Well, not individual pieces, but a cycle when taken in whole. His first guitar
book opens with a set of 24 passacaglias spanning all keys, the last few bars
of each modulating to the next implying the possibility of through performance
of any select set in series.
Best,
Eugene
-Original
OK I completely agree that Bartolotti is a wonderful and underappreciated
composer. But I have not encountered much chromatic music. Of course, I am only
familiar with his guitar music - are we talking about something else?
Joseph Mayes
From:
This evening I had the pleasure of playing Dowland's "Were every
thought an eye" from his Pilgrimes Solace (1612). It seemed very
familiar, and then I recognised it as Dowland's Courante in Thomas
Simpson's Taffel-Consort (1621). I didn't know of this concordance. I
can find no
Sorry, I didn't read the subject line. Portugal really had time for
music by the 18th c.
On Tue, Aug 7, 2018 at 12:14 PM, Christopher Stetson
<[1]christophertstet...@gmail.com> wrote:
Romanesca for Rome?And I'm surprised there isn't more
Renaissance
music
Romanesca for Rome? And I'm surprised there isn't more Renaissance
music associated with Portugal. Maybe they were too busy inventing
global hegemony?
Best, and keep playing,
Chris.
On Tue, Aug 7, 2018 at 4:43 AM, Edward C. Yong
<[1]edward.y...@gmail.com> wrote:
I move that Bartolotti be posthumously be given a "Chromy" award for
his contribution to chromatic music. May his rainbow-color bust now
join the ones of Gesualdo, Wagner and Schoenberg already in the
Chromatic Composers Hall of Fame.
Chris
[1]Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone
Ludovico Roncalli: same.
I also wish Angiol Michele Bartolotti was better recognized for his
contribution to fully chromatic music.
Eugene
-Original Message-
From: lute-...@cs.dartmouth.edu On Behalf Of Ido
Shdaimah
Sent: Tuesday, August 7, 2018 9:03 AM
To: lutelist Net
Subject:
Giovanni Zamboni: only one book (though still a lot more than
others...).
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IIRC in theory La Folia is Portuguese in origin, even though strongly
associated with Spain.
On 2 August 2018 at 15:00, Anthony Hart <[1]anthony.hart1...@gmail.com>
wrote:
I am looking for particular musical forms associated with Sicily,
Rome
and Portugal