:40
Aan: lutelist Net
Onderwerp: [LUTE] Re: Milan's tablature?
Hi, all.
I have (somewhere in a pile of music) a publication from about 1900
outlining newly invented character notation for guitar which was
essentially modern guitar tab: fret numbers on 6-line staves with
(redundantly) parallel staff
Luis Milan.
Ragards,
Stephan
-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: howard posner howardpos...@ca.rr.com
Gesendet: 07.05.09 19:50:54
An: lutelist Net Lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Betreff: [LUTE] Re: Milan's tablature?
I suppose I would have made it easier for everyone, particularly
Reinier de Valk
, 8. Mai 2009 19:36
An: lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Betreff: [LUTE] Re: Milan's tablature?
I seem to recall some handwritten pieces on the blank staves of Denss'
Florilegium, in the copy which was used for the Tree Edition selection.
There must be some more fragments, someone suggested the name
Dear Howard,
What comes to my mind immediately is Francesco da Milano's Intavolatura de
viola o vero lauto, libro secondo -- perhaps that is what you are looking
for?
Kind regards,
Reinier
- Original Message -
From: howard posner howardpos...@ca.rr.com
To: lutelist
Dear Stewart,
Yes, I am aware of that, but since the original question didn't specify that
it should be 'Spanish' tablature (i.e., *with* the zero) I thought this
might be the sought-after work.
Anyway, I'm not a lutenist (yet) -- so if I talk nonsense please correct me!
Best,
Reinier
-
I suppose I would have made it easier for everyone, particularly
Reinier de Valk, if I'd asked the actual question I'm trying to
answer, which is whether Milan's tablature can correctly be called
unique.
On May 7, 2009, at 10:22 AM, Stewart McCoy wrote:
There are four short pieces for the
On Thu, May 7, 2009 at 7:42 PM, howard posner howardpos...@ca.rr.com wrote:
I suppose I would have made it easier for everyone, particularly
Reinier de Valk, if I'd asked the actual question I'm trying to
answer, which is whether Milan's tablature can correctly be called
unique.
On a side
like to know
the answer as well!
Best,
Reinier (who doesn't mind listening to abovementioned records at all)
- Original Message -
From: David van Ooijen davidvanooi...@gmail.com
To: lutelist Net Lute@cs.dartmouth.edu
Sent: Thursday, May 07, 2009 9:42 PM
Subject: [LUTE] Re: Milan's
On Thu, May 7, 2009, David van Ooijen davidvanooi...@gmail.com said:
On a side note: when did modern guitar TAB (equals Milan's) arise?
I have heard talk of Mel Bay editions. before 1960, which is when I took
up guitar.
--
Dana Emery
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Hi, all.
I have (somewhere in a pile of music) a publication from about 1900 outlining
newly invented character notation for guitar which was essentially modern
guitar tab: fret numbers on 6-line staves with (redundantly) parallel staff
notation and without (annoyingly) rhythmic notation on
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