Actually there are hints about the playing position even in very early
tutors of the renaissance. They all mention a playing position between
bridge and rose.
I've seen many of today's players playing over the rose which would be
completely wrong following that instructions but I have to
Dear Francesco. Thomas, et all,
This is an interesting thread (pun intended) , as I think we are really
discussing the hows and why's, in the metamorphosis of the lute. By that, I
mean how the instrument changed through the times, why the transition
tunings appeared, but were short lived, and
here's an item to pique the interest of those with
uncompromising views on pinky placement, etc., etc.
in a book i confess to have read once called meetings
with remarkable men by george gurdjieff - which, as a
book, when divorced from the god'swill that
accompanied it, turned out to be an
There is a scene in - I think it's Sturm und Drang when the young student
complains about playing menuets on the lute and about all those grace which
doesn't work right ... I'll look it up!
Is there an English title for this film? I couldn't find it in the
Movie database.
--
Ed Durbrow
Saitama,
There is a quote in the biography by Rosanow about his study time in Königsberg:
Nur am Gesange, den er von ganzer Seele liebte, beteiligte er sich mit
Vergnügen.
Auch das Spiel auf der Laute bereitete ihm Genuß
in English:
Only in singing, that he loved with heart and soul, he took part with
Dear Roman and Rainer,
The only mention of Lenz I can find on the Baroque Lute List is a
message from Marcus Lutz on 8th May 2001. To save you looking for
it, I've copied it below.
My archives go back only as far as 29th October 1999, so it is
possible that there are other messages about Lenz on
The only mention of Lenz I can find on the Baroque Lute List is a
message from Marcus Lutz on 8th May 2001. To save you looking for
it, I've copied it below.
My archives go back only as far as 29th October 1999, so it is
possible that there are other messages about Lenz on the Baroque
Lute
a canary island timple is up for auction on spanish
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i've bought things from stringwalker1 in the past
without any problems.
- bill
=
and thus i made...a small vihuela from the shell of a
Ed Durbrow wrote:
There is a scene in - I think it's Sturm und Drang when the young student
complains about playing menuets on the lute and about all those grace which
doesn't work right ... I'll look it up!
It's not Sturm und Drang, it's - I was right :) - Lenz's Hofmeister.
The lute doesn't
Hi Roman,
You're right. It is in the 4th Akt.
And there are at least 2 lutenists ...
Markus
On Tue, 23 Nov 2004 13:46:53 -0500, Roman Turovsky wrote:
RT The only mention of Lenz I can find on the Baroque Lute List is a
RT message from Marcus Lutz on 8th May 2001. To save you looking for
RT
Hi All:
I answered Stephen privately but intended to post this to the Lute list
earlier, so here it is: JMHO.
- Original Message -
From: Vance Wood [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Stephan Olbertz [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, November 22, 2004 8:58 AM
Subject: Re: thoughts on low tension on
By popular demand: I have added an archlute/10c version of #37.
RT
I have some extraordinary and beautiful 18th century Ukrainian penitential
Psalms just added (## 37-44, [39-40 are updates of previously available
items]) to
http://www.polyhymnion.org/lieder/ukrainian.html
Enjoy,
RT
To
Markus Lutz wrote:
Hi Roman,
You're right. It is in the 4th Akt.
And there are at least 2 lutenists ...
Akt IV, Scene 6:
Sechste Scene.
In Leipzig.
Fritz von Berg. Pätus.
Fritz.
Das einzige, was ich an Dir auszusetzen habe, Pätus. Ich habe Dirs schon lang
sagen wollen: untersuche Dich
I have been interested in this for a while. It seems
to me to be a valuable insight into historical lute
construction, i.e to convert a rennaissance lute to a
baroque lute rather than only replicate the final
product. Ed-I think you should now convert the 11c to
a bassrider 13! If I had an 11c
According to luthier-friend this type of sorry expediency is exactly what
was the cause of low survival rate of baroque lutes. This is not as bad as
cello-pins for lutes, but DON'T TRY THIS AT HOME. Earlier lutes just don't
have enough wood to hold 13 courses.
RT
__
Roman M. Turovsky
Obviously I would take it to my neighborhood expert
luthier of course silly:)
Sterling
--- Roman Turovsky [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
According to luthier-friend this type of sorry
expediency is exactly what
was the cause of low survival rate of baroque lutes.
This is not as bad as
cello-pins
He would never do this, if he were intelligent.
RT
Obviously I would take it to my neighborhood expert
luthier of course silly:)
Sterling
--- Roman Turovsky [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
According to luthier-friend this type of sorry
expediency is exactly what
was the cause of low survival
So you are saying that J.J. Edlinger and J.C. Hoffman
were not inteligent? That is what they spent most of
their time doing besides making violins.
Sterling
--- Roman Turovsky [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
He would never do this, if he were intelligent.
RT
Obviously I would take it to my
They were MOSTLY building from scratch, and from time to time putting in a
fake label, for self-evident reasons.
RT
__
Roman M. Turovsky
http://polyhymnion.org/swv
So you are saying that J.J. Edlinger and J.C. Hoffman
were not inteligent? That is what they spent most of
their time
You should read the latest journal of the LSA which
discusses this topic in depth. Surely we can agree
that many baroque lutes didn't begin life with 13
courses.
Sterling
--- Roman Turovsky [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
They were MOSTLY building from scratch, and from
time to time putting in a
fake
You should read the latest journal of the LSA which
discusses this topic in depth. Surely we can agree
that many baroque lutes didn't begin life with 13
courses.
Sterling
1. That's why so many of them fell apart.
2. Lundberg's opinions are considered dated by some.
3. Too many instruments
RT,
If you join any of the Historical Harp Societies- they would surely
provide
you with an explanatory booklet, but in a nit-shell a Baroque harp is a
instrument in use during the Baroque Era, i.e. a more or less chromatic
instrument with either two or three rows of strings, or single a row
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