Thanks, I will check out Phalèse. You mean Passamezzi, right?
On 10.08.19 05:04, Sean Smith wrote: Not really. � �Check out the other Adr. as well as Phalese 1568. There's a pattern to this. � �I'm at work but those come to mind. � hastily, Sean On Fri, Aug 9, 2019, 4:24 PM Tristan von Neumann <[1]tristanvonneum...@gmx.de> wrote: Nothing? Here's something that came to mind afterwards: Some fantasies by Dowland contain a hint of this. But that's probably it. Anyone? On 09.08.19 02:33, Tristan von Neumann wrote: > The "Passomeso in Basso" from Adriaenssen's Pratum Musicum 1584 features > two variations in a very odd anachronistic/visionary style: > > It's basically the idea of "Alberti bass". > > (m. 114 - 119 and 225 - 238) > > [2]http://gerbode.net/sources/Adriaenssen/pratum_musicum_1584/pdf/61 _passomeso_in_basso.pdf > > > > This style seems to come from nowhere, and it has to my knowledge never > been used afterwards. > > But I haven't looked at everything. > > > Does anyone know any similar passage in that era? > > And: is there a recording of the piece? It is probably the most > elaborate and creative Passamezzo ever. > > I use it as exercise - feels like training for a marathon. > > > :) > T* > > > > > To get on or off this list see list information at > [3]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html > -- References 1. mailto:tristanvonneum...@gmx.de 2. http://gerbode.net/sources/Adriaenssen/pratum_musicum_1584/pdf/61_passomeso_in_basso.pdf 3. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html