Hm, what an idiotic idea. DO you have a reference?

Rainer


On 21.01.2018 15:39, David van Ooijen wrote:
    I understand these as 'French' 1st and 2nd endings, where the second
    ending is written first, and the first ending written last. You find
    these a lot in French Baroque. Very confusing when sight reading
    chamber music, as there's always some poor soul  getting lost  (usually
    me, to the merriment of the others),  espcially when these endings are
    combined with 'petite resprises'.
    David

    *******************************
    David van Ooijen
    [1][email protected]
    [2]www.davidvanooijen.nl
    *******************************
    On 21 January 2018 at 13:08, Rainer <[3][email protected]>
    wrote:

      Dear lute netters,
      I wonder what Vallet's intention in
      "L'Espagnolle", page 80, Secret des Muses I
      was.
      It is not at all clear how interpret the double bar lines, the half
      notes at the end of both strains and the repeat sign.
      Obviously Andre Souris had no idea either - he reproduced the piece
      as it appears in the original.
      The scribe of the Kassel lute book (Monbuyssant? or Elisabeth?) 99v
      simply ignores the double bar lines and changes the first half note
      to a dotted half note.
      This is certainly plausible. He should have changed the second half
      note, too.
      Any ideas, anybody?
      Rainer
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References

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    2. http://www.davidvanooijen.nl/
    3. mailto:[email protected]
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