I've enjoyed playing Lasso duets (fantasias) from standard notation and will be interested to see how reading them from tablature compares. Certainly it is - as Stuart says - good practice to read from score. In the case of the edition I have, some of the fantasias are written in treble clef, some in bass, and some in alto (C3).
Thanks for making these available, Anton. -Ned On Feb 20, 2011, at 8:20 AM, Stuart Walsh wrote: > On 20/02/2011 12:01, Lex van Sante wrote: >> Hi Anton, >> >> Thanks again for this great service. >> Keep up the good work. >> Cheers! Lex > > Indeed. > > Anton, for music like this, do you think it might be interesting to have a > version written in standard music notation too? Many players will be playing > lutes in G and it would be good practice in learning to play from a score. > (And, personally, I would find pieces like this much easier to sight read!) > > > Stuart > > > > >> Op 20 feb 2011, om 08:10 heeft Anton Höger het volgende geschreven: >> >>> Hi, >>> >>> I have uploaded for teaching and studying purposes >>> >>> some new single line (Melody) - lute duets (UNISONO) >>> >>> Antiquis, Giovanni de - Fantasia >>> Brumel - Benedictus fuga ex una >>> Lasso - Beata cujus bracchiis >>> Lasso - Esurientes implevit bonis >>> Lasso - Fantasia 1 >>> Lasso - Fantasia II >>> Lasso - Scribantur hæc in generatione altera >>> >>> Enjoy them >>> >>> Anton >>> >>> here is the link: >>> >>> >>> 2 Lutes (einstimmig-single line-for studying and teaching purposes) >>> http://www.mediafire.com/?sharekey=24enp6t87q71d >>> >>> >>> >>> -- >>> >>> To get on or off this list see list information at >>> http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html >> >> >> >
