[LUTE] Re: Terzi duets

2008-11-23 Thread G. Crona
Hi Betsy, Cosi le chiome IS a duet. Pages 24 to 28 in the facsimile. To play Terzi well, I'd say you need to have played for quite a few years, and have good finger control, on at least intermediate level. Stretches are sometimes quite prohibitive if not played on a descant lute. There are a

[LUTE] Re: Terzi duets

2008-11-23 Thread David van Ooijen
On Sun, Nov 23, 2008 at 3:01 PM, Betsy Lahaussois [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Are Terzi's duets completely out of the question for the relative newcomer to the lute repertoire? -- if some are more accessible than Shameless self-promotion: I recorded all the Terzi duets with fellow lute

[LUTE] Re: Terzi duets

2008-11-23 Thread David Tayler
I find them not only challenging, but they take a while to work into your fingers. I had to prepare some once on a fairly short schedule, and the music really requires some getting used to. There's lots of fine lute duets, so you should work your way up to these. dt At 07:10 AM 11/23/2008, you

[LUTE] Re: Terzi duets - help needed

2006-11-23 Thread Thomas Schall
@cs.dartmouth.edu Betreff: [LUTE] Re: Terzi duets - help needed Dear Thomas Barieraballetto con tutte le sue repliche. Terzi in his second book gives just one part, but the ground can be played by a second lute. If you're clever in dividing the divisions you end up with a nice duet. It sounds like Beier

[LUTE] Re: Terzi duets - help needed

2006-11-23 Thread Thomas Schall
Dear Stewart, Thank you very much. Capability to read helps ... As I have read your message and opened the booklet again I found the passages which I somehow have overlooked for the past two rehearsals. Let's see if Paul wants to share his work or if he would rather keep it. Thanks again and