[LUTE] Re: Saturday morning quotes - continuum

2015-10-10 Thread stephen arndt
; [4]lute@cs.dartmouth.edu Subject: Re: [LUTE] Re: Saturday morning quotes - continuum Stephen, My page on the 16th-century sources is at least a partial answer to your question: [5]http://applications.library.appstate.edu/music/lute/C16/contentlst.h tml I didn't go beyond

[LUTE] Re: Saturday morning quotes - continuum

2015-10-10 Thread Gary Boye
Stephen, My page on the 16th-century sources is at least a partial answer to your question: [1]http://applications.library.appstate.edu/music/lute/C16/contentlst.h tml I didn't go beyond 1600, but I think we'd all agree that the heyday of the vocal intabulation was about over

[LUTE] Re: Saturday morning quotes - continuum

2015-10-10 Thread stephen arndt
Ron writes: ". . . the bulk of published lute music was vocal polyphony reworked and arranged for the instrument." I have recently been wondering and have been on the verge of asking what percentage of the total lute repertoire intabulations of vocal works make up . Does anyone happen to