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 >> >> >> >>-- >> >>To get on or off this list see list information at >>http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html >> >> >> >> >> >> > > > > --
