Love 5th and 6th in octaves...only play that way.
   Le sam. 23 nov. 2019 5 h 10 p.m., Edward Martin
   <[1][email protected]> a écrit  :

        I think you will be surprised at how you will like the 5 th
     course in
        octaves. Good luck!
        Sent from my iPhone
          On Nov 23, 2019, at 12:34 PM, Jurgen Frenz
          <[2][email protected]> wrote:
        
        Hello Edward,
        thank you very much, I feel encouraged now to "go octaves" all
     the way
        down from 5th. course.I should consider myself stupid that I
     hesitated,
        because who is there to judge me apart from myself. I am not
     competing
        in any academic exercise :-)
        Thank you very   much again, gut is cost-wise prohibitive to me.
        Best regards
        Jurgen
        ----------------------------------
        "Close your eyes. Fall in love. Stay there."
        JalÄl ad-DÄ«n Muhammad Rumi
        âââââââ Original Message âââââââ
        On Saturday, November 23, 2019 9:16 PM, Edward Martin
        <[3][email protected]> wrote:
        Hello Jurgen,
        I agree that in with 8-course lutes, they do tend to not sound as
        brilliant as with octaves.   Of course, it is a compromise, but
     on my
        8-course lute, I have octaves on 5,6,7, & 8   and like it very
     much.
        Whatever brand of strings you try, I think you will like the 5th
     course
        in octaves, as it brightens up the sound.   I do not see it as
     confusing
        the voices as you say, but adding to the richness and complexity
     of the
        sound.   Another thing that could very much improve the sound is
     to use
        gut.   If you do not want gut, at least consider using gut for
     octaves.
        On Sat, Nov 23, 2019 at 6:19 AM Jurgen Frenz
        <[1][4][email protected]> wrote:
           Hello there,
           I have an 8c lute now since 10 months and from the beginning
     I'm
           "unhappy" with the sound of the unison C strings on it. I
     changed
        the
           plain Aquila strings to round-wound Aquilas but to me it
     sounds
        quite
           the same. What I'm missing is the high frequencies that we
     have on
        6c
           instruments with the octave string. In my mind I call the
     current
        sound
           "plastic-y". The maker of the instrument suggested to try out
     the
           Savarez early music strings but I do not think I would recover
     high
           frequencies with them.
           Any remedies that you have tried out with success other than
     "just
        get
           used to it"? An octave string shouldn't be a good idea because
     it
        would
           confuse voices.
           Hoping for some suggestions,
           Jurgen
           ----------------------------------
           "Close your eyes. Fall in love. Stay there."
           JalÃl ad-Dà �n Muhammad Rumi
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