Stephen:
   Good question and good points.  I've encountered similar issues from
   both angles - as a composer devising music that is idiomatic for a
   given instrument and as a lutenist asked to turn ideas composed at the
   keyboard into lute music.
   As far as the difference between music composed for guitar and for
   lute, I would have to say that the primary factors are texture and
   decay.  Guitar can be a very sensitive instrument and, in the hands of
   a sensitive player, can sound very light and transparent.  But the lute
   trumps guitar for transparency and light texture hands down.  A
   guitarist can't help but allow a single note to bloom with intent and
   purpose.  A lutenist knows that note is going to decay very soon and
   had better manage every millisecond.
   I was once given a set of songs on texts by Walt Whitman, written by a
   very good composer.  She had no idea how the lute worked but assumed
   that if she made the accompaniments sparse, that the lute should be
   able to manage.  After the better part of a day of jointly massaging
   the keyboard  accompaniments, narrowing the upper range and creating
   more idiomatic use of cross-string figures, I wound up taking the bare
   outline of her ideas and re-composing the music to fit the instrument.
   Ron Andrico
   www.mignarda.com
   > Date: Tue, 29 Mar 2011 12:07:44 +0100
   > CC: [email protected]
   > From: [email protected]
   > Subject: [LUTE] Re: a modern lute duet by Gilbert Isbin
   >
   > This reminds me of a question raised when I wrote a piece supposedly
   for lute (6 course) ages ago. I showed it to a lutenist who said it was
   really guitar music. Well, I'd written it using a guitar (tuned
   appropriately of course) having no lute to use. But it seems to me that
   its more a question of the musical style, my piece being a sort of
   quasi-classical sonata type of thing.
   > So what would the general understanding be, how non-traditional
   musical style/content affects whether a piece would be considered
   lute-like? Are there really, subtle aspects of how the instrument
   works, differently from guitar that would trump these...in which case
   how would a non-lutenist ever write for lute?
   > (Aside - I've just had a major piece written for guitar by a
   non-player, some of which is a little challenging and pushes the
   boundaries...which is rather the point to a degree?)
   >
   > Stephen
   >
   >
   >
   > Stuart Walsh wrote:
   >
   > > Gilbert Isbin has written some lute duets, "3 contemporary lute
   duets"
   > > published by the Lute Society, 2009. Here is a go at one of them:
   > > 'And Autumn Came'.
   > >
   > >
   > >
   >
   >
   >
   >
   >
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