[LUTE] Re: Belle qui tiens ma vie

2008-09-04 Thread wolfgang wiehe
here is a facsimile of the pavan: http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=musdifileName=219/musdi219.dbrecNum=61 w. Original-Nachricht Datum: Thu, 4 Sep 2008 00:33:26 - Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED] An: Lute Net lute@cs.dartmouth.edu Betreff: [LUTE] Re: Belle qui tiens ma

[LUTE] test

2008-09-04 Thread David van Ooijen
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[LUTE] Re: test

2008-09-04 Thread Omer katzir
works great On Sep 4, 2008, at 11:47 AM, David van Ooijen wrote: -- To get on or off this list see list information at http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html

[LUTE] Re: Books on the history of the lute?

2008-09-04 Thread David van Ooijen
Bernd Mine is hardcover, but called A History of the Lute. 2002, btw, so not that recent. You're not talking about the lovely booklet by Andreas: The Lute in Europe? Many glossy pictures, but paperback. David - still testing On Thu, Sep 4, 2008 at 1:32 PM, Bernd Haegemann

[LUTE] Re: Books on the history of the lute?

2008-09-04 Thread Rob MacKillop
The book by Andreas Schlegal is very nice indeed, and full of interesting information. Recommended. Rob MacKillop -- To get on or off this list see list information at http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html

[LUTE] Re: Books on the history of the lute?

2008-09-04 Thread Roman Turovsky
Seconded. RT From: Rob MacKillop [EMAIL PROTECTED] The book by Andreas Schlegеl is very nice indeed, and full of interesting information. Recommended. Rob MacKillop -- To get on or off this list see list information at http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html

[LUTE] Re: Books on the history of the lute?

2008-09-04 Thread Jim Abraham
PGRpdiBkaXI9Imx0ciI+VGhhbmtzIGZvciBhbGwgdGhlIHJlY29tbWVuZGF0aW9ucy4gTm9 3IEkg aGF2ZSBtb3JlIHRoYW4gb25lIGJvb2sgdG8gYnV5ITxicj48YnI+UmVnYXJkcyw8YnI+PGJ yPkpp bTxicj48YnI+PGRpdiBjbGFzcz0iZ21haWxfcXVvdGUiPk9uIFRodSwgU2VwIDQsIDIwMDg gYXQg

[LUTE] Re: Books on the history of the lute?

2008-09-04 Thread Taco Walstra
On Thursday 04 September 2008 15:32, Jim Abraham rattled on the keyboard: PGRpdiBkaXI9Imx0ciI+VGhhbmtzIGZvciBhbGwgdGhlIHJlY29tbWVuZGF0aW9ucy4gTm9 3IEkg Yes that's also a very interesting book on history of the lute although the language is a bit of a problem. Taco To get on or off this

[LUTE] Books on the history of the lute?

2008-09-04 Thread Stewart McCoy
Dear Jim, It may not be the book you saw, but if you want a history of the lute in Britain, there is Matthew Spring's book. Best wishes, Stewart McCoy. -Original Message- From: Jim Abraham [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 03 September 2008 20:13 To: lutelist Subject: [LUTE] Books on

[LUTE] Re: Books on the history of the lute?

2008-09-04 Thread Jim Abraham
Test message from Jim. Hope it's in English. On Thu, Sep 4, 2008 at 10:33 AM, Bernd Haegemann [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: those extraterrestrians seem to be everywhere now... PGRpdiBkaXI9Imx0ciI+VGhhbmtzIGZvciBhbGwgdGhlIHJlY29tbWVuZGF0aW9ucy4g Tm9 3IEkg

[LUTE] A question about Theorbos

2008-09-04 Thread Joshua Edward Horn
Guys, I have a question about Theorbos. First off, how it's it pronounced (there-o-bo)??? and 2nd are the extended strings off the body just plucked and that's all they are used for?? (no fingerings I mean). Thanks, Josh Joshua Edward Horn To get on or off this list see list

[LUTE] Re: A question about Theorbos

2008-09-04 Thread howard posner
On Sep 4, 2008, at 12:52 PM, Joshua Edward Horn wrote: I have a question about Theorbos. First off, how it's it pronounced (there-o-bo)??? Thee-oar-boe, with the initial th as in thick. and 2nd are the extended strings off the body just plucked and that's all they are used for?? (no

[LUTE] Re: A question about Theorbos

2008-09-04 Thread Rob MacKillop
2008/9/4 howard posner [EMAIL PROTECTED] Thee-oar-boe, with the initial th as in thick. Looks like an American accent, with that oar in there, Howie. I would say Thee - or - boe. But what do Scots know? [Don't answer that] Rob MacKillop -- References 1.

[LUTE] Re: A question about Theorbos

2008-09-04 Thread howard posner
On Sep 4, 2008, at 1:11 PM, Rob MacKillop wrote: Looks like an American accent, with that oar in there, Howie. I would say Thee - or - boe. -- To get on or off this list see list information at http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html

[LUTE] Re: A question about Theorbos

2008-09-04 Thread howard posner
On Sep 4, 2008, at 1:11 PM, Rob MacKillop wrote: Thee-oar-boe, with the initial th as in thick. Looks like an American accent, with that oar in there, Howie. I would say Thee - or - boe. But what do Scots know? [Don't answer that] Most Americans would pronounce the two spellings the same

[LUTE] was A Musician's Return to Music by Glenn Kurtz now Lute etymology

2008-09-04 Thread David Tayler
Thanks for Sean's insights. The etymology of lute cannot, of course, be known as a cerainty, however the most likely explanation is that it is derived from the early medieval arabic word for twig or bent stick. Many scholars have erroneously used modern arabic false cognates. The naming