On 30/03/2011 14:48, Gilbert Isbin wrote:
Dear All,
Hereby a lin to 3 contemporary lutesongs, 2 composed by myself and an
arrangement of an a medieval song performed by the Meander Ensemble.
http://users.telenet.be/gilbert.isbin/meander.html
Hope you enjoy them.
Gilbert Isbin
Gilbert
These
sent to your email..
Andrew
On 31/03/2011, at 7:02 AM, Jean-Marie Poirier wrote:
> Dear all,
>
> Would anyone affiliated with JSTOR be kind enough to forward the following
> article : http://www.jstor.org/pss/20532372 (Some "Liturgical Motets" for the
> French Royal Court: A Reconsideration
Dear all,
Would anyone affiliated with JSTOR be kind enough to forward the following
article : http://www.jstor.org/pss/20532372 (Some "Liturgical Motets" for the
French Royal Court: A Reconsideration of Genre in the Sixteenth-Century Motet
John T. Brobeck, Musica Disciplina, Vol. 47, (1993), pp
I would add John Sturt to this list of composers, and most of the music
in the M.L. Lute book. It's great to have Liz Kenny's CD of that music
and Nigel North's Robert Johnson CD when you want to decide which piece
to explore next.
Nancy
At 07:14 AM 3/30/2011, Ron Andrico wrote:
Mathias:
R. Johnson, Ballard and Vallet wrote some of my absolute favorite music
for lute. The perfect melding of melody, texture and polyphonic
writing - real or implied. I'm sure you have your favorites at your
fingertips but if you or others are interested, I have a few choice
Dear All,
Hereby a lin to 3 contemporary lutesongs, 2 composed by myself and an
arrangement of an a medieval song performed by the Meander Ensemble.
http://users.telenet.be/gilbert.isbin/meander.html
Hope you enjoy them.
Gilbert Isbin
To get on or off this list see list information at
http:
>Very interesting final comment. I sometimes have the impression that
>the seventeenth century is happening all over again, with more and more
>people taking up baroque lute, baroque guitar, theorbo etc and leaving
>the renaissance lute behind. Is it simply too hard?
I doubt that
Very interesting final comment. I sometimes have the impression that
the seventeenth century is happening all over again, with more and more
people taking up baroque lute, baroque guitar, theorbo etc and leaving
the renaissance lute behind. Is it simply too hard?
P
That's my rationaliz
Very interesting final comment. I sometimes have the impression that
the seventeenth century is happening all over again, with more and more
people taking up baroque lute, baroque guitar, theorbo etc and leaving
the renaissance lute behind. Is it simply too hard?
P
On 30 March
Yes, of course jazz standards will work on lute, either in old tuning
or in d-minor tuning. The point in playing effective jazz guitar is
not just playing triad harmonies (always altered) but voice leading.
Listen to old recordings by Dick McDonough and the player who took up
where
Ivano Zanenghi has recently recorded a CD of jazz standards on archlute.
And Edin has recorded 'Round Midnight on baroque lute earlier.
RT
- Original Message -
From: "Christopher Wilke"
To: ; "Daniel Winheld"
Sent: Tuesday, March 29, 2011 11:08 PM
Subject: [LUTE] Re: a modern lute due
hi,
sorry, I know many of you are playing Guitar too!
If anybody is interested in Guitarquartetts and transcriptions, done by me...
here is a link.
(But please remember, I am not a layouter! )
http://www.mediafire.com/?bm1cvq31cf2jj
Enjoy them
Anton
--
To get on or off this list see list i
Lovely to see! Thanks. What kind of items has Newsidler in his hand on
the frontpage picture? And what do they mean? Any idea?
Best
Franz
__
Von: lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu im Auftrag von Andreas Schroth
Ges
This is really phantastic! Autographs!
Thank you very much for the wonderful work for all who play
"renaissance"-tuned lute.
Yours
Andreas
Am 30.03.2011 02:22, schrieb A. J. Ness:
I have the page with the inventory up and on my web pages.
http://mysite.verizon.net/vzepq31c/arthurjnesslutesc
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