Sarge,
if you are not able to return to your house
I am here to help
i have a spare bedroom and your own bathroom for you
please let me know
if you are really lucky a PT treatment is included
i also can play a piece on my B-lute for you
Hermann
925 - 935-8279
On
As a generalisation I think of the French style courante and Italian
style corrente as very different. The courante as elusive, difficult,
tuneless! and the corrente as lively and having more clarity.
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Original Message
Subject: [LUTE]
Hi Sarge,
I heard all of Santa Rosa was evacuated because of the fire a couple of
days ago. Are you able to get back to your house now?
I think there are various sub-styles of courantes and even a couple of
instances where the same piece is called a courant in one source and a
volte in
Are there significant differences among courantes, corantos, correntes,
etc.? It seems there must be at least a historical connection between them.
--Sarge
--
Frank A. Gerbode, MD
11132 Dell Ave
Forestville, CA 95436
http://gerbode.net
To get on or off this list see list information at
Don't know how this happened, but many years ago (in the early 60's)
learned few steps & danced galliards, courantes, slower dances--woman
whose name I've forgotten--from the various treatises mentioned above.
So we had dancers in our early programs, they just tried to look
Tristan:
You are fortunate in that there is a great deal of information about
historical dance available. Start here.
RA
[1]https://www.loc.gov/collections/dance-instruction-manuals-from-1490-
to-1920/articles-and-essays/western-social-dance-an-overview-of-the-col
Thanks!
Interestingly, they are all German :)
On 31.10.19 12:43, David Van Edwards wrote:
To answer the second part of your question:
Possibly:
Melchior Newsidler 1574
https://lute-images.myjetbrains.com/youtrack/issue/LI-3
Sebastian Ochsenkhun 1588
To answer the second part of your question:
Possibly:
Melchior Newsidler 1574
https://lute-images.myjetbrains.com/youtrack/issue/LI-3
Sebastian Ochsenkhun 1588
https://lute-images.myjetbrains.com/youtrack/issue/LI-183
Sixtus Kargel (1540-1600)
Dear Tristan,
It seems unlikely as he's wearing some VERY fancy
armour. It looks more like a portrait of Charles
IX of France, the Roi under whose privilege the
book was printed. He has the same very
conspicuous long straight nose.
Best wishes,
David
At 10:22 +0100 31/10/19, Tristan von
Not all courantes are easy to play though :)))
I would be very happy to receive any info on the possible dance moves
around 1600.
On 27.10.19 16:38, Jurgen Frenz wrote:
Hello there,
I have the impression that Courantes have the tendency to be
technically much less challenging
Dear Lutists,
I just noticed that there is a portrait in "Le Cinquième Livre" of the
1562 Le Roy print of Albert de Rippe's works.
Is this considered an authentic portrait of de Rippe or just generic?
Are there any confirmed authentic portraits of 16th c. lutenists?
Links to pics are
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