Faint means to make less or diminish, or miss the mark, or fall short.
It has a resonance with the older meaning of feindre, which has a
sense of avoiding one's duty, and is also a pun on the other meaning
of faint, which is to fade, or die away.
These themes are used again and again in Dowland,
Dear Charles,
This book is essentially a modern edition of William Barley, _A new
Booke of Tabliture_ (London, 1596). Newcomb gives the tablature with a
transcription into staff notation. His introduction uses a proper font,
but all the music is copied by hand.
There is a bit about Newcomb's
Barley download here:
http://www.shipbrook.com/jeff/bookshelf/download.html?bookid=6
G.
- Original Message -
From: be...@interlog.com
To: lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Sent: Tuesday, January 11, 2011 6:07 PM
Subject: [LUTE] Shakespeare settings
Hi, all! I'm doing a concert of Renaissance
Dear friends lutenists!
Anyone can share Thomas Robinson The Schoole of Musicke? Or give please the
link where i can download it.
Thanks a lot in advance!
To get on or off this list see list information at
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
Same site!
http://www.shipbrook.com/jeff/bookshelf/details.html?bookid=26
- Original Message -
From: konstantin.n...@gmail.com
To: lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Sent: Wednesday, April 06, 2011 1:25 PM
Subject: [LUTE]
Dear friends lutenists!
Anyone can share Thomas Robinson The Schoole of
http://www.shipbrook.com/jeff/bookshelf/index.html?sort=bysubject
see und music
greetings
w.
Original-Nachricht
Datum: Wed, 6 Apr 2011 15:25:55 +0400
Von: Константин Щеников konstantin.n...@gmail.com
An: lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Betreff: [LUTE]
Dear friends lutenists!
Anyone
Hi Konstantin,
have a look here:
http://www.shipbrook.com/jeff/bookshelf/
regards
Bernd
- Original Message -
From: Константин Щеников konstantin.n...@gmail.com
To: lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Sent: Wednesday, April 06, 2011 1:25 PM
Subject: [LUTE]
Dear friends lutenists!
Anyone can
Ross W. Duffin's Shakespeare's Songbook gives early settings plus
tunes from early sources made to fit the Shakespeare texts. He
doesn't give accompaniments, much less tablature for Morley, e.g.
Ed
On Apr 6, 2011, at 7:18 AM, G. Crona wrote:
Barley download here:
Yes, but Duffin well documents his sources in the notes for each tune, and
so it is possible to find performance versions in the Elizabethan repertory.
Such as the Marsh Lute Book, Folger, Ballet, Varietie, Playford, etc. He
must cite close to
100 manuscript sources. And a like number of early
I had the pleasure of hearing HS give a recital last night of Spanish music of
the 17th century (on Baroque guitar). I've heard him twice before in recitals
of Renaissance lute music, but even though the lute is the instrument I'm
trying to learn to play, this guitar recital captivated me in a
This is my first recording on lute solo.
I am guitarist, I play lute 4 months.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HeNbkf1u1SQ
What do you think about it?
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http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
I do not know of Mrs. Smith's musical activities. However, I can tell you
about a similar event I coordinated in Columbus, OH this past weekend. I
was very pleased with the turnout for Hoppy's concert and all the support
from Early Music, WOSU, the Columbus Dispatch, etc. We had attendees from
Yes, he is an absolute master, and I am in awe of him as well. He
has the way of getting to the point, in a most insightful manner.
ed
At 11:52 AM 4/6/2011, Eugene C. Braig IV wrote:
I do not know of Mrs. Smith's musical activities. However, I can tell you
about a similar event I coordinated
out of curiosity:
how many times did Hoppy use the expression That was almost good! during
the master class?
RT
- Original Message -
From: Edward Martin e...@gamutstrings.com
To: Eugene C. Braig IV brai...@osu.edu; lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Sent: Wednesday, April 06, 2011 1:15 PM
It did come up a couple times, but only a couple. A couple more-choice
nuggets:
You have a very democratic spirit was used in reference to the treatment
of all voices with equal color and dynamic in passage from a Bach fugue.
Frankly, the overall performance of said fugue was already very good,
No clue.
At 12:25 PM 4/6/2011, Roman Turovsky wrote:
out of curiosity:
how many times did Hoppy use the expression That was almost good!
during the master class?
RT
- Original Message - From: Edward Martin e...@gamutstrings.com
To: Eugene C. Braig IV brai...@osu.edu;
Andreas Ornithoparchus (translate by John Dowland): His Micrologus, or
Introduction Containing the Art of Singing.
Anybody can share this book? Or give a link, where I can Download it? Thanks a
lot in advance!
With great respect,
Konstantin Shchenikov.
--
To get on or off this list see list
Hi everyone,
My name is Ehud (called Oody by friends) and I just joined the list. I
am not a lute player yet though that is in my plans. Currently I play
the sax and have had some recorder lessons.
Professionally, I am a special educator and I have degrees in history,
http://www.torban.org/sarmatoruthenicae/audio/321.mp3
http://www.torban.org/sarmatoruthenicae/images/321.pdf
in major!
Enjoy.
Amitiés,
RT
From: Roman Turovsky r.turov...@verizon.net
has just been filmed by Eugene Kurenko -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ttef1aZaI48
Enjoy.
Amitiës,
RT
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