I wonder to what extent we can rely on painter's accuracy...e.g.. big bridge holes. As far as I can remember it was said that the evidence suggests narrow BH which was to support the loaded strings theory. On Holbein's painting we have enormous holes in comparison to the string gauges on the lute. Would a painter bother about realistic hole diameter ? The same with high action. No one could examine that lute if it was playable, or was a professional instrument.....or maybe it was just a prop. On the other hand one of my lutes have an equal fretting and is very easy to play.

JL


W dniu 2011-02-09 09:49, Martyn Hodgson pisze:
    Dear Anthony,

    Thanks for this. On further reflection some other aspects come to mind:

    1. Most particularly, the difference between precision (the number of
    significant figures to which something is measured) and accuracy (how
    near the measurement is to the object being measured). For example a
    lute treble (of notional diameter, say, 0.49mm) may be given with a
    measurement of 4.8743215689mm, which is certainly very precise (to 1 in
    10,000millionth) but very inaccurate, or with a diameter of 0.5mm,
    which is much more accurate but not very precise.
    In the context of Holbein's wonderful painting, this may be translated
    as saying that he represented items with great precision but, perhaps,
    not always quite accurately. Thus, for example, the frets seem very
    finely executed but perhaps the graduation was not anything that
    bothered him (or his assistant). Other features which we find
    troubling/interesting (eg strings coming off the top of the bridge, nut
    rebate) may also be painted with great precision but maybe not with
    total accuracy....

    2. Leaving this idea aside and my earlier speculation that equal frets
    might be an attempt to counter a lifting neck or to make a Bray
    harp-like sound (Capirola), we should not overlook the possibility that
    fretting in the England in the early 16th century WAS of equal size:
    the likely repertoire might not be so virtuosic as to demand the finest
    set (lowest 'action') to the lute (as Dowland and later required).

    Martyn


    --- On Tue, 8/2/11, Anthony Hind<[email protected]>  wrote:

      From: Anthony Hind<[email protected]>
      Subject: Re : [LUTE] Re: Holbein painting [Google Art project] frets
      and bridge
      To: "Martyn Hodgson"<[email protected]>
      Cc: [email protected]
      Date: Tuesday, 8 February, 2011, 18:02

