http://www.lute.ru/library_eng/lutetab.htm
This is an older link to a lot of gerbodes tabs in russia.
Try it.
-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: Orphenica [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 8. November 2007 21:34
An: Tony Chalkley
Cc: lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Betreff: [LUTE] Re: Ok
in the absence of Sage Gerbode's site, try Richard Civiol's Luth-Librairie.
http://luthlibrairie.free.fr/?Renaissance:Fran%26ccedil%3Baise
there are 17 songs fron the First book of Ayres online in PDF
Charles
-Original Message-
From: Omer katzir [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 08 November 2
The library will have the Stainer and Bell edition, my wife would tell me.
Here's what I've found in my Finale files (off-list attachments only). Not
many, but beautiful songs anyway,
David
- Original Message -
From: "Omer katzir" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Thursday, November 08,
As you mention Gerbodes Site,
does anybody know, why it is not accessible any more?
Greetz
we
Tony Chalkley schrieb:
There were a few or rather a lot on Sarge Gerbode's site which seems
to have mislaid itself. They are also available in the public part of
Alain Veylit's site, which will be
There were a few or rather a lot on Sarge Gerbode's site which seems to have
mislaid itself. They are also available in the public part of Alain
Veylit's site, which will be a relief to many.
Go into
http://josquin.musickshandmade.com
Then filter "Author is" Campion to get eleven pages of s
I cant find any of campions song's with tabs, i can buy them, but it's
a problem for me to read facsimile (i cant see that good... unless
it's really good quality)
so what i need is a good website with the songs+tabs, or good source
for ordering them, if it facsimile, so it must be high quali
I mentioned this for someone recently,
James Bailey, "Regular Meantone Temperaments applied to
Francesco da Milano," JLSA 26-27 (1993-94): 71-95.
Baily ran the complete FdaM tablatures through a
computer program to analyze the intervals.
==AJN
Boston, Mass.
This week's free download from
Class
Jim
That was more or less the position adopted by Mark Wheeler during
the previous discussion (He is also a cittern player). Except that he
also added that he used the thumb to prevent some strings sounding,
if they were accidentally struck, when the strumming went a little
wide of the m