Dear all,
This excellent instrument is for sale, please check all the details
[1]here. Translation is available by using the flags on the top left
corner.
[2]https://www.cuerdaspulsadas.es/blog/vihuela-de-seis-ordenes-construi
da-por-javier-martinez/
Regards.
--
Cuerdas
Dear list members,
This vihuela is looking for a new owner, all the details are available
in this link:
[1]https://cuerdaspulsadas.es/blog/vihuela-de-seis-ordenes-construida-p
or-javier-martinez/
Regards.
--
Cuerdas Pulsadas
[2]www.cuerdaspulsadas.com ||
Thanks for the interesting comments on Spain vs. Italy
A few years ago there was some discussion that the vihuela sources
weren't so clear about the strict no octave policy. What is the current
thinking on this?
--
Sent from my Android phone with GMX Mail. Please excuse my
Here's Mimmo's researched opinion:
The lute in its historical reality
by Mimmo Peruffo
p.22- The vihuela case: unisons or octaves?
1. Italian and German string making technology before 1570 ca. (the best
of that time)
was not so advanced as to grant the production of efficient enough bass
Milan: http://imslp.org/wiki/Special:ImagefromIndex/75130
http://bibliotecadigitalhispanica.bne.es/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=201461custom_att_2=simple_viewer
Narvaez:
http://bibliotecadigitalhispanica.bne.es/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=2691784custom_att_2=simple_viewer
Dear All,
Jacob Heringman and I will be performing a vihuela duet program next Saturday,
in Basel (Switzerland).
More details here: http://www.lauten-abende.ch/index.php?id=konzert1
If you happen to be not too far away, we'd love to meet you there!
Greetings from Sevilla,
AA
To get on
Dear friends,
I'm listing two instruments for sale which belong to the Jeanne Lamon
Instrument Bank of Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra and are currently in
Toronto, Ontario (Canada).
Pickup in Toronto is preferred, or I can also bring one or both on an
upcoming trip to
Dear Martin,
You may recall that quite some years ago it was generally accepted that
the vihuela (but not the viola) was strung in unison - I believe this
was a misreading of an early source and was explained through the great
wealth of Spain in the periof whereby such expensive
Oskar de Mari-Jones, on Youtube, post two new videos of vihuela :
[1]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ydwo9tHP8DM
[2]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DCDmyu13xvU
Enjoy !
Val
--
References
1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ydwo9tHP8DM
2.
Dear everybody,
If you happen to be near Bremen on the forthcoming weekend, don't miss
Pedro Alcacer's vihuela concerts! He will play music from all seven
known prints of music for the vihuela, including the famous six pavanas
by Luis Milan.
Venues:
Saturday February 5^th
10, 2009 2:26 PM
To: lute-buil...@cs.dartmouth.edu
Subject: [LUTE-BUILDER] lute/vihuela action
Hello all,
I'm a newbie to lute construction but I have built a couple of modern
guitars. I'm in the dark about a lute builder's approach to setting the neck
angle relative to the soundboard. I've
I'm a guitarist (blues rock). Lute being very much my second instrument.
Neil
-Original Message-
From: Christopher Stetson [mailto:cstet...@email.smith.edu]
Sent: 19 January 2009 14:33
To: Lute List ((E-mail))
Subject: [LUTE] Re: 'notable composers (lute, vihuela and guitar)'
Hi, all
On 19 Jan 2009, at 6:33 AM, howard posner wrote:
On Jan 18, 2009, at 1:11 PM, Mayes, Joseph wrote:
I don't know why the world of classical guitar is of such
interest to
this list
Perhaps because 90% of us are or have been classical guitarists?
I'd be really interested to know how
...@yahoo.com]
Sent: Sun 1/18/2009 10:16 PM
To: Mayes, Joseph; David Rastall
Cc: Lute List (E-mail)
Subject: Re: [LUTE] Re: 'notable composers (lute, vihuela and guitar)'
Hi Joe,
No envy here. No Schadenfreude, either. It turns
out that our seemingly more succussful
From: Edward C. Yong ky...@pacific.net.sg
I don't know why the world of classical guitar is of such
interest to
this list
Perhaps because 90% of us are or have been classical guitarists?
