Here's David's original mail from January:

   The collection of tablatures formerly housed in the Gemeentemuseum in
   The Hague has been moved to the Nederlands Muziek Instituut
   ([1]http://www.nederlandsmuziekinstituut.nl/), which is in the same
   building as the Royal Library. Acces to both libraries is free, but
   membership costs 15 euro a year. Membership has some benefits, among
   which are free on-line acces from your home computer to the New Grove
   and to a large collection of musical magazines in JSTOR.

   P

   ---------- Forwarded message ----------
   From: morgan cornwall <[2][email protected]>
   Date: 2009/9/30
   Subject: Re: [LUTE] Re: Newbie needs to know - where buy a lute and
   what type?
   To: Peter Martin <[3][email protected]>
   Howdy,
   I can't recall that email, but could you pass along the jaarpass
   information?
   thanks,
   morgan
   ----- Original Message ----- From: "Peter Martin"
   <[4][email protected]>
   To: <[5][email protected]>
   Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 1:30 PM
   Subject: [LUTE] Re: Newbie needs to know - where buy a lute and what
   type?

      I just discovered I can get onto EEBO using the KB jaarpass that
     David
      van Ooijen alerted us to a few months ago.
      Hurrah!
      P
      2009/9/30 <[1][6][email protected]>
      >    I have been cruising the net for tab. Just not
      >    much luck in finding anything that I've heard recorded.
        There are a few websites with lute tab on them, but you will have
        much
        better luck with early music stores.  Most of the renaissance
     lute
        repetoire has been published in facsimile by Broude Brothers and
        others.
        The english printed sources have recently been put online by the
        EEBO
        project, you can see catalogs of it online, but full access is
     only
        available at an EEBO participating institution such as the
     British
        Museum,
        the NYPL etc.
        Try a college music library for journals such as Early Music,
     Early
        Music
        America, Lute, Lute Society of America, Galpin Society..., the
     ads
        will
        give you luthiers, string makers, music publishers.
        The stacks will give you editions and bibliographical works such
     as
        HM
        Brown, _Instrumental Music Published before 1600_  Brown is worth
        owning,
        not sure if it is still in print, tho it has been kept in print
     for
        several decades.
        Join the Lute Society (and the LSA).  The LS regular mailings
        include
        several sheets of music from ms sources, members can buy
     assortments
        of
        reprints of those. Sometimes familiar music, more often odd bits.
        Brown lists a huge amount of the music you are interested in,
     some
        of it
        will be found on shelf in that library in the editions he cites.
        Unfortunately Brown did the bulk of his work in the aftermath of
        WW-II,
        and his modern x-refs are dated and miss much of the publishing
     that
        has
        followed.  Thankfully we have the internet now, and small
     publishers
        such
        as tree editions can be explored that way.
      --
      Dana Emery

   --

References

   1. http://www.nederlandsmuziekinstituut.nl/
   2. mailto:[email protected]
   3. mailto:[email protected]
   4. mailto:[email protected]
   5. mailto:[email protected]
   6. mailto:[email protected]


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