And hear, hear, hear from over here.

Dan

On 6/19/2019 8:46 AM, Braig, Eugene wrote:
Hear, hear.

Eugene

-----Original Message-----
From: lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu <lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu> On Behalf Of Ron 
Andrico
Sent: Wednesday, June 19, 2019 11:09 AM
To: Gary Boye <boy...@appstate.edu>; Edward C. Yong <edward.y...@gmail.com>
Cc: Jurgen Frenz <eye-and-ear-cont...@protonmail.com>; Lute List 
<lute@cs.dartmouth.edu>
Subject: [LUTE] Re: Julian Bream on Lute

    I feel I must add a word of support for Julian Bream and his many
    contributions to the current lute revival.

    As a 20th-century pioneering concert artist, Julian Bream first and
    foremost raised the lute from a quaint closet instrument, best suited
    to historians and eccentrics, to an instrument capable of musical
    expression that reached and communicated to modern audiences.

    Yes, Julian Bream developed and employed his own characteristic
    technique.  And yes, he used instruments that were modified from
    historical models to suit his needs as a touring concert artist.  But
    it was through his musical chops that he exposed a broad audience to
    the depth and the possibilities of old music for the lute.

    Bream-bashing has been a popular sport among modern players who like to
    dwell on what is now considered proper lute technique, but many of
    these players for all intents and purposes dwell in glass houses.  For
    instance, I still see an absurd number of modern players (who really
    should know better) using thumb-under technique on baroque lute and
    theorbo.  This is patently unhistorical.  In fact, it is well known
    that music from circa 1600 onward should be played with the thumb out.

    While the lute world is populated by an abundance of opinionated
    hobbyists, Julian Bream is a real musician, and probably still has
    chops most lute players will never attain.  Let's give the man the
    respect he deserves.

    RA
      __________________________________________________________________

    From: lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu <lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu> on behalf
    of Gary Boye <boy...@appstate.edu>
    Sent: Wednesday, June 19, 2019 11:23 AM
    To: Edward C. Yong
    Cc: Jurgen Frenz; Lute List
    Subject: [LUTE] Re: Julian Bream on Lute