    Thanks Martyn, I should have given you more time to think about this.
    "At a glance you're right,  the fretting does look all the same
       diameter!  Trying to think why this may be my speculation (and
    that's
       all it is!) is : if the neck had pulled up this might have been done
    so
       as to reduce the action by using a much thinner than normal upper
       frets."
    Right, if we use equal frets to compensate for a raised kneck, then we
    would use
    equal but thin frets? Would you think this is the case, here?
    Dowland suggests "Fret 1 and 2: shoudl have the value of the
    countertenor, ie
    4th course?
    Of course it is hard to evaluate from a painting and with zoom, and
    also the
    frets are double, but the thickness of the top fret (and all the
    others) looks
    about equivalent to the fourth string.
    However, I think it might be a little silly to be too literal in
    measures from a
    painting.
    The thing which made me feel that the lute might be deliberately chosen
    with a
    problematic setting (either kneck pulled up, or badly fretted) is the
    way the
    other "instruments" are said to be misaligned, according to the
    articles I have
    glanced over; but I agree with Lex that it is hard to say anything for
    sure.
    It is rather that I read several lutenists mentioning the thin strings,
    as
    though we could be sure this is good practise of the time.
    regards
    Anthony
       My earlier response to Anthony:
       Anthony
       Sorry to delay answering - I will reply to this but if you're in a
    rush
       then send it off. I need to spend proper time studying the  picture.
       At a glance you're right,  the fretting does look all the same
       diameter!  Trying to think why this may be my speculation (and
    that's
       all it is!) is : if the neck had pulled up this might have been done
    so
       as to reduce the action by using a much thinner than normal upper
       frets. Alternatively, some early writer (Gerle?) mentions an effect
    of
       strings buzzing on frets (I think to cut through like a Bray harp) -
       could this lute be set up to play like this?
       Also the strings do indeed seem to come from the top of the bridge
    (or
       almost) - this is not really possible since in practice since simple
       statics will make the point half way between the top of the string
    hole
       and top of the bridge. However it could be that the maker has made
    the
       distance VERY small (looks a bit like this);  also if the tension is
       fairly low then static friction can hold the strings in a higher (or
       lowever) position if required. Do some tests yourself and see how
    easy
       or hard it is to make a string leave from the top of the bridge.
       rgds
       Martyn
       --- On Tue, 8/2/11, Anthony Hind<[1][email protected]>  wrote:
         From: Anthony Hind<[2][email protected]>
         Subject: Tr : Re : [LUTE] [off list] Google Art project
         To: "Ed Durbrow"<[3][email protected]>, "Martyn Hodgson"
         <[4][email protected]>
         Cc: [5][email protected]
         Date: Tuesday, 8 February, 2011, 14:35
       Dear Ed, Martyn, and All,
             As you lecture on this painting, and until now, I have only
       given  it an
       admirative, but casual look, may I formulate a few questions about
    the
       significance of the stringing and the fretting, about which you may
    be
       able to
       enlighten me?
       The fretting appears to be equal and not stepped (which is quite
       different from
       Dowland's indications), but is this significant of  typical
    stringing
       of the
       time?
       It could be that zooming in alters the perspective and gives too
    much
       importance to this detail which the painter might have considered
       insignificant; but it might also have been highly significant of the
       practise
       of the time (around 1533), but not necessarily of good  practise, as
    it
       was
       deemed by those knowledgeable in luting.
             The detail, as you say, is indeed extraordinary, which tends
    to
       give the
       (possibly mistaken?) impression that the painting of the  lute might
    be
       almost
       as accurate as a photograph. Although, photographic  accuracy is not
       necessarily
       informative per se, as the lute could still  be painted from memory
       (doubtful?)
       or an example of just one man's  stringing, or even a lute strung up
    as
       a
       painter's prop and not for  playing; but in any case, certain
    details
       of
       instruments in the painting (musical or  otherwise) could have been
       focussed on
       (at the expense of others), tweaked or  altered, to conform with the
       complex
       primary symbolic message conveyed.
       For example, it seems to have been established that some of the
       instruments are
       misaligned, as possible symbols of impending chaos, or aligned to
    the
       date of
       Good Friday 1533.
       "But cleaning of the picture has established that each one of the
       instruments
       to the right of the celestial globe - a cylindrical  shepherd's
    dial,
       two
       quadrants, a polyhedral sundial and a torquetum -  are all curiously
       misaligned
       for use in a northerly latitude. This is  unlikely to have been an
       oversight on
       the artist's part, since  one of his closest friends in London was
    the
       astronomer Nikolaus Kratzer  (...)"
       "The misaligned instruments are surely emblems of chaos, of the
       heavens  out of
       joint. The fact that they were intended to be read symbolically  is
       suggested by
       the generally encrypted nature of the whole painting and  confirmed
    by
       the lute
       with a broken string on the shelf below (...)"
       [1][6]http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/art-holbeins-inner-gam
    e-1291
       477.html
       That the musical instruments are defective, in that one string of
    the
       lute is
       broken and one of the flutes are missing from the case of flutes  is
       evident;
       but might it not also be possible that Holbein expected the
    would-be
       viewer
       (just as for the sundial)  to recognize that this  instrument was
    not
       ideally
       strung, according to the principles of the  time (i.e. if those
       principles were
       already the same as those at J.  Dowland's time, around 1610)?
       I note that the frets (fre t1 to fret 8), apart from being double,
       would appear
       to be almost equal in thickness.
       At  the same time, it would appear that the strings are set as high
    as
       possible in relation to the bridge-holes. Could this raised string
       height have
       been used to compensate  for  the resulting raised fret  height at
    fret
       8 (due
       to the equal fretting)?
       The presence of  both these features together, could argue against
    the
       likelihood that the lute  was fretted with unequal frets, and that
    the
       painter
       had simply  abstracted away from this; but possibly indicates that
    the
       painter
       is  "describing" an actual lute strung in this particular way;
    although
       if we
       accept
       that, can we be sure that this was a general practise at that  time
       (1533), or
       just one man's "lazy" habits, or more interestingly a  pattern that
       those in the
       know would recognize as a badly strung lute  which would be
    difficult
       to play.
       If significant, this certainly would not correspond to the later
       suggestion by
       Dowland   (as pointed out by Martyn Hodgson), in John Dowland's
    'OTHER
       NECESSARIE  Observations....' Varietie (1610). Here Dowland relates
       fret  sizes
       to  strings of the lute,
       Fret 1 and 2: countertenor ie 4th course
       3 and 4: as Great Meanes ie 3rd
       5 and 6: as Small Meanes ie 2nd
       7, 8 and 9: as Trebles ie 1st
       (PS I wrote the whole of this  message, but then realised there was
    a
       flaw in my
       reasoning. If the  general tendency around 1533 was to have equal
       frets, and
       this called  for raised strings at the bridge, why not simply make
    the
       bridge
       higher?  The raised strings at the bridge would have to be
    compensating
       for
       something that was not expected when the lute was given its bridge.
       Indeed, I used this solution on my Renaissance lute when I first
    added
       loaded
       strings, as their  large movement tended to touch the frets. Thus
       perhaps the
       expected
       fretting by the lute maker was frets decreasing in thickness, and
    the
       raising
       at the bridge a compensation for the present "poor" equal  fretting.
           I also agree with you Ed, that the strings appear rather thin,
       particularly
       relative to the lute holes, and even the smalles treble string,
    might
       be thinner
       than the 0.42 postulated  by Martin Shepherd, as being the smallest
       possible
       string at the time  (if not made from gut strips); but I would point
       out that
       some of these features, thin strings, for example, might also have
    been
       chosen
       by the  artist to underline the fragility of the harmony they
       represent, and
       the  bolder
       thickness of the transverse frets might then have served to
    contrast
       this.
       In this case the pattern chosen, equal thick frets and thin strings
       (possibly
       both not ideal), might have been there to underline a  symbolism,
    which
       is also
       present in so many other structural elements in  the painting,
    rather
       than
       significant of a general practise.
       These are just my attempts at organising my thoughts and perhaps
    simply
       show my
       ignorance; indeed, perhaps I am the only one to see the fretting as
       equal; or
       many of you use equal fretting for a lute that has a particular
    problem
       (I seem
       to remember that might be the case), if so please do excuse my
       "balbutiements".
       Regards
       Anthony
       ----- Message d'origine ----
       De : Ed Durbrow<[2][7][email protected]>
       A : LuteNet list<[3][8][email protected]>
       Envoye le : Sam 5 fevrier 2011, 3h 32min 30s
       Objet : [LUTE] Re: Google Art project
          I missed the beginning of this thread. Luckily I checked the
    link.
       Wow!
          I'm so happy to have this link. What detail! I use this picture
    in
       my
          academic lecture class at Saitama U. (not teaching one this year
    or
          next unfortunately). It is always good for two or three 90 minute
          lectures, what with all the tangents I go off on.
          Those are quite thin strings on that lute. I wonder if he was
    using
          carbon fiber. :-)
       [3][1][4][9]http://www.googleartproject.com/museums/nationalgallery/
    the-am
            bas
                 sadors
          Ed Durbrow
          Saitama, Japan
          [2][5][10]http://www.musicianspage.com/musicians/9688/
          [3][6][11]http://www9.plala.or.jp/edurbrow/
          --
       References
          1.
       [7][12]http://www.googleartproject.com/museums/nationalgallery/the-a
    mbas
          2. [8][13]http://www.musicianspage.com/musicians/9688/
          3. [9][14]http://www9.plala.or.jp/edurbrow/
       To get on or off this list see list information at
       [10][15]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
       --
    References
       1.
    [16]http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/art-holbeins-inner-game-129
    1477.html
       2.
    [17]http://uk.mc263.mail.yahoo.com/mc/[email protected].
    jp
       3.
    [18]http://uk.mc263.mail.yahoo.com/mc/[email protected]
       4.
    [19]http://www.googleartproject.com/museums/nationalgallery/the-am
       5. [20]http://www.musicianspage.com/musicians/9688/
       6. [21]http://www9.plala.or.jp/edurbrow/
       7.
    [22]http://www.googleartproject.com/museums/nationalgallery/the-ambas
       8. [23]http://www.musicianspage.com/musicians/9688/
       9. [24]http://www9.plala.or.jp/edurbrow/
      10. [25]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html

