Is there a conspiracy to hide the fact that he was the brother of
Francesco? :)
On 08.01.20 01:28, Roman Turovsky wrote:
Because they lend credence to alternatives of Antonio's postulates!)))
RT
On 1/6/2020 12:34 PM, Mathias Rösel wrote:
Why is that? Let others do as they please. I should
Because they lend credence to alternatives of Antonio's postulates!)))
RT
On 1/6/2020 12:34 PM, Mathias Rösel wrote:
Why is that? Let others do as they please. I should only be curious why
they did so.
Mathias
__
Actually, I really need a transcription, because it's for a non-lutenist
who can't read tablature ;-)
Yuval
Am 07.01.2020 21:39 schrieb Wayne:
Hi Yuval -
Not a transcription, but legible
http://culture.besancon.fr/ark:/48565/a011284026247S0XA9H/1/1
Wayne
On Jan 7, 2020, at 2:48 PM
Dear Ron
I don't believe Milán set the standard for later vihuelists, at least for those
whose works we know. His works, as you rightly pointed out are quite
idiosyncratic and unlike those which followed. On the other hand you may be
right about the term Fantasia. This is what Milán has to
Hello everybody,
I'm looking for a transcription of the Allemande in d-minor for theorbo
by de Visée, Saizenay-ms. pp. 228–9. Does any of you happen to have one?
I'd be very grateful!
All the best for 2020
Yuval
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Thanks, Rainer!
I have long wanted a good facsimile of this MS.
Dick
On Sun, Jan 5, 2020 at 12:11 PM Rainer <[1]rads.bera_g...@t-online.de>
wrote:
The digital facsimile of so-called Dlugoraj (II.6.15) lute book was
announced ages ago.
Now a miracle has happened:
Hello all,
I don't know any source of Portuguese lute music but there is at least
one of baroque guitar. It is called "O livro do conde de Redondo" and
the facsimile was edited by Lusitana Musica.
All the best,
Gui
I said more that 2%, not 2%, and I was referring to the average Jewish
percentage of the population.
Just guessing, but when I look up someone with a toponymical surename,
it seems more like 20-50%, depending on the Jewish population at the
place back then.
(Oppenheimer, Wertheimer are probably
Two percent equals "often"? Serious?
Mathias
__
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--- Original-Nachricht ---
Von: Tristan von Neumann
Betreff: [LUTE] Re: Milan's name
Datum: 07.01.2020, 15:24 Uhr
An: lu
You get a toponymical surname because people say: that's Hans, he moved
here from Nuremberg. Since we already have dozens of Hansens, let's call
him Nürnberger.
In many regions in Bavaria still today the Surname is moved to first
place when talking about people. So "der Nürnberger Hans" becomes H
Dear Mathias,
could you kindly explain to me, why Milan's surname could not possibly
imply that his family roots might have been from Milano?
G.
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Toponymical family names are quite common among Germans, and
inferentially among German Jews.
Nevertheless, Don Luys Milan did not hail from Milano, or at least his
name is no hint he did. Antonio brought enough evidence.
And there's no evidence at all that Milan was Jewish. Also, he
Not only among Jews, Roman! If every Oesterreicher, Frankfurter or
what-you-have would be Jewish, there would be no problem for any small Kehillah
anywhere here to find a Minjan for the Service …
Joachim
-Original-Nachricht-
Betreff: [LUTE] Re: Milan's name
Datum: 2020-01-07T11:18:18+0
Dear Antonio:
Thank you for this clarification. While I appreciate Milan and his
status as a pioneer in documenting Spanish music and courtly customâand
setting a standard for the later viheula printsâit seems to me (and
others) that he was strongly influenced by trends emergin
Toponymical surnames are prevalent among Jews: Toledo, Rovira, Palma and
Palmieri, Venezia etc etc.
RT
http://turovsky.org
Feci quod potui. Faciant meliora potentes.
> On Jan 6, 2020, at 8:48 AM, Tristan von Neumann
> wrote:
>
>
>> On 06.01.20 05:50, howard posner wrote:
>> And wouldn
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