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> Van: Lex van Sante <[email protected]> > Datum: 21 april 2014 16:24:44 GMT+02:00 > Aan: Mathias Rösel <[email protected]> > Onderwerp: Antw.: [LUTE] Re: versions of Tombeau do Mezangeau > > Mathias, > > I understand what you mean but for instance in Bittner's book there is also a > piece with the name "Tombeau" > In France this would be named Tombeau de Bittner. Just like Courante de > Gaultier for instance. > I was only suggesting a possibility. Mesangeau could be the composer or he > could be the dedicatee. > > Lex > Op 21 apr 2014, om 12:11 heeft Mathias Rösel het volgende geschreven: > >>> Not only did Mesangeau use this tuning a lot. This piece has many >> stylistic traits >>> characteristic of him. >>> I suggest he could well have been the composer. Otherwise someone else has >>> deliberately cited from his work. Anyway Tombeau de Mesangeau might mean >>> Tombeau by Mesangeau as well as Tombeau for Mesangeau. If my suggestion is >>> right, this tombeau would predate the one composed by Ennemond Gaultier. >>> Lex >> >> Would be funny, though. Correct me if I'm wrong, I was thinking that >> tombeaux in the 17th century were composed for real deceased persons, and >> not just like that as a stylistic exercise like in the 20th/21st centuries. >> Unless it be clear for whom this tombeau was penned other than for late >> Mesangeau, I'd assume it was written at the occasion of Mesangeau's obituary >> by someone else. >> >> Mathias >> >> >> >>>>>> according to Peter's wonderful database, 3 have been found: >>>>>> >>>>>> F-Pn ms. Vm7 6211, 31v >>>>> http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b52503776m/f66.image >>>>> >>>>> That's a different piece, in one of the transistor tunings :-) May be >>>>> BY Mezangeau. >>>> >>>> That is the flat tuning, (like Lester) which Mesangeau did use a lot. >> >> >> >> To get on or off this list see list information at >> http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html > --
