This thread has inspired  a heretical thought about playing baroque
   lute - I can imagine it sounding ok without pinky  on soundboard and  a
   modified guitar-style technique. I haven't tried out my heresy (I would
   misjudge the bass-courses without the pinky to help judge distances),
   but with a more secure thumb technique than i currently have ..... I
   guess someone somewhere has tried it, and I would be curious to know to
   what extent it works
   On Ren lute I aim to do exactly what David suggests, bendy banana
   fingers and all. I actually can (and at first did) play a Ren lute with
   guitar technique though the sound is in comparison a bit disappointing
     __________________________________________________________________

   From: David van Ooijen <[email protected]>
   To: lutelist Net <[email protected]>
   Sent: Tuesday, 29 July 2014, 6:17
   Subject: [LUTE] Re: Bare spot on soundboard.
     Necessity of pinky on top is not the answer to why it's there. On
     R-lute, if you hold your hand in such a manner that the thumb has a
     good angle of striking both strings of a pair, and do likewise with
     your index finger, all relaxed, thumb-inside, hand a little cupped,
     fingers like slightly bend bananas, your pinky is bound to touch the
     top, unless you'd stick it out to prevent it touching. It's not the
   top
     of the pinky that rests like a crutch on the top, but the last digit
     that gently slides along as the hand moves up and down in alternating
     thumb-index stroke.
     David
     *******************************
     David van Ooijen
     [1][1][email protected]
     [2]www.davidvanooijen.nl
     *******************************
     On 29 July 2014 06:34, howard posner <[3][2][email protected]>
   wrote:
     On Jul 28, 2014, at 8:16 PM, Mayes, Joseph <[4][3][email protected]>
   wrote:
     > Zowie!! Just mention, in passing that one of the sacred cows is
     somehow not the best idea, and the floodgates open!
       Well, the writer said (and not in passing a it was the sole subject
       of his post) that resting the little finger on the top was a
       "crutch" and "undeveloped right-hand technique," because he didn't
       understand that it was a considered and common part of lute
       technique; a little like telling a horn player to get his hand out
       of the bell because it might affect the sound, or telling an
       electric guitar player "it's insane to stick electrical wires in a
       guitar! Unplug that damn thing before you get electrocuted, you
       fool!." A The writer lacked basic information, and it's a function
       of this group to disseminate information. A So I don't think you've
       got much cause to be zowieing.
     > In all of this justification for using the pinky on the face, I
   have
     heard nothing by way of explaining why it's necessary.
       Not surprising, since nobody in this thread has asked why it's
       necessary, which in turn is probably because nobody has said it's
       necessary.
     To get on or off this list see list information at
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   References
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     5. [9]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html

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References

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