Rainer, Nigel North did a set of intabulations of Henry Purcell pieces at the
beginning of his concert on 11-course d-minor lute.https://bit.ly/NorthConcert
Daniel
-- Original Message --
From: Rainer
To: Lute net , lutelist
Subject: [Lutelist] Purcell on the lute
Date: Sun,
Thanks, Martyn. Great movie. There is a playlist on YouTube for the TV
program. Let's see whether the link below survives transmission through the
list server.https: // www.youtube .com/ playlist?list=PL1145D2CEC1ECC20C(You
will need to remove the 4 spaces I inserted in order for the link to
Instrument(s) for sale:http://bit.ly/1ddztq7 If I count correctly, this
instrument has1 single chanterelle + 4 double courses on the fingerboard9
single courses on the extension. Is there any historical, modern or practical
justification for this configuration?In other words, does there exist
Mateo: The complete manuscript cataloged as M140.V186S is available in
facsimile here:http://hdl.handle.net/1802/27721 Daniel Heiman
-- Original Message --
From: Matteo Turri matteo.o.tu...@gmail.com
To: lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Subject: [LUTE] A page on Charles de Lespine with
be a gamba rather than a cello, but the pegs and +/- frets on the
neck are not clear:http://www.accademiacarrara.bergamo.it/foto/acq00760.jpg
Daniel
Sent: Saturday, December 28, 2013 2:43 AM
To: [4]heiman.dan...@juno.com
Cc: [5]lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Subject: [LUTE] Re: New example
Bob: I have to agree with Howard's suspicion that this is a contemporary
photograph, probably modified in photoshop. The design is too sparse, too
simple for a 17th century painting. A still life from that period would have
more musical instruments and more food and drink items on the table,
Amusing little item I ran across in an image search with the terms lute and
still lifehttp://www.epilogue.net/art/21154-i-vampiri-il-liuto Just look at
that excellent plucking-hand technique! Regards, Daniel
--
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Volume 12 of Das Erbe contains selections from Reusner (and Weiss). See this
pdf:http://bit.ly/17VpGnc for a table of contents. Daniel -- Original
Message --
From: stephen arndt stephenwar...@verizon.net
To: lute mailing list list lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Subject: [LUTE] Reusner
__JWM__J754acc87.49e5fe68S.92174f5M
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
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Manuel: I would have expected an immediate response, since this is in the
Cancionero de Uppsala which is widely available, but I have not
Before I buy any new electronic product I always spend some time scanning the
reviews on the Internet, paying special attention to the negative ones to find
out what can go wrong. Having done that for the pocket digital recorders now
available, I stand by my recommendation for Roland/Edirol.
Anthony: I would like to put in a plug for the Edirol R-09 recorders from
Roland. They are among the most compact and lightest of the pocket recorders.
The original version was made in Japan, but has a relatively fragile design for
the door that covers the memory chip slot and the batteries,
To amplify on the response by Grzegorz, the Lautenweltadressbuch lists 27
historical lutes in Leipzig and a total of 22 in three different public
collections in Munich. In Vienna there are 27 in the Kunsthistorisches Museum
and in Nürnberg 27 or 28. Of course many of the historical instruments
Ariel:
The 1568 edition is available as a microfilm in the LSA library.
Daniel
-- Original Message --
From: Ariel Abramovich g_abramo...@hotmail.com
To: lute lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Subject: [LUTE] Fronimo 1568
Date: Fri, 9 Dec 2011 12:09:38 +0100
Dear friends,
I'm looking for
Heiman heiman.dan...@juno.com,LuteNet list
lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Subject: [LUTE] Re: Century-old lute recordings
Date: Sun, 4 Dec 2011 18:38:06 +0900
How very interesting! It sounds like the singer is singing full voice.
They must have put the lutenist right in front
Pity that there does not appear to be a photo of the instrument on the website
of the Kunsthistorisches Museum where it resides.
Daniel
-- Original Message --
From: howard posner howardpos...@ca.rr.com
To: LUTELIST List lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Subject: [LUTE] Re: Weird early
Theo:
Thanks for bringing this museum to our attention.
Looks like they have a quite new and fancy building based on what we can see in
the photo gallery. Indeed if we are to judge from the photos, they are more
proud of the building than they are of their collection.Interestingly, of
at the Library of Congress:
http://1.usa.gov/tdD129
It must be a lutar, but it is nevertheless interesting that anyone even thought
of doing these at that time.
Daniel
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http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
A short spot with interview on this Early Music Show, a visit to the
Greenwich International Early Music Festival 2011:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01755kl
Still availble for listening for a few days. Congratulations, Mark!
Regards,
Daniel
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As of today, there is a digital facsimile of the Capirola lutebook on line in a
marvelous presentation, full color!
http://ricercar.cesr.univ-tours.fr/3-programmes/EMN/luth/pages/actualites.asp
Regards,
Daniel
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Bruno:
In SCORE it is trivially easy to do. I would put the rhythm symbols on an
invisible staff at any arbitrary pitch and the pitch symbols on a visible staff
synchronized to it, converting the appearance of all the notes on that one to
stemless halfnotes after entry with an alter command.
Chris:
Going back to the Attaingnant question, you are correct that the AbeBooks
search turns up nothing, but if you search the Picard inventory here:
http://www.antiqbook.com/books/bookseller.phtml?owner_id=pic
you will get a hit for the Daniel Hearz edition, apparently still on sale for
Last night, after a 3-hour flight and a couple of hours of playing duets with
Travis Carey on his home turf, I set the clock radio to the only classical
music I could find quickly and went to sleep. This morning the first thing
that came out of the radio was a brief passage of violin music in
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