I'd be really interested to know how many on the lute list are also
guitarists or have been at
Hi, all,
In answer to Edward's question, I started on guitar (Delta blues, as a matter
of fact), moved to lute, then back to guitar, with mandolin thrown in. Right
now I play mainly guitar, several styles, but I'm currently mostly interested
in turn of the century (19th to 20th) American
On Jan 19, 2009, at 8:28 AM, Mayes, Joseph wrote:
They wouldn't think of firing the lute professor? Oh yeah, there
is no
lute professor.
It works both ways. I can think of a number of highly accomplished
and successful lutenists and musiclologists in the lute world with
academic
Three day weekends are great. Sometimes the lute list really does
turn into an afternoon down at the Lute Player's Pub, except we
each have to provide our own beverage. So I told my wife (The Soprano
Who Must Be Obeyed - apologies, R.I.P., John Mortimer) that the
guitarists-who-play-lute are
I am one of those lute professors, but my position is just adjunct, so
there is no use letting me go.
ed
At 10:31 AM 1/19/2009 -0500, David Rastall wrote:
On Jan 19, 2009, at 8:28 AM, Mayes, Joseph wrote:
They wouldn't think of firing the lute professor? Oh yeah, there
is no
lute
Well put and succinct, Dan. Darn Russki sure can play.
Further, I think that I, when playing Hawaiian guitar music from 1915, can
claim total irrelevance with confidence.
Happy inaug. to you from your side of the puddle, though about as close as you
can get to the other side.
Chris.
PM
To: lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Subject: [LUTE] Re: 'notable composers (lute, vihuela and guitar)' w/
ham on the side...
Three day weekends are great. Sometimes the lute list really does
turn into an afternoon down at the Lute Player's Pub, except we
each have to provide our own
Has this been noted before:
http://www.hernanmouro.com/uploads/pdf/guitar_timeline.pdf
Stuart
To get on or off this list see list information at
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
Does it strike you, that the provider of this must be colour blind??
- Original Message -
From: Stuart Walsh s.wa...@ntlworld.com
To: Lute Net lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Sent: Sunday, January 18, 2009 2:41 PM
Subject: [LUTE] 'notable composers (lute, vihuela and guitar)'
Has this been
Stuart Walsh s.wa...@ntlworld.com schrieb:
Has this been noted before:
http://www.hernanmouro.com/uploads/pdf/guitar_timeline.pdf
Stuart
Thanks for this! (Sweelinck has been placed a bit awkwardly, though.)
--
Mathias
To get on or off this list see list information at
Mathias Rösel wrote:
Has this been noted before:
http://www.hernanmouro.com/uploads/pdf/guitar_timeline.pdf
Stuart
Thanks for this! (Sweelinck has been placed a bit awkwardly, though.)
The whole thing seems rather eccentric -even allowing for the
colour-coding confusion of
All,
Elliot Carter, while not very prolific for guitar,
is noticeably absent. (And still very much alive and
composing at 100!) Other than that, my general
observation in that its sad that Leo Brouwer is the
youngest composer o be called notable. (Sad that he's
even included as a notable,
On Jan 18, 2009, at 12:37 PM, chriswi...@yahoo.com
chriswi...@yahoo.com wrote:
Sorry to be a
downer but I'm afraid, despite the awesome technical
abilities of many performers today, that the CG world
is slipping from the heights it attained in the mid
20th century once more into the cultural
There may be a couple of pieces for guitar, and guitar and voice, by
Maxwell Davies, I believe.
http://www.chesternovello.com/default.aspx?
TabId=2432State_3041=2workId_3041=11859
http://www.chesternovello.com/default.aspx?
TabId=2432State_3041=2workId_3041=11859
Anthony
Le 18 janv. 09 à
__
From: David Rastall [mailto:dlu...@verizon.net]
Sent: Sun 1/18/2009 2:45 PM
To: chriswi...@yahoo.com
Cc: Lute List (E-mail)
Subject: [LUTE] Re: 'notable composers (lute, vihuela and guitar)'
On Jan 18, 2009, at 12:37 PM, chriswi...@yahoo.com
chriswi...@yahoo.com wrote:
Sorry
List (E-mail) lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Sent: Sunday, January 18, 2009 10:11 PM
Subject: [LUTE] Re: 'notable composers (lute, vihuela and guitar)'
I don't know why the world of classical guitar is of such interest to
this list - although I believe it's natural to be interested and a
little
On Jan 18, 2009, at 1:11 PM, Mayes, Joseph wrote:
I don't know why the world of classical guitar is of such
interest to
this list
Perhaps because 90% of us are or have been classical guitarists?
