Agreed, Ron, not so much that I'm that supportive of copyright law in
   these cases, though I do see the point.   However, I spent long hours
   in the library, way before digitization, copying anything I could find
   by hand.   I learned a lot about the music, and feel I still know those
   pieces much more thoroughly than I do those obtained in quicker, more
   convenient fashion.
   Best to all, and keep playing.
   Chris.

   On Mon, Jun 29, 2015 at 2:47 PM, Ron Andrico <[1][email protected]>
   wrote:

        Or, rather than violating international copyright law, you could
     try
        what musicians have done for centuries.   Transcribe the piece.
     This
        should be easily done and is of great benefit in learning to play
     the
        piece musically.
        RA
        > Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2015 12:38:41 -0500
        > To: [2][email protected]
        > From: [3][email protected]
        > Subject: [LUTE] a missing saraband
        >
        > Appealing to the Collective Wisdom:
        > I've been working on some Dufault, and there's this lovely set
     of
        > pieces in D Major...there are rather fewer of them in this key
     than
        in,
        > say, C or F. I happened on Pascal Monteilhet's recording and lo
     and
        > behold, heard a saraband in D major that doesn't turn up in
     CNRS or
        > Doug Towne's extensive library. Can anyone point me to the
     source, or
        > even a pdf of the piece that might be in public domain?
        > Thanks, all!
        > Tom Walker
        >
        > --
        >
        >
        > To get on or off this list see list information at
        > [4]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
        --

   --

References

   1. mailto:[email protected]
   2. mailto:[email protected]
   3. mailto:[email protected]
   4. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html

Reply via email to