Am 22.11.2010, 13:49 Uhr, schrieb Nicolás Valencia nivalenl...@gmail.com:
Dear all,
According to Richard Stone's article, Weiss's Concerted Music: A
Catalogue with Commentary, published in the latest LSA Journal, some
duets by Weiss include alternate instrumentations, i.e. lute
I have a copy of the Salzburg Lautencodex Ms III 25 which contains
these Weiss works (mostly for liutho, violino and basso but only the
lute tablature survives). Other composers include: Meckh, Block(Bloch),
Lauf(f)ensteiner, Bohr.
I have no evidence that the Weiss pieces in this
Dear Martyn,
thank you for your answer, to which I fully agree. Actually I was only
refering to Stone's overview on concerted works by Weiss, without assuming
that they were duets. In his published reconstruction of the lute concerti
(recent researches in the music of the baroque era, 136,
I am announcing a concert tomorrow night, Monday, 11-29-10. It is
with Leo Kottke and Bob Barto.
http://www.suemclean.com/shows/leo-kottke?utm_source=Facebookutm_medium=CPCutm_content=Leo+Kottke+-+11%2F29utm_campaign=sma10%2F11%2F20+-+Leo+Kottke
This ought to be a fabulous event, so if anyone
Hello Stephan,
unfortunately the edition of the Weiss complete works still hadn't been
finished at the time Richard Stone published his reconstruction.
So some of the numbers were preliminary and had to be changed due to
other editorial choices.
On the Weiss site you find the current
Ah, yes, I see. Thanks for the information, Markus.
And thanks for a great ressource!
Regards,
Stephan
Am 28.11.2010, 19:11 Uhr, schrieb Markus Lutz mar...@gmlutz.de:
Hello Stephan,
unfortunately the edition of the Weiss complete works still hadn't been
finished at the time Richard Stone
hi,
i have uploaded a new lute trio for 3 equal lutes.
It is a very fine and interesting music, with some diminuitions!
- Scarabelli, Damiano - Jubilate Deo --
(Florilegium sacrarum cantionum - Petri Phalesij 1609)
Damianus Scarrabeus (Scarabelli)
?, Bologna - 1598, Milano
score,
Dear all,
This might be of interest to some of you: There is a special web sale at
BoydellBrewers`s (www.boydellandbrewer.com) today and on monday. Most of the
books on stock, including the Balcarres lute book, are at 40% off normal
prices. In order to benefit, you only need to enter the
I am announcing a concert tomorrow night, Monday, 11-29-10. It is
with Leo Kottke and Bob Barto.
http://www.suemclean.com/shows/leo-kottke?utm_source=Facebookutm_medium=CPCutm_content=Leo+Kottke+-+11%2F29utm_campaign=sma10%2F11%2F20+-+Leo+Kottke
This ought to be a fabulous event, so if anyone
Hello
I'm looking for the biographical data and a biographical sketch on Josef Klima.
Who knows something?
Thanks!
Andreas
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I was at a poetry reading recently - not wholly of my own volition, but
there you go. At the end, the poet, Wendy Cope, was asked how long she
took to write her poems. Generally, she said, a few days and after that
point she couldn't really get them any better.
As an amateur player, I feel
Unfortunately my computer would only let me view the first 21 seconds of the
video/audio. But what I heard/saw was very nice. Your posts have convinced me
that I should have this music, so I've ordered it. I suspect that it's
unlikely that I'll be getting any of these pieces up to your level
On Nov 28, 2010, at 2:52 PM, Stuart Walsh wrote:
I wonder if professionals feel like this, albeit at a much higher level of
proficiency?
It's not very productive in any discussion to draw a line between
professionals and amateurs, as there are amateurs who play 'better'
(in any definition
- Original Message -
From: Susanne Herre [1]mandolinens...@web.de
To: Lute List [2]l...@cs.dartmouth.edu
Sent: Thursday, November 25, 2010 9:43 AM
Subject: [LUTE] Re: Francesco da Milano - Ness 33
Thank you for all your responses!
Sorry I didn't write clearly.
I defer to Arthur in all things Francesco, however as an issue of
performance practice, not musicology, I still hold that the beginning
of a piece may be in free time, and that there is no urtext or
composer's intent except in very rare cases (Byrd).
As we can see from John and Robert Dowland,
Hello
A
Someone announced on the french lute list, that James Tyler passed
away.A I don't know if the American lute list was made aware of
this.A
A
Bruno Cognyl-Fournier
Montreal, Canada
--
To get on or off this list see list information at
Thanks Bruno--
He will be missed.
One of my earliest memories of his playing was Queen Elizabeth's
Galliard--I remember thinking, yikes, that's fast!
dt
At 06:14 PM 11/28/2010, you wrote:
Hello
A
Someone announced on the french lute list, that James Tyler passed
away.A I
Certainly will be missed, I still have my old LP's of him and Anthony
Rooley playing.A He was amongst the first in the line of lute
revivalists and I certainly would probably have never played lute if I
hadn't listened to his records amongst others of that period.A He
apparently
James Tyler was a great inspiration for my lute duet partner, Sandy
Hackney and me when we listened to the lute duets he performed with
Anthony Rooley way back in another day. And his guitar books were of
great interest as well. He is missed.
Dan
Someone announced on the french lute
Also at the forefront of reuniting baroque repertoire for mandolin[o] with the
instrument for which it was intended. Still one of the very few to have
recorded gut-strung mandolino in fingerstyle punteado. Missed indeed...
Eugene
- Original Message -
From: Bruno Fournier
For you delectation, the Sonata in ecco con tre violini of Biagio
Marini
Marini always sounds better with a few lutes. The Passacaglia in G
minor is a great piece as well.
[1]http://tinyurl.com/Biagio-Marini --
References
1. http://tinyurl.com/Biagio-Marini
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