is # 46. In the saltarello's second measure (1546 edition),
>there is a rhythm sign missing, a one-flag on the second half of the
>measure.
>
>Mathias
>
>  
>
>>-----Original Message-----
>>From: Manolo Laguillo [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>Sent: 19 May 2008 22:31
>>To: Lute Net
>>Subject: [LUTE] two intabulations
>>
>>
>>Dear lutelisters,
>>
>>I have the photocopies of two pieces in italian tabulature, both
>>facsmiles, same aspect:
>>
>>Et don bon soir (this is a chanson)
>>Sal ditto el Giorgio (this is a... saltarello, obviously)
>>
>>but no idea about where they come from (book, intabulator...)
>>
>>Can somebody help me?
>>
>>Thank you very much!
>>
>>Saludos from Barcelona,
>>
>>Manolo Laguillo
>>
>>
>>
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>>
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>>
>>
>>
>>    
>>
>
>
>  
>

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