    --

References

    1. http://uk.mc263.mail.yahoo.com/mc/[email protected]
    2. http://uk.mc263.mail.yahoo.com/mc/[email protected]
    3. http://uk.mc263.mail.yahoo.com/mc/[email protected]
    4. http://uk.mc263.mail.yahoo.com/mc/[email protected]
    5. http://uk.mc263.mail.yahoo.com/mc/[email protected]
    6. http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/art-holbeins-inner-game-1291
    7. http://uk.mc263.mail.yahoo.com/mc/[email protected]
    8. http://uk.mc263.mail.yahoo.com/mc/[email protected]
    9. http://www.googleartproject.com/museums/nationalgallery/the-am
   10. http://www.musicianspage.com/musicians/9688/
   11. http://www9.plala.or.jp/edurbrow/
   12. http://www.googleartproject.com/museums/nationalgallery/the-ambas
   13. http://www.musicianspage.com/musicians/9688/
   14. http://www9.plala.or.jp/edurbrow/
   15. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
   16. 
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/art-holbeins-inner-game-1291477.html
   17. http://uk.mc263.mail.yahoo.com/mc/[email protected]
   18. http://uk.mc263.mail.yahoo.com/mc/[email protected]
   19. http://www.googleartproject.com/museums/nationalgallery/the-am
   20. http://www.musicianspage.com/musicians/9688/
   21. http://www9.plala.or.jp/edurbrow/
   22. http://www.googleartproject.com/museums/nationalgallery/the-ambas
   23. http://www.musicianspage.com/musicians/9688/
   24. http://www9.plala.or.jp/edurbrow/
   25. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html






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