Dear David and Martin,
thank you! Apparently there's a lot to think about...
Two months ago in Venice I had the chance to meet an indorador
(gilder) who still works using traditional Venitian techniques: his
(small and beautiful) shop belongs to his family since at least three
Thanks, folks, for your information about lutes in North America. It
was interesting to read of records concerning lutes in New France and
New England. I had imagined it highly unlikely that no lutes had made
it over the Altantic during the seventeenth century, but I had never
come across
- Forwarded Message -
From: Martyn Hodgson hodgsonmar...@yahoo.co.uk
To: David Van Edwards da...@vanedwards.co.uk
Cc: 'LuteNet list' lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Sent: Friday, 21 June 2013, 8:16
Subject: Re: [LUTE] Re: The golden rose
Dear David,
I was under the, perhaps
I guess kitsch was invented earlier than generally thought
RT
On 6/21/2013 4:02 AM, Luca Manassero wrote:
Dear David and Martin,
thank you! Apparently there's a lot to think about...
Two months ago in Venice I had the chance to meet an indorador
(gilder) who still works
Here's a groovy little club of which I'm quite fond: http://www.iaglr.org/.
The name was obviously mangled to accommodate the catchy acronym
that sounds like 'eye ag ler'.
If the organization weren't paying so much
attention to the acronym, they might have come
up with a more suitable name:
Hmmm...
Eugene
-Original Message-
From: lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu [mailto:lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu] On Behalf Of
Tobiah
Sent: Friday, June 21, 2013 12:39 PM
To: Braig, Eugene
Cc: lute mailing list list
Subject: [LUTE] Re: Lute in North America?
Here's a groovy little club of which