All instruments very authentic copies.

   Gamba and violin on gut, historical bows, baroque flute traversierre,
   14 course theorbo in A on nylgut and copper and organo di legno (wood
   organ)

   One example:

   [1]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JfDoomhnUOU&list=UUFoONkd8wBnm1emuE8y
   bClQ&index0&feature=plcp

   (recording was made in 2010)

   (the quality of the recording is not the best)
   --- On Tue, 4/10/12, David Tayler <[email protected]> wrote:

     From: David Tayler <[email protected]>
     Subject: [LUTE] Re: All about micing...part II
     To: "lute" <[email protected]>
     Date: Tuesday, April 10, 2012, 12:58 AM

      If you use all original instruments, you will hear the lute fine.
      However, if you have thin bridges, heavy bows, thick bass bars,
   metal
      strings etc on the bowed strings then they will be easily twice as
      loud. And so all of the soft instruments will disappear.
        __________________________________________________________________
      From: Mathias Roesel <[2][email protected]>
      To: lute net <[3][email protected]>
      Sent: Mon, April 9, 2012 5:50:11 AM
      Subject: [LUTE] Re: All about micing...part II
      >    there and the music was generally very interesting but I hear
   your
      >    theorbo only on the solo piece..." (a Kapsberger)...Na...
      There's nothing wrong with an audible theorbo in an ensemble,
   probably,
      but
      the thing is, pluckers cannot hold their tones like singers, viols,
      flutes
      or organs do. So what should be heard are the impulses of each chord
   or
      note
      that you play. Profiling the rhythmic structure of an ensemble piece
   is
      a
      major task of the theorbo, I suppose. And if you're not content with
      that,
      there's another way to become audible. You can break the chords. Not
   in
      the
      way of quick arpeggios, but in regular rhythm. You can try to go in
      consonant intervals alongside the leading part in prominent
   passages.
      To get on or off this list see list information at
      [1][4]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
      --
   References
      1. [5]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/%7Ewbc/lute-admin/index.html

   --

References

   1. 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JfDoomhnUOU&list=UUFoONkd8wBnm1emuE8ybClQ&index0&feature=plcp
   2. file://localhost/mc/[email protected]
   3. file://localhost/mc/[email protected]
   4. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
   5. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/%7Ewbc/lute-admin/index.html

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