If I remember correctly the first copyright law appeared in England ca.
1714. Pirated editions made the bread and butter of many printers before
then. But, it is only when copyrights were in force that authors started
to make a living out of their published works. Before that it was a
system
Many Thanks Arto! Your generosity in sharing has always been sincerely
appreciated.
Having finally done my research, I see that it was composed by Purcell
in 1695, and then published by Playford in 1698.
Thanks again!
Theo Jordan
Ohio, US
(I use the theo89294 to hide
I was wondering if anyone on the list has a pdf, or knows a link for:
Johann Daniel Mylius Thesaurus Gratiarum (Frankfurt, 1622).
Lvov lute manuscript = RU-Lv Ms 1400/1 - Hans Kernstock c1655.
I found nice indexes of both of them in Julia Craig Mc-Feeley's lists.
Nancy
--
Nancy Carlin
I recall a conversation with Pat O'Brien about dC many years ago, and he
said there was a lot of plagiarism in his works.
RT
On 2/20/2018 3:45 AM, Martin Shepherd wrote:
Hi Leonard,
They could be derived from a common model, such as a recercar by
Giulio Segni (da Modena). A more explicit
Hi Leonard,
They could be derived from a common model, such as a recercar by Giulio
Segni (da Modena). A more explicit case of this is Ness 88, which is
very close to no.16 in DaCrema's 1548 book, where it is attributed to
Julio da Modena. It appears in Ness as Appendix 15. Julio Segni