George Torres wrote an article about the impact of French verse on the
   making of melody in French baroque lute music. May I warmly recommend
   that article. George successfully sorted out the term style brisé and
   17th century terms like style luthé.
   Mathias
     __________________________________________________________________

   Gesendet mit der [1]Telekom Mail App
   --- Original-Nachricht ---
   Von: Ron Andrico
   Betreff: [LUTE] Re: RH folk style
   Datum: 03.08.2019, 13:47 Uhr
   An: [email protected] list

   <'accords bris��s'>?
   Is this yet another contrived modern term that a modern person is
   imposing on an antique musical device?
   "The term most frequently used by modern writers to describe the
   musical style of the seventeenth-century French lutenists is the style
   brise ("broken style"). Although the word brise was used in the
   seventeenth century to distinguish a type of ornament,' the term style
   brise was apparently coined in the twentieth century. After an
   exhaustive search through dictionaries, lexicons, theoretical
   treatises, practical sources, and contemporary accounts, I am unable to
   find a single example of the term style brise used in any previous
   century." - David Buch, The Musical Quarterly, Vol. 71, No. 1 (1985),
   p. 52.
   RA
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