Hi Mathias, I'm pretty certain it is a jigge or gigue. Look in Dufault or Mercure for similar pieces. Do you have more pieces from Panmure 5? If so... I'm interested.I have not found it on the net.
Cheers, Lex Op 9 jan 2012, om 18:22 heeft Mathias Rösel het volgende geschreven: > Hi Lex, > > Please find the related files attached. Curious, what you think about it! > > Mathias > >> -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- >> Von: Lex van Sante [mailto:[email protected]] >> Gesendet: Montag, 9. Januar 2012 17:54 >> An: Mathias Rösel >> Betreff: Re: [LUTE] Dance in time >> >> Hi Mathias, >> >> Where can I find Panmure 5 so I can get an idea of the music you are > talking >> about? >> I suppose it is for a 10 course lute tunes in one of the transitional > tunings. >> Do you have a copy or a link? >> >> Cheers! >> >> Lex >> Op 8 jan 2012, om 14:27 heeft Mathias Rösel het volgende geschreven: >> >>> Dear everyone, >>> >>> >>> There is a dance in triple time in Panmure 5, fol. 17v-18, that >>> probably is neither a courante nor a sarabande, lacking their >>> chracteristic rhythms. It has hemiolas in cadences, but also other >>> characteristic rhythms, though, like crotchet - minim at some ends of >>> phrases, or crotchet - dotted crotchet - two semiquavers / one quaver >>> (marking the ends of hemiolas). >>> >>> >>> Some say it's a country dance. Yet I wonder if English country dances >>> (and masques, for that matter) come in even time? >>> >>> >>> Mathias >>> >>> -- >>> >>> >>> To get on or off this list see list information at >>> http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html > > <Panmure-5_Country-dance.pdf><Panmure-5_Country-dance.mid>
