Thank you for the heads-up, Ed. I just checked and the CD won't be
available in the UK until April 23rd. Pre-ordering is possible
though! Tony is certainly covering the repertoire, isn't he?
Interesting that he uses A70. It's really all you can do when you use
a gut chanterelle
Hi Bill,
This is indeed a fascinating subject (hence the change of heading).
I am told variously that the 1722 Wenger has a string length of 76 or
77cm. It may at some stage have been converted (from a gallichon
perhaps?) to a 13 course lute before the present manifestation as
Dear Martyn,
Thank you for this notice: in fact this CD has been out in Europe for
over a year.
I think you confuse it with some other recording. (Old Gautiers
Nightinghall?)
This one is quite new.
[1]www.ramee.org/1104gb.html
best regards
Bernd
Hi Martyn,
Go to [1]www.spotify.com where you can download the player onto your
computer.
There are then two options - you can go for the free version which has
occasional ads between tracks, or the paid version that is ad-free.
Being a Scotsman I put up with the ads!
Best
Will I be shot down in flames by suggesting you don't use Spotify? The
thing is a massive rip off. The musician gets almost nothing for being
on it. Lady Gaga had over a million plays on it, and received just over
100 dollars. Imagine what Anthony Bailes would receive... Many
Dear Martyn,
Thank you for this notice: in fact this CD has been out in Europe for
over a year.
I think you confuse it with some other recording. (Old Gautiers
Nightinghall?)
This one is quite new.
[1]www.ramee.org/1104gb.html
best regards
Bernd
To be
Hi Bill, This is indeed a fascinating subject (hence the change of
heading). I am told variously that the 1722 Wenger has a string length
of 76 or 77cm. It may at some stage have been converted (from a
gallichon perhaps?) to a 13 course lute before the present
Good point Rob
rgds
Martyn
--- On Fri, 16/3/12, Rob MacKillop robmackil...@gmail.com wrote:
From: Rob MacKillop robmackil...@gmail.com
Subject: [BAROQUE-LUTE] Re: What lutes for 17th century French music
was: Ne Anthony Bailes CD
To: William Samson
Dear Mathias,
Interesting. As said, I don't think any reasonably sized lute is
'wrong': it's more a matter of what might have been generally expected
at the particular time.
My comments relate principally to French lute music of the mid/late
17th century (as on Anthony
the case, too, that even when things are done legally, the artist is at
the end of the queue for picking up their meagre share of the takings.
Artists usually pay to record cds these days. In return they receive a
number of cds to sell by themsleves. Depending on the name/popularity
of the
Dear Anthony Hind!
Anthony Bailes LP recording of 'Pieces de luth'; EMI REFLEXE;
IC 06330938, was my introduction to French baroque lute music.
After that I was hooked.
So was I at the time. All my prejudices were set, and I was sent for a long
way.
I have enjoyed his
Dear Anthony and all,
I also very much enjoy that old recording of AB on EMI Reflexe. A
great, old recording.
Your statement that (although, I imagine that with his 76cm lute
pure gut basses should also work well) is in complete agreement with
my recent experimentation.
As you know, I have
Dear Both of You
I think the plenitiful supply of choral groups is a particularly English
thing because every Cathedral, Anglican or Roman Catholic has a full time
choir usually with a choir school of some sort attached and all these
singers have grown up in them man and boy (and girl now).
Monica,
Smaller Catholic churches may or may not have had the performing
resources to present much in the way of elaborate polyphony, but they
would have certainly had plainchant either sung by hired singers or the
priests and deacons themselves. By and large, the congregation
Thanks Rob. This is interesting. Presumably the publisher/record
company must get something worthwhile out of this, or they wouldn't be
agreeing to let Spotify include their tracks. Either that or they view
it as a marketing tool that will encourage listeners to buy the
download
On 3/16/2012 7:22 AM, Christopher Wilke wrote:
Monica,
Smaller Catholic churches may or may not have had the performing
resources to present much in the way of elaborate polyphony, but they
would have certainly had plainchant either sung by hired singers or the
priests
Sorry - I would question a lot of what you are saying. It depends what
you mean by smaller Catholic churches. Most peasants lived in small
scattered rural communites and the clergy who ministered to them were
not necessarily highly educated or particularly musical. If they did
Dear All
Anthony Bailes LP recording of 'Pieces de luth'; EMI REFLEXE;
IC 06330938, was my introduction to French baroque lute music.
After that I was hooked.
I have enjoyed his recent CDs (although I had not yet heard this, his
most recent one), but regret that the
Thank you for the clarifications, Monica. I was tempted to add my two
sense but your words more effectively expressed my reaction.
At the risk of mumbling this topic to death, I will add that our
practical experience pretty much confirms your observations. We have
had some very
Well - our vicar can't even intone the Gospel on one note without
ending at least a tone lower than where he started.
Perhaps musical historians don't realize how complex plainchant is and
how difficult it is to sing well.
Monica
- Original Message -
From:
Please correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't Martin Luther, circa 1500, say
Why
should the Devil have all the best music?, and took his lute and recorder
to the
German taverns to play his hymns.
May I say at least that this is news to me: Luther playing the recorder, and
Luther playing and
Monica,
--- On Fri, 3/16/12, Monica Hall mjlh...@tiscali.co.uk wrote:
Sorry - I would question a lot of what you are saying. It depends
what
you mean by smaller Catholic churches. Most peasants lived in
small
scattered rural communites and the clergy who ministered
In fact.
Read Burney on the quality of most church music he encountered on the
Continent.
RT
From: Christopher Wilke chriswi...@yahoo.com
I never suggested elaborate settings, in fact, I argued against it. Be
careful not to project our modern notions of quality on past periods.
To get
In the old Catholic Church, there was not a just go with what you've
got attitude:
Dearie me! I am not saying that there was a just go with what you've got
attitude.
Most of the things in your list (I have never heard of Susan Carroll-Clark)
are very basic and have nothing to do with
Thank you so much Ken ! I do appreciate your kind and fast gesture.
Hope I can help you back some time !
All the best,
Jean-Marie Poirier
=
== En réponse au message du 16-03-2012, 22:04:58 ==
I've attached the article for you.
Ken Brodkey
On 3/16/2012 1:53
Thank you for sending the article I requested about Anthony Holborne.
You were a fantastic help once more !
All the best,
Jean-Marie
To get on or off this list see list information at
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
Reference:
Luther, Biography of a Reformer, by Frederick Nohl, Concordia Publishing
House, 2003.
ISBN 0-7586-0651-6
Luther thought it was critical that lay people (non-clergy and the
unlearned) be able to understand the service, be able to sing the hymns
during service, and be able to read
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