--
To get on or off this list see list information at
Well- what heights, exactly was it up to; and where precisely has it
slipped today? Is there some higher orbit that it was supposed to
attain, other than where it is now? It seems to me that it went from
close to nowhere (early 20th century) and finally reached a proper
level, (Thank you,
11:40 PM
Subject: [LUTE] Re: 'notable composers (lute, vihuela and guitar)'
Well- what heights, exactly was it up to; and where precisely has it
slipped today? Is there some higher orbit that it was supposed to
attain, other than where it is now? It seems to me that it went from
close to nowhere
Daniel Winheld wrote:
Recently I heard some Astor Piazzola (some
original guitar, some very well transcribed pieces) that I love so
much I may try to get and desecrate on the Renaissance lute.
Piazzolo - all clenched and seething (or then again, gushing) would be a
strange thing on the
Stuart Walsh wrote:
Daniel Winheld wrote:
Recently I heard some Astor Piazzola (some original guitar, some
very well transcribed pieces) that I love so much I may try to get
and desecrate on the Renaissance lute.
Piazzolo - all clenched and seething (or then again, gushing) would be
a
No idea- that completely upsets the fruit cart. Specialty seasonal
food section, or the open can of worms dept. (should have kept my
damn mouth shut). Dan
And where among the apples and oranges do you place G. Sollscher's
altgitarr, Blanchette's archguitar, harp-guitars, etc.etc. ?
G.
--
Daniel Winheld wrote:
Recently I heard some Astor Piazzola (some original guitar, some
very well transcribed pieces) that I love so much I may try to get
and desecrate on the Renaissance lute.
Piazzolo - all clenched and seething (or then again, gushing) would
be a strange thing on the
: 'notable composers (lute,
vihuela and guitar)'
On Jan 18, 2009, at 12:37 PM,
chriswi...@yahoo.com
chriswi...@yahoo.com wrote:
Sorry to be a
downer but I'm afraid, despite the awesome
technical
abilities of many performers today, that the CG
world
is slipping from
On Jan 18, 2009, at 10:16 PM, chriswi...@yahoo.com
chriswi...@yahoo.com wrote:
...No envy here.
Me neither. As a player on both instruments I'm not exactly in
competition with myself!
...You'd quickly realize that
the world can do without yet another 20 student
versions of Leyenda (and 20
Hello luters, Happy New Year!
I've put my vihuela up for sale. The details are on Wayne's Lutes
for Sale page. Anyone interested, please don't hesitate to call or
e-mail.
David Rastall
301-668 5413
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
To get on or off this list see list information at
- Original Message -
From: Roman Turovsky [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Arthur Ness [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, September 20, 2006 7:00 PM
Subject: Re: Tablature (Lute, vihuela, etc.)
We probably have more autograph manuscripts by
Melchior (son, NOT brother of
Hans) Newsidler (ca. 1531-before
I've seen a few posts from people interested in the Vihuela, So I thought I'd
mention that Clive Titmuss has a couple of Vihuela's for sale (price $3900
Canadian dollars, including case).
More information is available at:
http://www.earlymusicstudio.com/
The link to the Vihuela's for
Wayne et al. (are you there, Al?)--
While the Vihuela tablature CD contains a Windows based navigational
application that's quite handy, all the pages are accessible as jpegs.
There are plain text indices to help you find what you need. It's awkward,
but it works just fine.
Regards,
Recognizing that there are some differences in sound, can a beginning
student of the Renaissance lute do just as well to take his first
steps on a vihuela?
Are the following assumptions correct? --
I'm aware that there are some techniques associated with Spanish vihuela
music that seem to be
This question is really for Arthur Ness, but I would appreciate the collected
wisdom responses, too:
I played through some of the Palladino lute music on my vihuela, and the way
it's written (high positions etc.) seems to scream VIHUELA to me. Just how
important and prevalent was the vihuela
Does somebody have for me the vihuela/lute (?) songs/solos (?) that are in
some (?) British Library MS?
I'm sorry to be so non-specific. I am looking for any vihuela/lute music
connected with Thomas Luys de Victoria. I have Denss 1594 (three movements
of a mass for voice and lute) and I know of
the ukulele is a european instrument, directly linked
to an early tradition. its arrival in the new world
is well documented and it hasn't changed a bit since.
its association with hawaii is so complete that its
hawaiian name is universally accepted to be its real
name.
Apropos of
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