Dear Bill,

Thanks very much for alerting us to that. No, I don't know the 
picture at all and I notice that the first question in the comments 
section is asking where it is. No answer as yet, maybe he will 
respond later.

There is also the conjecture which Lynda Sayce put forward that his 
"theorbo", which was destroyed after being kept until the 19th 
century in an Oxford college, was in fact, like Pepys,' a 12 course 
double header, of either sort. And this picture *could* be consistent 
with either of those. So possibly you're again up with the zeitgeist 
in building your extended neck double-header!

On that design, it is noticeable that there are many more of them in 
French iconography than of the English/Netherlandish curly pegbox 
sort and that they do die out pretty quickly. So maybe Mary Burwell 
tutor is referring to that sort when it talks of the French taking 
them up and then dropping them. True it refers to Gaultier having 
invented the form and we have the engraving of Gaultier holding the 
curly sort but it is at least conceivable that he actually "invented" 
the straight form while still in France and then later in England 
taking up or "inventing" the curly form with its stepped basses. 
Certainly the Burwell tutor's disparagement of "them long basses" 
fits rather more with the straight form, several of which are shown 
with really quite long basses. As indeed has the Rauwolf survivor in 
Copenhagen.

Best wishes,

David


At 09:19 +0100 28/7/13, William Samson wrote:
>    Hi,
>
>    In today's Telegraph (I hope those of you from outside the UK will be
>    able to access this link!) there's an article about Lawes and his music
>    and it's accompanied by a portrait of him that I've never seen before
>    now.
>
>    [1]http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/music/classical-music-guide/10199
>    855/Ivan-Hewetts-Classic-50-No-31-William-Lawes-Fantazy-from-Consort-Se
>    tt-a-6-in-F.html
>
>    I would guess it's  a 10-course instrument, but it's impossible to tell
>    from the image.
>
>    Bill
>
>    --
>
>References
>
>    1. 
>http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/music/classical-music-guide/10199855/Ivan-Hewetts-Classic-50-No-31-William-Lawes-Fantazy-from-Consort-Sett-a-6-in-F.html
>
>
>To get on or off this list see list information at
>http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html


-- 
The Smokehouse,
6 Whitwell Road,
Norwich,  NR1 4HB      
England.

Telephone: + 44 (0)1603 629899
Website: http://www.vanedwards.co.uk


Reply via email to