       Edward,
       Back in the '70s, there was a quip that "Julian Bream makes the lute
       sound like a guitar and the guitar sound like a lute." I think that
       came from guitarists who had no idea what the lute could sound like.
       He was pretty amazing in concert (on guitar, I didn't see him play
       lute), and quite a character off stage. In addition to "lute," he
    also
       played "vihuela" and "Baroque guitar" (quotes used intentionally!) .
    .
       . Can't say I'd recommend his early music recordings to students
    today
       though..
       Gary
       On Wed, Jun 19, 2019 at 5:39 AM Edward C. Yong
       <[1]edward.y...@gmail.com> wrote:
         I have to agree. JB used his stardom to get the lute out there,
    even
         if it was a Frankenlute with nothing lute about it apart from the
         shape.
         Would anyone have paid attention to his lute playing if it hadn't
         ridden on the back of his guitarist reputation? Probably not.
         I recognise that many here were introduced to the lute via JB's
         efforts, but my own experience was rather different. My first
         exposure to lute music was an LP of Julian Bream playing Dowland
    in
         my school library, and that put me off the lute - it sounded like
    a
         classical guitar to me, so at 12, I didn't see the point. It
    wasn't
         until a year later that I heard Paul O'Dette and Jakob Lindberg's
    cd
         of Elizabethan lute duets and that changed my mind entirely - I
         wanted to play an instrument that sounded like theirs.
         While I have much respect for JB being a musician on the guitar
    and
         an 'early adopter', I fear I find his tone on the lute to be thin
         and hard, or âmetallic sharp' as Mr Frenz calls it. It's difficult
         for me to look past the tone and appreciate JB's musicianship on
    the
         lutewhen I find the tone unattractive - and this is my failing,
    not
         JB's.
         Edward
         > On 19 Jun 2019, at 12:40 PM, Jurgen Frenz
         <[2]eye-and-ear-cont...@protonmail.com> wrote:
         >
         > Julian Bream was a vital part (I believe) of the lute revival 50
         years ago by making the music public. On the downside of it he
         played guitar technique on it to the point of using singe strings
    on
         both the high G and D courses - it allowed him to play apoyando on
         the lute which is a big no-no. Hence his lute playing doesn't
    really
         sound like a lute. Also, at that time, it was common guitar
         technique to use sound differences to emphasize or mark formal
         sections by moving the right hand extremely close to the bridge,
         which creates a very metallic sharp sound. This has fallen out of
         favor on the guitar as well, I personally would qualify it as
         obnoxious, even more so on the lute.
         > If you like it, you may listen to Konrad Ragossnigs lute
         recordings, he sounds very much like Bream did.
         >
         > Best
         > Jurgen
         >
         >
         > ----------------------------------
         > "Close your eyes. Fall in love. Stay there."
         >
         > JalÃ"l ad-DÃ"«n Muhammad Rumi
         >
         > âââââââ Original Message âââââââ
         > On Wednesday, June 19, 2019 6:13 AM, Franz Mechsner
         <[3]franz.mechs...@gmx.de> wrote:
         >
         >> Dear Dan,
         >>
         >> Julian Bream actually pioneered lute playing very early. Watch
         >> this beautiful movie on him that makes me smile (lute things
    come
         >> somewhere in the
         >> middle): [1][4]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MUdunh_wMCI
         >>
         >> Warm regards and best
         >> Franz
         >>
         >> Dr. Franz Mechsner
         >> Zum Kirschberg 40
         >> D-14806 Belzig OT Borne
         >> +49(0)33841 441362
         >> [5]franz.mechs...@gmx.de
         >>
         >> Gesendet: Mittwoch, 19. Juni 2019 um 01:07 Uhr
         >> Von: "Dan Winheld" [6]dwinh...@lmi.net
         >> An: "Franz Mechsner" [7]franz.mechs...@gmx.de,
         [8]lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
         >> Betreff: Re: [LUTE] Julian Bream on Lute
         >> Nope. Never heard of him.
         >> On 6/18/2019 3:49 PM, Franz Mechsner wrote:
         >>
         >>> Dear collective wisdom,
         >>
         >>>
         >>
         >>> I just heard some pieces played by admired guitarist Julian
    Bram
         on
         >>
         >> the
         >>
         >>> lute. It seems to me he played kind of classical guitar style
    on
         the
         >>
         >>> lute. Strange, but It sounds wonderful to me, not only bold
    for
         the
         >>
         >>> time. Does anyone understand how he played the (maybe special)
         lute
         >>
         >> and
         >>
         >>> produced the wonderful sound on a lute admittedly built for
    him?
         >>
         >>>
         >>
         >>> Best and curious
         >>
         >>> Franz
         >>
         >>>
         >>
         >>> Dr. Franz Mechsner
         >>
         >>> Zum Kirschberg 40
         >>
         >>> D-14806 Belzig OT Borne
         >>
         >>> +49(0)33841 441362
         >>
         >>> [9]franz.mechs...@gmx.de
         >>
         >>>
         >>
         >>>
         >>
         >>> To get on or off this list see list information at
         >>
         >>> [2][10]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
         >>
         >>>
         >>
         >> References
         >>
         >> 1.   [11]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MUdunh_wMCI
         >> 2.   [12]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
         >
         >
         >
         >
       --
       Dr. Gary R. Boye
       Erneston Music Library
       Appalachian State University
       --
    References
       1. [1]mailto:edward.y...@gmail.com
       2. [2]mailto:eye-and-ear-cont...@protonmail.com
       3. [3]mailto:franz.mechs...@gmx.de
       4. [4]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MUdunh_wMCI
       5. [5]mailto:franz.mechs...@gmx.de
       6. [6]mailto:dwinh...@lmi.net
       7. [7]mailto:franz.mechs...@gmx.de
       8. [8]mailto:lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
       9. [9]mailto:franz.mechs...@gmx.de
      10. [10]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
      11. [11]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MUdunh_wMCI
      12. [12]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html

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